A retrospective devoted to Jonas Mekas’s 70-year activity within and beyond the history of avant-garde cinema. Through a wide selection of works from the 1960s to the late 2010s, this catalogue aims to read the Lithuanian filmmaker’s work as a Dantesque journey leading to happiness, from the infernos of history, through a daily exercise in filmmaking. The title is a quote taken from the film Out-takes From the Life of a Happy Man, in which the artist’s voice-over reflects to himself, “Memories are past, but images are here, and images are real!” Completing the volume are a collection of texts by Francesco Urbano Ragazzi, Hollis Melton, P. Adams Sitney, Ieva Jasinskaite, and Philipp Scheid. “Jonas Mekas lived far more than a life, not just because he turned the one it fell to him to live into the daily medium of his cinema but also because if we set all the events in his life in a row, we get the impression that Jonas lived many more lives than just one. Born in Biržai, Lithuania, in 1922 and raised in the neighboring village of Semeniškiai, Mekas began at a very early age to write poetry and to keep a diary, two literary genres that were to mark his destiny as a filmmaker but not only as that. He began to pen pieces for the culture pages of two local magazines while still in his teens, but in the meantime World War II had broken out and Lithuania was occupied militarily, first by the Soviet Union (1940–41) and then by Nazi Germany…” – Francesco Urbano Ragazzi
Published: 2023
Origin: Italy
Language: Italian, English
Length × Width × Height: 28 × 19 × 2 cm
Article Number: 36418