Villa Aurora Events Archive
2019
Meet the Fellows
Los Angeles

Participants

Jakob will show excerpts from his recent films and speak about his research on his great-grandfather Leroy Scott, a successful 1920's novelist whose work was adapted for the silver-screen in the silent-film era.

Doreen is a performance artist, composer, singer and vocal-teacher specialised in the art of yodelling.
On January 31st she will perform two musical pieces. A composition of a yodel that is repeatable and breaks down into individual pieces down to silence.
The second piece is a pop song from her last album, which presents a yodel in minor.

Max Göran will show an excerpt from his film "filming dad's ass while he's chopping logs with his chainsaw", a documentary he made last year about his dad, and do a short reading in relation to the film.

On January 31st filmmakers Ika Künzel & Wolfgang Fischer will show a clip from their movie STYX.
STYX premiered at the Berlinale, where it opened the Panorama Special section. It has recently been shown at the Palm Springs International Film Festival. STYX is a work of unrelenting intensity & technical brilliance.
ER doctor Rike (Susanne Wolff) embarks on a one-woman solo sailing trip to Ascension Island in the Atlantic Ocean. When Rike comes across a sinking ship of refugees, she is quickly torn out of her contented and idealized world and must make a momentous decision. Aptly named after the mythological river that separates the living from the dead, STYX is an astute modern day parable of Western indifference in the face of marginalized suffering. Carrying practically the entire film Wolff is never less than remarkable in a riveting role as a woman pushed to her physical, psychological, and moral limits.
Tiger Girl
UCLA James Bridges Theater (235 Charles E Young Drive West, Los Angeles, CA 90095)
Information

UCLA Graduate Student Association Melnitz Movies present:
TIGER GIRL
IN PERSON: Director Jakob Lass
Germany, 2017, 90 min, In German with English subtitles
Push-over Maggie (Maria Dragus) is desperate to fit in. After failing the Berlin police entrance exams, she settles for training as a security guard, but her passivity constantly lands her in risky situations. Enter Tiger (Ella Rumpf), an assertive, street-smart young woman who gets what she wants - occasionally by violence - and takes Maggie under her wing. Hitting the streets of Berlin in borrowed security uniforms, the unlikely duo aims to correct minor social injustices, but the increasingly self-confident Maggie ultimately takes things a bit too far.
Following his own FOGMA manifesto, director Lass’ third feature skillfully blends mostly improvised dialogue with documentary-style camerawork to bring the powerful, action-packed visuals and stylized fight scenes to life in this intelligently edgy “Martial Arthouse” film.
Yodeling Workshop by Villa Aurora Fellow Doreen Kutzke
Villa Aurora (520 Paseo Miramar, Los Angeles, CA 90272)
Information
Ready to Cheer? Start yodeling!
Yodeling is not a solely Alpine tradition but extends across many disparate cultures around the world, including Central Africa Pygmy singers; Persian classical music; and Australian Aboriginals. A yodel is not necessarily the sound we associate with pigtails and lederhosen. It is a vocal oscillation between the head voice and the chest voice; the break that occurs upon the movement between the two voices is the central characteristic of yodeling. Yodeling is not demanding on the lungs as it relies on diaphragmatic breathing which produces the same feeling of physical wellbeing as laughter or yogic breathing. Consequently, yodeling has long been used by humans as both an effective form of long distance, non-verbal communication and also as solo and communal vocal play.
Participant

Kutzkelina aka Doreen Kutzke is a German performance artist, composer, singer, and vocal-teacher specialising in the art of yodeling. She grew up in the Harz-Mountain region and started yodeling at the age of six.
Her activities includes workshops, performances and concerts with numerous projects.
She founded the Yodel School Kreuzberg and teaches yodelling and advanced vocal techniques all over the world.
Doreen is the Villa Aurora Fellow of Musicboard Berlin.
Styx by Ika Künzel and Wolfgang Fischer
Laemmle Royal (11523 Santa Monica Blvd 1st floor, Los Angeles, CA 90025)

Information
Germany / Austria 2018, 94 min., color, English, German, starring Susanne Wolff
The work of unrelenting intensity and technical brilliance tells the story of ER doctor Rike who is on a solo sailing turn to Ascension Island in the Atlantic Ocean. When Rike comes across a sinking ship of refugees, she is quickly torn out of her contented and idealized world and must make a momentous decision.
Aptly named after the mythological river that separates the living from the dead, STYX is an astute modern day parable of Western indifference in the face of marginalized suffering.
Concert: ECLECTIC SALON Salastina Music Society & Villa Aurora present "Sounds Local"
Villa Aurora (520 Paseo Miramar, Los Angeles, CA 90272)
Information
Salastina Music Society & Villa Aurora proudly continue our tradition of presenting what’s most beautiful to us among LA’s vast selection of new musical offerings.
We invite listeners to join composers, musicians, and artists to celebrate the beauty of the past and present, and to create a future in the spirit of inclusivity.
Program:
Derrick Spiva, Jr: Grace Unbound (world premiere)
Peter Knell: Intimate Voices
Gabrielle Owens: Shadows and Songs (world premiere)
Juan Pablo Contreras: Voladores de Panatela
Sounds Promising Composers:
Emily Webster-Zuber: Pastorale, Op 1 (world premiere)
Kaitlin Webster-Zuber: Rhapsody, Op 1 (world premiere)
Sakari Dixon Vanderveer: Obsidian, rippled in moonlight, gleams (world premiere)
Artists:
Ben Smolen (resident flute), Kevin Kumar (co-director/violin), Heather Powell (guest violin), Meredith Crawford (resident viola), Yoshika Masuda (resident cello),
HyeJin Kim (resident piano)
Brian Lauritzen, resident host/artist partner
Sounds Promising musicians: Emily Webster-Zuber (piano), Kaitlin Webster-Zuber (piano), Maya Paredes (piano)
Tickets
Please note that tickets are $40 at the door.
Student tickets are $10 at the door with valid ID.
Click here for $32 advance purchase tickets.
Screening Verlorene (Lost Ones)
California State University Long Beach (1250 Bellflower Blvd, Long Beach, CA 90840, Room LH-150)
Information

California State University Long Beach and Villa Aurora present:
VERLORENE (Lost Ones)
IN PERSON: Director Felix Hassenfratz
Germany, 2018, 91 min, In German with English subtitles
Following the death of their mother, Maria and Hannah live alone with their father in the southern German province. When Valentin, a carpenter on the road, shows up, Maria falls in love with him. But a dark secret prevents Maria from surrendering to this love. A secret that she also hides from her sister. LOST ONES tells a universal story of perhaps the strongest of all forces: that invisible bond between siblings of guilt and of a longing for love against all reason.
Theater Play: Women at Work - Käthe Leichter and Marie Jahoda
Villa Aurora (520 Paseo Miramar, Los Angeles, CA 90272)

Information

“Women at Work – Käthe Leichter and Marie Jahoda” is directed by Sandra Schüddekopf, with Anita Zieher as Käthe Leichter and Brigitta Waschnig as Marie Jahoda.
This performance at Villa Aurora is part of a U.S. tour of the show by the Viennese company portraittheater.
USC Libraries, Max Kade Institute of Austrian-German-Swiss Studies at USC, and Villa Aurora present:
Women at Work: Käthe Leichter and Marie Jahoda
This play highlights the life and achievements of Käthe Leichter (1895–1942) and Marie Jahoda (1907–2001), two Austrian pioneers researching and writing about unemployment, work and gender pay inequality in the 1920s and 1930s. Both women were political activists who opposed the rise of fascism and the Nazis in Austria, and the play portrays them against a backdrop of politically turbulent times.
A Cultural & Literary Salon
Los Angeles
Information
SEEfest and Villa Aurora present:
A Cultural & Literary Salon with Villa Aurora Fellow Fatma Aydemir

Concert: Lost and found - The Rediscovery of Ingolf Dahl
Villa Aurora (520 Paseo Miramar, Los Angeles, CA 90272)
Information
The Piano Duo:
Friederike Haufe and Volker Ahmels had their international debut as a piano duo in 1997 in Israel and the Palestinian Territories. They played in both parts of Jerusalem, in Tel Aviv and Haifa. They have been touring international festivals and concert halls ever since.
The duo's international research and "discovery" of composers, who were deported to and killed in extermination camps or driven into exile, became a focal point in their lives and work. In 2012, they recorded „Der Ochse auf dem Dach und andere Verbote“ a CD (Granola/Vienna) with works by Milhaud, Gál, Schönberg, Smit, Schulhoff and Toch.
Since 2016, the piano duo has been focused on the publication and revival of the oeuvre of Ingolf Dahl.
In 2017, they premiered and recorded „Four Intervals“, followed by the „Rondo“ (2018) and the publication of the entire sheet music for Ingolf Dahl's piano works for four hands.
In December of 2018, German President, Frank Walter Steinmeier awarded the German Medal of Honor to Volker Ahmels for his achievements as head of the "Center for Degenerate Music" at the music academy in Schwerin Musik in Schwerin.
The Concert:
This concert features 5 composers, who were all forced to leave Europe for their American exile where they were able to build on their careers quite successfully.
Arnold Schönberg and Ingolf Dahl made their new home in Los Angeles. After WWII Darius Milhaud and Paul Hindemith lived and worked both in Europe and in the U.S.. Only Alexandre Tansman returned back to Paris permanently in 1946.

The Composer Ingolf Dahl:
He was the son of a Swedish mother and a German father of Jewish origin. After growing up in Hamburg, Dahl started his career as pianist, conductor and composer. In 1931, he began to study composition with Philipp Jarnach in Cologne. Being confronted with growing anti-Semitism, in Germany he moved to Zürich in 1932 to study at the conservatory.
His studies were quickly followed by engagements at the Zürich Municipal Theatre, now called the Zürich Opera House.
In 1939 the 27-year old Dahl followed his American fiancée to Los Angeles, where he settled down as professor at USC.
Dahl considered himself a U.S. composer of Swedish origin. His German-Jewish roots were widely unknown.
Ingolf Dahl was friends with all of the composers in this program.
Programs
Arnold Schönberg (1874-1951)
from „6 pieces for piano for 4 hands“ (1896)
Ingolf Dahl (1912-1970)
„Four Intervals“ (1967)
First U.S. revival since 1970
Darius Milhaud (1892-1974)
„Le Boeuf sur le Toit“ op.58 (1919)
Arranged for 4 hands by the composer.
Alexandre Tansman 1897-1986)
„La Danse de la Sorcière“ (1923)
Arranged for 4 hands by the composer.
Paul Hindemith (1885-1963)
„Ragtime“ (well tempered) (1921)
Arranged for 4 hands by the composer.
Ingolf Dahl
„Rondo for piano four handed“ (1938)
First U.S. revival since 1940
Paul Hindemith
Symphony „Mathis der Maler“ (1934)
Arranged by the composer for 4 hands
Concert: place/displace
Villa Aurora (520 Paseo Miramar, Los Angeles, CA 90272)

Information
German composer von Lilienstern spent three months in Los Angeles on a Villa Aurora fellowship last year. His new work was specifically written for this program and poetically derived from his string quartet.
Other works in the program are:
Davor Vincze’s bass flute and live electronics work Take your time…hurry-up! (2015-16) L.A. Premiere.
Mu-Xuan Lin figuratively à.. (2018-19) for flute and electronics L.A. Premiere.
The only piece on the program composed before the Twenty-first Century, Luc Ferrari’s Madame de Shanghai (1996) performed here in version for solo flute and electronics.
place/displace is a collaborative project that involves artists from Berlin, Paris, San Francisco, and Los Angeles, jointly produced by PIE and Villa Aurora. The program will also feature Paris-based Taiwanese flutist Shao Wei Chou.
For more information, please check:
www.peopleinsideelectronics.com
Tickets via Brownpaper
Partner
A special collaboration between People Inside Electronics and Villa Aurora
Welcoming Reception
Villa Aurora (520 Paseo Miramar, Los Angeles, CA 90272)

Participants

Maren Kames is a writer and translator shifting hybridly between prose and poetry, with a strong drift towards musical language, rhythm and sound. She will read an extract from her first book HALB TAUBE HALB PFAU (HALF PIGEON HALF PEAFOWL) integrating an audio level and thus exceeding the plain paper dimension. She will also talk about the different stages this text went through until it was finished. (see picture of a sound video installation above).

Philipp Schönthaler will read an excerpt from his recent essay “Portrait of the Manager as a Young Author. On Storytelling, Business, and Literature”. The English edition of the book was published last year.

Sound and media artist Georg Klein will show some examples of installations and projects, leading up to his last work "The Sound before Silence - Souvenirs from North Korea" with an outlook on his subsequent research comparing North Korean and U.S. American kids in music contests and beauty pageants.

Fatma Aydemir studied German and American literature at Goethe Universität in Frankfurt. Since 2012 she has been living in Berlin and working as an editor for the daily newspaper taz. She also contributes to various magazines, such as the feminist publication Missy Magazine and the music magazine Spex. In 2017 her first novel "Ellbogen" was published. It was awarded the Franz Hessel Prize and the Klaus Michael Michael Kühne Preis and was adapted for the stage by numerous German theaters.

Louisa Clement studied painting at Akademie der bildenden Künste in Karlsruhe. She was a Master Student of Andreas Gursky at Kunstakademie Düsseldorf. Her work has been exhibited internationally in group and solo exhibitions.
At Villa Aurora Louisa Clement works on a project dealing with the digitalization of the human body and questions such as:
- What does this mean for the creation of a human personality?
- When will the human body and its digital counterpart be completely independent from each other?
SEEfest
Villa Aurora (Pacific Palisades 520 Paseo Miramar, Pacific Palisades, CA 90272)

Information
Featured speakers included executives from Warner Bros., Walt Disney Studio, Mace Neufeld Productions, Film Finances, Bona Fide Productions, United Talent Agency, L.A. Times, The Hollywood Reporter, Cinedigm, LA FilmForum, Metan Entertainment Group, Entertainment Finance, AMBI Group, EFILM, Sundance Institute, ARRI, Film & Ink LLC, Grey Juice Lab, Pluto TV, as well as co-production executives from Europe and independent producers and filmmakers from Hollywood and Eastern Europe.
Videoart at Midnight #105: Jan-Peter E.R. Sonntag
BABYLON (Rosa-Luxemburg-Platz, Berlin, Big Cinema Hall)

Program
B², 2111/2014
HD video, 2 channel sound, 2 min. loop
PACIFIC NOCTURNE, 2012/2018
An audio-visual composition for 2 crickets, motorbikes on the sunset boulevard, planes over the bay, the cinema organ of the Villa Aurora in the Pacific Palisades during and after the sunset and the moving images of the Ferris wheel of the Pacific Park on the pier of Santa Monica.
BOO84, 2016-2019 (Premiere)
HD video based on NTSC Footage, two-channel sound/composition for British Brassband, 4 min.
SUNDOGS, 2011/2012
HD video, two-channel sound/composition for piano, strings, horns, double bass and granular synthesis, 24 min.
Featuring a live music performance by ER (bass trombone) and Lars Gühlcke (double bass)
TRISTAN, 2012-2019 (Premiere)
HD video, two-channel sound/composition for the cinema organ of the Villa Aurora and live the cinema Organ of the Babylon Kino, 15 min.
Featuring a live music performance by Anna Vavilkina (Babylon cinema organ)
612.43WEISS, 2003-2006/2010
HD video, two-channel sound, 24 min.
Participant

The Berlin-based artist, composer, and theorist Jan-Peter E.R. Sonntag (b. 1965 in Lübeck, Germany) associates the fine arts, new music, and media aesthetics in his artwork, which is usually of installative nature. Videoart at Midnight’s cinema setting will be an exceptional performance of is work. Sonntag studied art, art history, composition, philosophy and cognitive sciences. His mostly spatial works are shown and performed worldwide. He was a fellow of the Akademie Schloss Solitude and Villa Aurora. Since 2013, together with Sebastian Döring, he has published the circuitry notations for Friedrich Kittler “Gesammelte Schriften”. In 2015 he was invited for his mid-career retrospective RAUSCHEN at the Württembergischer Kunstverein in Stuttgart. In 2017 documenta 14. commissioned RUNDFUNK AETERNA – A RADIO OPERA.
Detailed Program
Pacific Nocturne, 2012/2018
2 ch. HD video, two channel sound, 21 min.
A composition for the historic cinema organ of Villa Aurora, two inside mics in the salon and two outside mics in the patio area. The neo-hispanic villa, built in the Pacific Palisades in Los Angeles, is the former residence of exiled Jewish author Lion Feuchtwanger and his wife Marta.
The organ, built by the Artcraft Organ Company of Santa Monica in 1928/1929, was part of the original structure. The organ fills three chambers next to the hall and was restored in 2011.
Pacific Nocturne was written for the cinema organ of Villa Aurora. This big pneumatic and electromagnetically controlled machine has pipes with different sounds. Starting point for Pacific Nocturne was a sonic observation of the soundscape surrounding Villa Aurora during and after sunset: The chirp of two crickets in the foreground and motorbikes racing down Sunset Boulevard in the background. Furthermore, Sonntag tried to understand the inner mechanisms of the organ, developed to imitate an orchestra in order to create the live sound for accompaniment of silent movies. Two mics facing Santa Monica Bay were controlled by the prespecified movements of three digital filters and the two mics inside the salon. There, Sonntag was playing the big sound machine based on the main frequencies channeled from the outside. These almost frozen sounds – a live mixture of non-electronic sounds of nature and those of engines – are played to the endless variations of light pattern of the Ferris wheel on the Santa Monica Pier on the coast of L.A., home to the motion picture industry.
BOO84, 2016-2019 (Premiere)
HD video based on NTSC footage, two-channel sound, 3 min. 43sec.
The Battle of Orgreave on June 18,1984 was a violent confrontation between the police and pickets at a British Steel Corporation (BSC) coking plant in Orgreave, South Yorkshire in Rotherham.
This is the beginning of the Wikipedia entry as of Tuesday, May 7, 6:51 p.m. And then there is a number of video clips online, which were taken by BBC reporters and the police. They were analyzed in the courts and by the police on a continuous basis.
In 2014, working as a composer and video artist on the stage adaptation of David Peace´s book GB84, Sonntag wrestled through the 535 pages of the novel in addition to all the video documentation available online. He tried to create a video testimony of this battle from those sources, and composed music for a British Brass Band. The im line-up of these marching bands and the sound is unique, because, contrary to a continental marching band, or the American marching and big bands, trombones and percussion instruments are not replaced with trumpets, but with all sizes of horns, from the flugelhorn to the tuba. Traditionally, each mine had such a band, which adapted all kinds of music, from actual dance hits to orchestral compositions of the so-called high culture for different special occasions.
Sound recordings of two demonstrations served as an acoustic starting point for the composition, analyzing rhythm and harmony and morphing them together with AI, and arranging the result for the special line-up of the British Brass Band.
For the recording, Sonntag used digital sample banks with well-rehearsed sounds of these special instruments. Referring to recent political events in England, Sonntag has taken this video out of its stage context. It marks a social upheaval, the consequences of which are still relevant today.
Sundogs/Nebensonnen, 2011
HD video, two-channel sound, 24 min.
The video installation “sundogs // Nebensonnen” is based on a musical piece composed by Jan-Peter E.R. Sonntag for Peter Carp’s production of “Winterreise” (Winter Journey) by Elfriede Jelinek. The latter piece, in turn, harks back to Franz Schubert’s eponymous song cycle of 1827, which integrated poems by Wilhelm Müller. Analogue to Jelinek’s text, where fragments of Müller’s poem series appear in Jelinek’s convolutions of seemingly endless monologue, Sonntag takes up two motifs from “Gute Nacht” (Good Night) and “Wegweiser” (Signpost) respectively. He distorts and overextends them on the piano and alpine horn until they fade away, amid soundscapes of contrabass and other strings, in a seemingly boundless flow of crescendo and diminuendo. These psychoacoustic simulations of endlessly rising and falling noise, have been cultivated by Sonntag since 1993 when he realized them for the first time on an IRCAM Workstation. They are based on a manipulation of turning points, which, similar to the Möbius strip or Escher’s stairs, are inextricable.
Continuous musical progression serves as the foundation for the audio-visual composition. The visual film material is unedited and unprocessed. It shows a landscape that is rapidly speeding by, which is repeatedly disrupted by hints of urban and industrial surroundings. Filmed with a strong contre-jour effect, the landscape seems almost graphic in nature. The only fixed point is the close-up remoteness of the sun’s glaring disc at the center of the picture.
TRISTAN, 2012/2019
HD video, 14 min. 36 sec.
Created specifically for this event, creating a sonic dialogue between the Babylon Cinema’s theater organ and recordings of the house organ at the Villa Aurora.
Tristan is a name, a suspended chord, a sound. In this video work, the audience see two big tankers in the fog off the Santa Monica bay, and hear a machine, the same cinematic organ as in Pacific Nocturne plus its engine in a separate room. It is located across from the room, Sonntags stayed in at the Villa Aurora. He had worked on a concept for the cinema organ ahead of his stay in Los Angeles. He used to film the fog creeping up the slope from the Pacific in the morning and tanker movements in the bay during foggy evenings. The installation consisted of three projections – the view into the bay, the view along the corridor and the lamellae of the organ, and a quadrophonic sound system. This is how Pacific Nocturne emerged. It will be played, for the first time, with the recorded sound of Villa Aurora’s movie organ and the live performance on the organ at Babylon Cinema.
612.43WEISS, 2003-2006/2010
HD video, two-channel sound, 24 min.
On the wall outside of the respective projection space in the installation set up, the following is written in Helvetica letters in one continuous line:
The heroic baritone Hans Hotter created a recording of Schubert’s Winterreise in Berlin in 1943 The circle was also closing in Stalingrad at the same time It is now January 2, 2005 and 18 degrees below zero Celsius Snow swirls in the air and fog surrounds the lookout platform on Mt Pilatus Eskimos supposedly have hundreds of words to refer to snow
The materials for the installation include: a section of a reproduction of a photograph showing abandoned military gear outside Stalingrad in 1943, and “Der Leiermann” (The Organ Grinder) taken from Hans Hotter´s first recording of “Die Winterreise”. This recording of Franz Schubert´s cycle of songs, has also been available in digital form for several years now. Originally, it was carved right into wax and later reproduced on shellac records. “Die Winterreise” – a recording of poems by Wilhelm Müller – is an imaginary inner journey. The sense of alienation from the world is the other side of individuation. It reflects the dark side of the »modern« notion of the »subject« as it was being defined at the time, and which, even today, serves as the foundation of modern art and our notion of “the artist”. The city name »Stalingrad« not only stands for the turning point in World War II. Looking back, it also signifies a general collective trauma that is juxtaposed with the (romantic) notion of the subject. Both historical and media-referential documents are amalgamated into a »fast Film« (»almost Cinema«) and brought to a deliberate standstill. (This text was a conceptual starting point and the term »almost cinema« also the title for a video festival in Ghent where the installation was shown). White light is the sum of all colors. Until the development of so-called »digital media«, one assumed a fair amount of objectivity in the technical process of capturing light through chemistry – the spellbinding photographic moment and development process. For years, the photographic image created a new, apparently objective reality that interacted with our non-instrumental/»direct« perception.
A moment of the illusiveness of appearances engraves itself into the film. The traces are then fixed and reproduced ad infinitum. Independent of its material deterioration, the still photographic image is not static since the human eye and its process of seeing is not static, or rather, cannot be fixed. Our eyes scan an image and reconstruct their own picture of the visible figures. They more or less wear themselves out in the process. The facade of a building looks more static when viewed through raindrops rather than in sunlight. A little flash of light that is only perceived out of the corner of our eye lets us see more clearly and with more depth. The re-composition is based on Hotter´s recording. I used digital equipment to try to filter Hotter´s voice out of the piano accompaniment and to free it from the patina of analogue recording, retaining the musical proportions. I kept only a few piano tones, mainly the bourdon tones that imitate the Lyre, and stretched them out digitally. The musical phrase is repeated two and a half times, and thus reflects the repetitious motif of the barrel organ. Due to this repetition the micropolyphonics become increasingly longer. Sonntag is concerned with elongating something to a standstill – abstraction and pathos in an extended moment.
B²
HD video, 2 channel sound, 2 min. 17sec. loop
B² is a TV play, a composition for 4 football players in gray hooded jerseys.
It is Gallery Weekend 2011 in Berlin Auguststrasse: Instead of striding the choreography “Quad” by Samual Becket on a flood-lit green football field, the 4 players are running an adaptation of it – 30 years after Becket realized this non-verbal piece for Süddeutscher Rundfunk TV. The reason for this camera performance was a request by ZDF, for a half-day shoot in Sonntag’s studio, showing how he works and interviewing him.
Sonntag had the idea for the work years ago, when, coming from an opening at KW, he caught sight of the football players in the floodlights, which made him think of “Quad”, especially since he doesn’t play football. We show the last part of this documentary, the finished work for TV, in relation to its evolution.
Partner
In cooperation with

The Arab Spring and the Literature
Literaturhaus Berlin (Fasanenstraße 23, 10719 Berlin)

Information
The authors Ali Al Muqri (Yemen), Abdelaziz Baraka Sakin (Sudan), Omar Edlbi (Syria), Nora Amin (Egypt), Golan Haji (Syria), Najwa Benshatwan (Libya) and Inam Kachachi (Iraq) were invited for an Arab-German get-together with readings and conversation.
The event is curated and moderated by Yasmine Merei. The 2015 Feuchtwanger Fellow at Villa Aurora is now Fellow »Weltoffenes Berlin« at Literaturhaus Berlin.
After the event oriental music will be played and Syrian food will be served. The talk will be in Arabic with simulaneous translations into by Günther Orth.
Entrance fee 7 € / red. 4 €
Tickets via ticket@literaturhaus-berlin.de
Partners
In cooperation with Literaturhaus Berlin und Orschina e.V.
Michael John Kelly & Rachel Eulena Williams
68projects GalerieKornfeld (Fasanenstraße 68, 10719 Berlin)

Information
Exhibition Opening
At the invitation of Villa Aurora & Thomas Mann House, Michael John Kelly spent two months as Berlin fellow in Berlin. For his stay, Kelly brought more than 40 digital paintings on paper with him, which he successively tore apart over the period of the residency. His art, situated between digital drawing, video art and classical abstract painting, references an entire era of artistic practice.His aim is not so much to translate digital painting back to its analogue counterpart, but instead to connect them, making them experienceable.
Williams also deals with the conditions and possibilities of the classical medium of painting. She deconstructs the rectangular canvas creating her own surface by connecting it with ropes and fabrics - often found objects collected during her stay in Berlin. The formal boundaries of her works are often unclear, and the creative process thus revealed is an integral part of the work's narrative. The fragmented canvases tell of their own creation, the connections made by ropes create a visual strand, open spaces as points of tension or calming empty lines to read.
Partner
An event by 68projects GalerieKornfeld Berlin and VATMH

Concert Fundraiser - Hindemith Recordings
Los Angeles

Information

SILENT SALON Screening: The Dragnet Girl
Los Angeles

Information
Talking pictures came relatively late to Japan: it would be 1930 before a feature-length Japanese talkie was released, and silent films continued to be produced throughout the decade such as Yasujiro Ozu’s rarely screened 1933 drama Dragnet Girl (Hijosen no onna), which didn't even feature a musical score. However, 2017 Villa Aurora fellow Udo Moll will be at hand to create the sound track for this master piece, full of stunning imagery and distinctive mise-en-scène.
"Dragnet Girl is a formally accomplished and psychologically complex gangster tale pivoting on the growing attraction between Joji, a hardened career criminal, and Kazuko, the sweet-natured older sister of a newly initiated young hoodlum—a relationship that provokes the jealousy of Joji’s otherwise patient moll, Tokiko. With effortlessly cool performances and visual inventiveness, Dragnet Girl is a bravura work from Yasujiro Ozu." (Criterion Collection)
Participant
2015 Villa Aurora fellow Udo Moll was born in Kirchheim unter Teck and lives and works in Cologne.
His initial musical socialization process took place in the brass orchestra of the city of Uhingen. He studied empirical cultural sciences, musicology, romanistic and new German literature at the Eberhard-Karls-Universität Tübingen and went on to study the jazz trumpet with Manfred Schoof and composition with Johannes Fritsch at the Music Academy Cologne.
Udo Moll works as a freelance composer, trumpeter and in the field of electronic music and tours internationally.
Partners
Villa Aurora & Thomas Mann House e. V. is supported by the German Federal Foreign Office and Federal Government Commissioner for Culture and the Media.

Concert: NORTH ATLANTIC JAZZ ALLIANCE
Los Angeles

Information
NAJA is a jazz collective comprised of three Germans and four Americans. The musicians have been seamlessly fusing jazz adaptations of classical pieces with touches of avant-garde compositions and funk-infused, straight-ahead rhythms.
Pianist and founder of NAJA, Markus Burger, and saxophonist Jan von Klewitz as well as the entire ensemble played to sold-out houses at Villa Aurora before. Welcome back!
NAJA will depart on a 4-concert tour in July of 2019 with concerts scheduled in Southern California, Las Vegas and Alaska. The tour is part of the “Deutschlandjahr USA”, The Year of German-American Friendship, an initiative of the German Federal Foreign Office and the Goethe-Institut.
Under the banner "Wunderbar Together" the campaign will travel across the entire U.S., bringing with it a collection of events and exhibits revolving around business and industry, politics, education, culture, and science, to highlight the unique importance of transatlantic relations.
Partners
Villa Aurora & Thomas Mann House e. V. is supported by the German Federal Foreign Office and Federal Government Commissioner for Culture and the Media.

Meet the Fellows
Villa Aurora (520 Paseo Miramar, Los Angeles, CA 90272)

Participants

Uisenma Borchu & Sven Zellner will talk about two of their joint projects:
One is DON’T LOOK AT ME THAT WAY, a compelling examination of female roles, the power of sexuality, gender identity and alienation between cultures. Combining a naturalistic style with an ever-present air of the surreal, the film captured a FIPRESCI prize at Filmfest München, along with Best Direction – Young Film at the Bavarian Film Awards, Most Promising Talent at the Osaka Asian Film Festival, and the International New Talent Competition’s Grand Prize at the Taipei Film Festival.
Watch the tailer here
The other project is BLACKMILK, shot in Mongolia 2018.
In BLACKMILK two sisters meet after twenty years of separation. One grew up in Western Europe, the other in the Gobi Desert. This encounter turns their worlds upside down. A fight for love and recognition begins.

Leo Hofmann is going to welcome you to into his music studio. It's not only a work place, but also the temporary home for him and his machines. Sit on the sofa or the floor, while Leo is creating waves with automation and algorithms. Referencing genres such as audio drama, opera and vaporwave, the semi-virtual ensemble explores new connections between electronic music production and its performance, addressing visions of creative rationalization and consumer culture.

Angelika Levi is a research based filmmaker and video artist, working with a range of media – particularly film material, video, audio, photography and text.
Her work contains thematic lines as well as narrative structures, which have a completely unique signature and enter into a congenial dialogue with her choice of cinematic means opening up a space of freedom: the freedom, of circling a subject, of approaching associatively, of digressing, of pursuing secondary paths, to return to the starting point in a non-linear movement. The question is often more important than the answer, the approach, both content-wise as emotionally, more productive than the fixation.
Her work is part of the group exhibition Territorium Tijuana https://territorium-tijuana.org
On August 8th you will have the chance to be among the first to see Angelika’s new piece which is being edited as we speak.

Christoph Keller's installations frequently resemble experimental configurations in which he uses the discursive possibilities of art to investigate the themes of science and its utopias. The Cloudbuster-Projects for example involve reenactments of Wilhelm Reich’s experiments for influencing the atmosphere with orgone energy. In Los Angeles Christoph Keller revisits his previous formation as a hydrologist for an artistic inquiry into the city's water supply.

Hadeer El-Mahdawy has worked for various independent Egyptian media. She is currently a full time reporter for the independent, bilingual news website Mada Masr. She focuses on domestically sensitive topics, such as political detentions, labor and women's rights, refugee issues, religious minorities and the seizure of private property.
On August 8th she is reading a short story about a political detainee in Cairo, attending the funeral of his father.

Ole Hübner studied composition in Hanover and Cologne and holds an MA in Applied Theatre Studies from the University of Giessen. Since 2015 he has been focusing on the development of music theatre in open formats and discursive, democratic team constellations, e.g. at the Munich Biennale 2016, the Venice Biennale 2017, the Stanislavski and Nemirovich-Danchenko Moscow Academic Music Theatre 2018, at Gare du Nord Basel and at the Halle Opera House 2020. In the field of concert music, he has collaborated groups such as Klangforum Wien, Ensemble Modern, Decoder Ensemble and NAMES Ensemble. Throughout all genres, the enrichment and reassessment of knowledge and techniques of contemporary music through theatric and theatrological perspectives is of crucial interest to him. In 2018 he started to work as a lecturer in composition at the University of Giessen.
On August 8th you will have the chance to listen to a live recording of his piece „Masse und Bewegung“ („Mass and Movement“) for 14 instruments, played by Ensemble Phœnix on June 8th, 2019, at Gare du Nord Basel.
SILENT SALON Screening: An evening with Asta Nielsen
Los Angeles (Villa Aurora, 520 Paseo Miramar)
Information
The Film Primadonna

Dir. Urban Gad, Germany, Denmark 1913, 17 min, silent starring Asta Nielsen
This enchanting fragment allows a satirical view into studio and production facilities of early silent film.
"The main plot of Die Filmprimadonna is launched when we see Ruth Breton (Asta Nielsen) receive a screenplay from Walter Heim (Fritz Weidemann). The search for a suitable manuscript now resolved, the film details the workings of the studio and the shooting process, as Ruth and Walter become romantically involved." (Silents Please)
The ABC of Love (Das Liebes ABC)

Dir. Magnus Stifter, Germany, 1916, 50 min, silent, starring Asta Nielsen
Das Liebes-ABC (1916) sees Asta Nielsen in a comedic trouser-role as Lis, a dashing young lady engaged to be married to Philipp who she feels. is somewhat boring and campy. In order to "educate" him, she, dressed as a man, takes him to Paris, where she introduces him to the theatre and club scene. When her father visits, the plot gets more twisted and some more cross dressing is required.
Participant
Michael Mortilla started his full time career as a serious composer in 1976. He was company pianist for legendary choreographer, Martha Graham and was the last composer to work directly with her in the studio on a produced dance work. Mr. Mortilla served as Resident Composer for Theater & Dance at the University of California, on the faculty, and as Principal Musician from 1986 to 2000. His work is performed worldwide with commissions from the Library of Congress, Academy of Motion Picture Arts & Sciences, Chicago Symphony Orchestra, Turner Classic Movies, National Film Preservation Foundation, PBS, NPR, and The Catalina Island Museum, among others.
SILENT SALON Screening: The Nut
Los Angeles (Villa Aurora, 520 Paseo Miramar)

Information
1921, 75 min.
Charlie (Fairbanks) has a girlfriend Estrell (De La Motte) who has a theory that if rich people would take a number of poor children into their homes each day, the environment would cause the children to grow up properly. Since Estrell does not know any of these rich people, Charlie offers to arrange a meeting. However, Charlie thinks impostors will do as well as real rich people, so first he hires some burglars and gamblers. Then he tries using dummies, but Estell is not fooled and becomes indignant. A wealthy man working as a reporter goes to investigate a report of a man dragging a body which turns out to be Charlie moving a dummy, allowing Charlie to finally meet someone rich.
Participant
Michael Mortilla started his full time career as a serious composer in 1976. He was company pianist for legendary choreographer, Martha Graham and was the last composer to work directly with her in the studio on a produced dance work. Mr. Mortilla served as Resident Composer for Theater & Dance at the University of California, on the faculty, and as Principal Musician from 1986 to 2000. His work is performed worldwide with commissions from the Library of Congress, Academy of Motion Picture Arts & Sciences, Chicago Symphony Orchestra, Turner Classic Movies, National Film Preservation Foundation, PBS, NPR, and The Catalina Island Museum, among others.
Exhibition: Max Göran "Assholes Live Forever"
Jenny's (4220 Sunset Boulecard, Los Angeles, CA 90029)
Information

A scaffold supports a projector, a projector-screen, and a flat-screen TV, a bench is provided for you to sit on as you watch the two videos and listen to their soundtracks. One is about twenty minutes long, and the other is ten minutes; they play contiguously, creating novel overlaps each time round. The footage was all filmed over the course of three months in 2019, in and around Los Angeles.
Initially invited to stay at Villa Aurora, under the auspices of Studienstiftung des Deutschen Volkes, the artist then moved in with a friend and Tiffany the Scabies Cat in Lincoln Heights. He put ads on Craigslist, and met more LA residents who were willing to participate in his filming, either as protagonists or interviewees, or sometimes both.
Different textures of freedom might be found on the periphery of the city. This could be the physical periphery, as with dirt bikers who appear in the film, or the social periphery, where the furry subculture exists. Other kinds of animals also inhabit these spaces - hares, racoons, cats, foxes- and their animal freedoms are sometimes cut short by humans, sometimes protected by them. The object of pity becomes a possible vessel for feelings by proxy.
Art Production in La La Land. From the Beginnings at CalArts to the Present Digital Visual Worlds in Los Angeles.
Berlin (Flughafen Tempelhof Hangar 5 and 6 Tempelhofer Damm 45 12101 Berlin U6 Paradestrasse)

Participants

Louisa Clement, born in 1987 in Bonn, lives and works in Bonn.
At the beginning of this year, Louisa Clement was a guest at Villa Aurora, the former US exile residence of Lion and Marta Feuchtwanger. Her work ties in with one of the most pressing themes of our time: the confrontation with being human in digital times. Her photographs, videos and VR projects show bodies without eyes, mouth and nose, faceless and genderless; aesthetic avatars and digital pictorial spaces in which the audience can communicate with bots. Louisa Clement talks about her experiences in Los Angeles and the influence of media technologies on her art production.

Julika Bosch arbeitet als Kuratorin in der Kestner Gesellschaft, Hannover. Sie realisierte dort u.a. Ausstellungen zum Werk von Roman Siegner, Nevin Aladag u. Walter Dahn. 2019 hat sie an einer umfassenden Ausstellung zu den frühen Jahren des California Institute of the Arts mitgearbeitet. "Wo Kunst geschehen kann – Die frühen Jahre des CalArts" widmet sich den ersten zehn Jahren der Kunsthochschule und führt erstmalig die dort vertretenen Lehrkonzepte mit den daraus entwickelten künstlerischen Praktiken in einer Gruppenschau zusammen. Die Ausstellung ist noch bis bis 10. November in der Kestner Gesellshaft, Hannover zu sehen und 2020 im Kunsthaus Graz.
Partner
A Cooperation with Berlin Art Week
Concert Eclectic Salon: Another World
Los Angeles
Information

Pianist Genevieve Lee joins members of Brightwork Ensemble to present an evening of music from another place and time. In Saariaho’s enigmatic Mirrors, performers are given a series of musical fragments, to be assembled as desired, breaking down the need for a goal-oriented order. Veronika Krausas Un-Intermezziare inspired by China Miéville’s Un-Lun Dun, is a haunting story of an alternate and parallel universe. George Crumb’s masterpiece Vox Balaenae (Voice of the Whale), for three masked players bathed in blue light, takes the audience on a captivating, mysterious, and timeless journey. Altromondo (Another World), by Kurt Rhode, calls for melodicas, harmonicas, Chinese paper accordions, triangles, and antique cymbals, in addition to a number of preparations inside the piano. We are transported to a place where time is not an arrow – locations are in flux, and the music as “object” never stands still.
Presented by Tuesdays@MonkSpace, Brightwork Ensemble and Villa Aurora
Program
Kaija Saariaho: Mirrors (1997)
Maggie Parkins, cello
Sarah Wass, flute
Veronika Krausas: Un-Intermezzi (2012)
Aron Kallay, piano
George Crumb: Vox Balaenae for Three Masked Players (1971)
Maggie Parkins, cello
Sarah Wass, flute
Traci Esslinger, piano
Kurt Rohde: Altromondo (2014)
Genevieve Lee, piano
Aron Kallay, piano
Partners
Villa Aurora & Thomas Mann House e. V. is supported by the German Federal Foreign Office and Federal Government Commissioner for Culture and the Media.

Walls - An International Conference
Los Angeles (UCLA Royce Hall 314)

Information
Actress Susanne Sachsse will join the conference via Skype, director and producer Can Candan’s film Duvarlar-Mauern-Walls will be screened, and scholars Ilse Helbrecht, David Kim, Kalani Michell, Isotta Poggi, Todd Presner, Yasemin Yildiz, and Maite Zubiaurre will lead a roundtable discussion on these central questions.
"A Woman Walks through Socialism"
1:pm–1:30pm
Susanne Sachsse | A long distance performance
"Duvarlar - Mauern - Walls"
2:00pm–3:30pm
Can Candan | Documentary film screening
Coffee Break
3:30pm–4:00pm
"The Berlin Wall and Unification: Nationalism, Populism, and Memory"
4:00pm–5:30pm
Panel discussion | Participants:
Ilse Helbrecht (Humboldt University, Visiting Scholar, TMH)
David Kim (UCLA)
Kalani Michell (UCLA)
Todd Presner (UCLA)
Yasemin Yildiz (UCLA)
Maite Zaubiaurre (UCLA)
Reception at 306 Royce Hall
5:30pm
Partners
An event by UCLA Department of Germanic Languages in collaboration with Thomas Mann House and the Getty Research Institute.


LA Premiere Screening: Artur Schnabel. No Place of Exile - A Film by Matthew Mishory
Los Angeles

Information
A legend among pianists of the twentieth century, Artur Schnabel (1882–1951) is best known as the first performer to record the complete cycle of Beethoven’s piano sonatas. The exiled Austro-German musician and composer was a giant of his time, but today he is nearly forgotten.
No Place of Exile is the cinematic rediscovery of an essential 20th century artist displaced by the catastrophe of the two World Wars and the Holocaust and inspired by the possibilities of modernism.
The film follows pianist and Schnabel devotee Markus Pawlik as he prepares to bring Artur Schnabel’s greatest compositions back to Germany in a major commemorative concert at Berlin's Musikfest. Along the way, we visit the places, landscapes, and history that shaped and inspired Schnabel’s life and music. Commenting on and performing Schnabel’s oeuvre are celebrated actor Udo Samel and musical personalities such as Dietrich Henschel, Igor Levit, Kent Nagano, Leon Fleisher, Jeanne Bamberger, and Walter Arlen.
A Q&A will follow the screening. The evening will open with a performance of Robert Schumann's Phantasie op. 17 (1st mvt.) by Markus Pawlik.
Presented by
Light on Shadow / Monolithic Films / Matthew Mishory
and Villa Aurora
Watch the trailer here: www.noplaceofexile.com
Partners
Villa Aurora & Thomas Mann House e. V. is supported by the German Federal Foreign Office and Federal Government Commissioner for Culture and the Media.

Farewell Concert & Membership Drive
Los Angeles

Information
Sunday Matinee!
Featuring Jazz greats
MARKUS BURGER & ALMER IMAMOVIC
Jazz pianist Markus Burger is joining Bosnian-born guitarist Almer Imamovic for an acoustic mélange centering around melodies that cross the bridge between music from the Balkan with jazz and European chamber music, creating melodies that bridge the gap between two different high cultures.
Almer and Markus would like to debut some of their new titles LIVE at Villa Aurora.
This concert is also a gift to Villa Aurora and a farewell to Margit Kleinman who will leave her post as director in February of 2020.
Participants
Burger is the creator of “Spiritual Standards” and founder of the North Atlantic Jazz Alliance. His musical output is documented on 15 CDs ranging from solo piano work (Ultreya) to his renowned duo with saxophonist Jan von Klewitz entitled Spiritual Standards to his Trio Accidental Tourist with Jazz legends Bob Magnusson on bass and Peter Erskine on drums.
He performs internationally from the Vatican to Russia, Brazil and Iceland.
Imamovic is a highly sought-after composer having played in concerts on five continents. As a versatile and innovative guitar player, he is a master of the electric guitar as well as of Latin and Balkan stringed instruments. Most recently, Imamovic's song “Stani Draga" was featured in the film "In the Land of Blood and Honey", by Angelina Jolie.
Partners
Villa Aurora & Thomas Mann House e. V. is supported by the German Federal Foreign Office and Federal Government Commissioner for Culture and the Media.
