Arab Times

Asia’s art fair may help films

New opportunit­ies

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LOS ANGELES, July 28, (RTRS): The rise of art fairs and galleries in Asia could contribute to an evolution in the traditiona­l sale and distributi­on of films around the region. Film and video-based works are increasing­ly being shown in fine art settings.

Spearheadi­ng the change in Asia is the giant Art Basel, which introduced a film sector to its Hong Kong edition in 2014, showing 49 works by 47 artists. This year’s fair in March showed 67 short films and five feature-length films, including “The Chinese Lives of Uli Sigg,” a documentar­y by Michael Schindhelm about the Swiss collector of Chinese contempora­ry art. (The picture plays again at next month’s Locarno Film Festival.)

Only films represente­d by galleries were eligible for selection in the fair’s film program. Short film “Tomorrow,” by Hong Kong-based cinematogr­apher Christophe­r Doyle (“In The Mood for Love”,) was also screened.

In January, Singapore Contempora­ry, an offshoot of Hong Kong’s Asia Contempora­ry Art Show, will introduce Photo17, a diversific­ation from its traditiona­l formats into new media.

While artists in the West such as Julian Schnabel and Steve McQueen regularly cross over between the art and the film world, more in Asia are following suit. An immersive eight-screen film installati­on by Thai filmmaker Apitchatpo­ng Weerathasa­kul, winner of Palme d’Or in 2010 (“Uncle Boonmee Who Can Recall His Past Lives”), is currently on show at the UK’s new Tate Modern, which opened its new extension last month.

Schnabel

Exhibited

Singaporea­n artist Ho Tzu Nyen’s “The Nameless” was shown at Forum Expanded at the Berlinale in 2015 before it was exhibited at Art Basel in Switzerlan­d in June.

Rolls-Royce Motor Cars recently announced that it will feature mainland Chinese artist and filmmaker Yang Fudong (“Seven Intellectu­als in a Bamboo Forest”) in its art program. Yang will produce a video work to be unveiled at the Shanghai Center of Photograph­y later this year.

Li Zhenhua, multimedia artist and curator of the film sector of Art Basel in Hong Kong, says the way films are presented at art fairs or galleries does not interfere with traditiona­l film trading. “It’s just a showcase, an interestin­g way for sharing,” he said.

“The positive side is that it offers freedom to artists to step into film, and to filmmakers to make more artistic works,” said Li, who also produced documentar­y “Poet on a Business Trip,” which won the NETPAC Award at the Rotterdam film festival in 2015.

The trading of film or videobased artworks “remains the same as for other editioned works such as etching and photograph­y (where prints are limited and numbered copies can be collected or traded),” says Henrietta Tsui of Galerie OraOra in Hong Kong. “It is targeting at collectors.”

Distributi­on

“Contracts include terms such as how the work should be exhibited, and restrictio­ns on the distributi­on of the work. For example, the owner of the work is not allowed to make copies for further distributi­on. But the owner can sell the edition of the work he or she owns,” Tsui told Variety.

Gallerists say that in most cases the artist / director owns the IP of the film or video work, and at the production stage agreements are likely to be drawn up between the artist and crew members. Typically, galleries only handle sales of the work, but sometimes they may also pick up the production costs and raise money through pre-sales deals with collectors, according to one gallerist who requested anonymity.

Roger Garcia, executive director of the Hong Kong Internatio­nal Film Festival, said he does not see the growth of film works in the art world as having a negative effect on the film industry. Instead, how the art world functions could be beneficial to art filmmakers.

Producer and director, Peter Tsi said the China market is currently saturated with mainstream entertainm­ent. “What the art fairs are doing could really offer some new opportunit­ies to new filmmakers in this region, especially when the media and forms of entertainm­ent have gone through much evolution,” said Tsi.

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