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Jordan Belson 5 Essential Films

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Jordan Belson 5 Essential Films is another film I rented while ago which features 5 amazing works by filmmaker and artist Jordan Belson who created spiritually oriented abstract films richly woven with cosmological imagery, exploring consciousness, transcendence, and the nature of light itself. See more;

Here are some still images from each piece. This is a great film to have, which is on several sites online around 25-30€. 
Information courtesy Centerforvisualmusi.org where you will find more about Jordan Belson and  this DVD.


Allures (1961)

"An early (8 min) masterpiece of Non-Objective Cinema “I think of Allures as a combination of molecular structures and astronomical events mixed with subconscious and subjective phenomena – all happening simultaneously. the beginning is almost purely sensual, the end perhaps totally nonmaterial. It seems to move from matter to spirit in some way.” “…it took a year and a half to make, pieced together in thousands of different ways….Allures actually developed out of images I was working with in the Vortex Concerts.” (Jordan Belson, quoted in Expanded Cinema by Gene Youngblood, p. 160-162). The soundtrack is a collaboration with Henry Jacobs. Allures was preserved with the support of the National Film Preservation Foundation."




Samadhi (1967)

"Samadhi (6 min) evokes the ecstatic state achieved by the meditator where individual consciousness merges with the Universal. “I hoped that somehow the film could actually provide a taste of what the real experience of samadhi might be like.” (from Scott MacDonald’s interview with Belson in A Critical Cinema 3). Belson adds “It is primarily an abstract cinematic work of art inspired by Yoga and Buddhism. Not a description or explanation of Samadhi.”





Light (1973)

"Light (8 min) is based on the continuity of the electromagnetic spectrum. It is a ride through space and light. This is the last film for which Belson composed his own soundtrack."




Fountain of Dreams (1984) 

"A bold sychronisation to the Transcendental music of Franz Liszt."





Epilogue (2005) 

"By way of pure Visual Music experience, the Hirshhorn Museum (Smithsonian Institution) commissioned a major new work from abstract film artist Jordan Belson, who distilled 60 years of visionary sound and images into a twelve minute videofilm, synchronised to a symphonic tone poem “Isle of the Dead” by the great lyric composer Sergei Rachmaninoff."




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