FCW Society

"FCW Society is dedicated to promoting and exploring feminist issues and interests while spreading the word and celebrating the fact that women are so fucking cool!" "Respect. Empower. Celebrate."

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Friday, March 30, 2007

The Thinking (Wo)man’s Sundance

Video Shorts Segue Women Into Director’s Seat

New York – From silver screen sirens to indie breakout roles, women have always maintained a strong presence in the world of the moving image – that is, at least, on camera. Despite the various mediums that exist today for film and video imagery, the off-camera role of director remains decidedly male terrain. However, for 92 minutes one audience received a glimpse as to how the industry would look if populated, instead, by a slew of Sophia Coppolas.
This year’s International Video Shorts Screening Festival, which features female directors, displayed 22 video shorts out of 66 pieces sent from the around the world, said Sheryl Mousley, curator of film at the Minneapolis-based Walker Art Center. Mousely screened all the submissions for the Feb. 18 festival, held at Barnard College and sponsored by The Women’s Caucus for Art.

The selected shorts were arranged across four categories, including children -- no surprise there -- to identity, memory and place. Unexpected, however, was that just three shorts were featured under the children category, indicating women directors have a lot more on their minds than motherhood. In fact, some of the most evocative pieces in this year’s festival were found in the identity and place categories.
Martha Gorzycki played with the ubiquitous image of the American flag in “Unfurling.” Amid all the entries, this particular short stood out as type of modern artwork than digital short. The flag in Gorzycki’s near two-and-a-half-minute piece is comprised of commerce signs, bar codes, animated cars, windmills and other images strung together, in patterns – creating an American flag comprised of layers which exude rhythms and has a pulse. At the same time, this piece is also a deconstruction of an extremely powerful object, for various reasons, the world over and should find a home in a MoMa-like institution.

Agoraphobia, the notions of limit, and marriage were among other topics explored during the festival. And while it’s safe to say it was inevitable that the Iraq War II and the Sept. 11 attacks would be explored, Donna Stack delivered these themes in an especially tactful piece called “Ten 00:10:00.”

This ten-minute short, comprised of one-minute clips that play in slow motion, include footage taken from these two violent events, skillfully woven together with eight other clips from man-made and natural events (the 2006 India Ocean Tsunami, for example). Yet, there is no sound to this short. The muting of such a crucial element produced visible reactions in the room. The audience was moved by footage ranging from high-tech bombs being released mid-flight, to the heat sensory camera that captured human “targets” being taken out in a US military raid. But it was the silent footage of the abuse of prisoners at the Iraqi prison, Abu Ghraib, which produced audible gasps by the crowd.

And if it’s no surprise that sex and violence sell in America, then director Chelsea Tonelli Knight skillfully repackaged it into a form that did surprise, utilizing a seemingly innocuous tale of an Italian female traveler.

In the eight minute short, “Standing on the Beach in Rimini,” the unseen female narrates three stories from her travels across the Adriatic Sea. One involves meeting a mother in the former Yugoslavia, who, as she fiddles around her kitchen and fusses with her outdated stove, drops this bomb into the conversation -- that two of her three sons were murdered and the community fingers local Muslims for the crime.
But it’s the female Italian’s retelling of a sexual episode involving three strangers in an unfamiliar city that touched a raw nerve with the audience.

Recalling drinking and some hash smoking with these male strangers, our soft spoken narrator reveals she’s unclear as how and why she had sex with all three men one that evening. Perhaps it’s her very blunt description of the factors that lead to her entanglement which created the connection with the audience. As the traveler relates her confusion, in a flat voice, seemingly devoid of emotion, the audience grew completed muted and still. It appeared that many were recalling their own individual wounds from sexual exploitation and as the tales from Knight’s character eventually rolled from the beach in Rimini out to sea, only the sound of the heat being pumped into the college auditorium was heard for several moments.

To be sure, the festival did not disappoint, delivering the ups and downs an audience needs out of an edgy event. That’s because not every short was as polished as the above mentioned, or, in the case of Sarah Kanouse’s “Chasing Billy Caldwell,” even coherent due to poor sound mixing. But the festival is the thinking (wo)man’s Sundance; for example, despite its technical flaw, Kanouse’s short was pleasing for her premise. The just over seven minute short traced the life of Billy Caldwell, a 19th Century Indian-Canadian settler, by using the street and business signs found in an affluent Chicago neighborhood that tap his name.

This mixing of the up-and-comers, with those who should be well on their way to broader recognition, is what makes this international festival truly cutting edge.

The Women’s Caucus for Art, nationally based organization, sized up video shorts as an opportunity for women to chip away at the gender imbalance when it comes to directing. The 4th running of the International Video Shorts Screening was the premiere event for the organization’s 35th Anniversary Celebration in New York City.

Colleen O’Connor Grant - writer/ FCW SOCIETY MEMBER

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we heard a rumor!

Hillary Clinton was asked if is she a feminist and she basically said "HELL YES I'm a feminist!"

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Saturday, March 24, 2007

Why I wanted to form the FCW Society...

Women are so Fucking Cool!

Not sure when I realized that I had been meeting some of the most fucking cool women in the world. As far back as I can remember, I have known fucking cool women. Childhood friends, H.S. girlfriends, women you met on the job, girls from the local bars, an aunt, mother, sister, lover, girlfriend, the chick that lived with you for a month - the list could go on and on. All women, everywhere – all kinds. It’s because of this list that I needed to create the “Women are so fucking cool!” project.

It started out with the video. I attempted to try and answer the question, “why are women so fucking cool?”. I was going to interview 20 women and to find this answer. Somewhere after the 2nd woman, I realized that this was one question that was never going to find an answer. So, instead of trying to find the answer, I changed my focus to letting the audience hear other women talking about a fucking cool woman in their lives and reminding them of the fucking cool women they know.

The video was made from 1992-93 while I was living in Chicago. I was going through my twenty-something, feminist, women-centered period. It was an exciting time for me to discover the spirit of sisterhood though the process of this project. For each interview, I used different women as the camera and sound person. I let the women who were shooting, to shoot however they felt like. I wanted to get different women’s perspectives. I asked the same questions to all of the women, but always-new discussions arose from each shoot. We would spend about 2 hours just talking about the cool women in our lives and why they are so special. How fucking empowering can that be? The dancers were friends of a friend. The movements came from their interpretation of the statement; “Women are so Fucking Cool.” The women on the street were videotaped one Sunday afternoon. I stationed myself outside a café on Broadway. I stopped women who were together, and asked them, “do you think women are cool?” If they said yes, then I videotaped them. My sister, Jennifer, took the photos. The video was screened in 1994 at the Women in the Director’s Chair International Film & Video Festival, in Chicago and on DYKE TV, national cable access program.

A few years ago, I was meeting some pretty fucking cool women in NYC and wanted to do part two of the project. Email had just begun to really start taking off. I emailed all the women that I knew, asking them to compile a list of fucking cool women and send it back to me. I also had them forward the request to other women. For 2 months, I received emails from so many fucking cool women. I was getting lists as long as 10 to 25 names. It was a powerful moment on the Internet. I enlarged the lists and they were part of a Bra Bar show at PS 122 and I wheat-pasted the sheets of names around the East Village. I feel it is important to spread the word about fucking cool women.


Now 13 years after the original video was made, I'm very proud to be a part of the FCW Society. Our 2nd Anniversary Special Brunch/Party was a lot of fun. Over 70 men and women gathered in a basement club (MIDWAY) in the East Village, we were entertained by talented women, we heard about how we can make a difference in our society and we had a few drinks.

I am very proud that a simple idea I had when I was 27 has grown into a powerful energy in the world because of all of the fucking cool women who exist!

sisterhood is a powerful thing!

Joanne Morton
co-founder of the FCW Society