9 - 15 October 2006

The End

by Mark Wallinger

 

Artprojx and Anthony Reynolds Gallery presents
'THE END' by Mark Wallinger


Monday 9 to Sunday 15 October 2006.

Prince Charles Cinema

7 Leicester Place, London WC2

Box Office: 020 7494 3654 (open 1-9pm)

www.princecharlescinema.com

 

On Monday 9 October Mark Wallinger selects the main feature films of the day.

1pm KES (PG)
3.20pm COMME UNE IMAGE

(trans: LOOK AT ME (12A)
6pm EDUKATORS (15)
9pm ERASERHEAD (18)


Project organised by David Gryn

Contact/info/press/Frieze VIP's

events@artprojx.com

+44(0)7711 127 848

 


Event partners:
www.anthonyreynolds.com
www.fetherstonhaugh.com

www.kultureflash.net

www.artupdate.com

www.arttactic.com

www.withyou.co.uk

www.tank.tv

 


Artprojx 06 is kindly supported by Arts Council England, Lottery Funded www.artscouncil.org.uk
design: fetherstonhaugh

 

 

MARK WALLINGER’S FILM CHOICE
ARTPROJX AT PRINCE CHARLES CINEMA

Kes (1969)

D. Ken Loach from the novel by Barry Hines
Director of Photography Chris Menges

"I saw this at Gant’s Hill Odeon. It was part of the most questionable double bill of all time with The Thousand Plane Raid (1969), a paean to Bomber Harris."

Comme une Image (2004)
D. Agnes Jaoui [French]
W. Agnes Jaoui and Jean-Pierre Bacri
won European Film Award,
best screenplay Cannes 2004

"One of those films that makes you smile in the dark. Fantastically sophisticated script and Bacri is the most hypnotically watchable actor."

The Edukators (2004)
D. Hans Weingartner [Austrian]
W. Katharina Held & Hans Weingartner

"The opening scenes are shot round the corner from where we lived in Berlin for a couple of years. The break ins feel thrillingly transgressive and the hapless hostage scenario is very funny.(The director is one of the two Austrians actors that Ethan Hawkes and Julie Delpy encounter on the bridge in Before Sunrise)."

Eraserhead (1977)
W & D. David Lynch

"One of Stanley Kubrick’s favourite films.
It scared the shit out of me when I first saw it when I was on foundation course. It is wilfully Freudian and opaquely disturbing. Lynch is America’s greatest belated surrealist."

 

MARK WALLINGER 2006