Running parallel to the Keep Your Timber Limber exhibition in the upper and lower galleries, this ICA Cinematheque series navigates the subversive drawings of Robert Crumb and the leather-clad iconography of Tom of Finland in a triptych of 35mm screenings.
Like her printmaking, drawing and photography, Jennifer Bornstein's 16mm films capture simple and enigmatic actions, while her recent video work frames social interaction and dialectic exchange.
Consider the Fugue commences with Otto Preminger's classic film noir Laura (1944), a deceptive thriller which follows New York police detective Mark McPherson as he investigates the murder of glamorous Manhattan advertising executive Laura Hunt.
On the eve of the release of his acclaimed first feature film Silence, a rare opportunity to view earlier films by leading Irish documentary artist Pat Collins, followed by a Q&A with the filmmaker.
Silence is an absorbing meditation on themes of sound and silence, history, memory and exile, following a sound recordist on a journey through Ireland's remote terrain.
As a tribute to Saul Leiter, who sadly passed away in November, we offer another chance to see Tomas Leach's In No Great Hurry: 13 Lessons in Life with Saul Leiter.
Starting life as a rejected pilot episode, Mulholland Dr. (2001) is arguably Hollywood surrealist David Lynch's most accomplished, acclaimed and emotionally resonant work to date.
The story of gay artist Tom of Finland, told through interviews with the artist's models, associates and intimates, including hundreds of his sketches and paintings grouped by subject matter.
In Umut Dag’s much-garlanded debut feature, sweet-natured Ayse (Akkaya) marries handsome young Hasan (Murathan Muslu) before being whisked away from her Turkish village to an unfamiliar and daunting Vienna, where the marriage is revealed as a sham to dodge immigration controls.