Screening of Lucy Raven’s Digital Still Animation "China Town"
21feb4:00 pm6:00 pmScreening of Lucy Raven’s Digital Still Animation "China Town"4:00 pm - 6:00 pm
Time
february 21, 2017 4:00pm - february 21, 2017 6:00pm
Location
Fine Arts Building (FAB) 249
Event Details
The Museum of Fine Arts will be screening Lucy Raven’s China Town on February 21st at 4pm and February 28th at 7pm in Fine Arts Building (FAB) 249. China
Event Details
The Museum of Fine Arts will be screening Lucy Raven’s China Town on February 21st at 4pm and February 28th at 7pm in Fine Arts Building (FAB) 249.
China Town traces copper mining and production from an open pit mine in Nevada to a smelter in China, where the semi-processed ore is sent to be smelted and refined. Considering what it actually means to “be wired” and in turn, to be connected, in today’s global economic system, the video follows the detailed production process that transforms raw ore into copper wire — in this case, the literal digging of a hole to China — and the generation of waste and of power that grows in both countries as byproduct. The video uses an experimental edit structure, composed entirely of animated sequences of digital still photographs and ambient sound recorded on location. Thousands of individual images with varying frame rates are combined in a granular, accumulative narrative, that structurally echoes the many discrete processes, human efforts, and geographic locations that go into copper mining and commodity production. Many of the laborers who worked on mines throughout Utah and Nevada in the late 1880s were Chinese immigrants — a population that was also involved in construction of the transcontinental railroad, which connected just north of Salt Lake City on the mining site in Western Nevada that was originally called “Chinatown.” Today, the historic mining town of Ruth, which still sits at the base of the mine and most of whose population of several hundred works there, is another sort of China town: sending their ore overseas as China’s rapid industrialization and urbanization demands a growing amount of raw materials from around the world. China Town follows the contemporary recycling of the American landscape and industrial economy as raw mineral wealth for a developing nation