Block Cinema: Northwestern University Evanston, IL
Artemis Willis
Media Historian, Media Arts Curator, and Media maker
andJoel Schlemowitz
Experimental Filmmaker
Urania and the Asclepiades— Magic lantern performance
Program Description
Throughout the 19th century and well into the 20th century—before and after the invention of cinema—audiences around the world flocked to scientific lectures illustrated by luminous magic lantern images.
Following the approximately 30-minute performance of Urania and the Asclepiades, a magic lantern performance by Artemis Willis (in collaboration with lanternist Joel Schlemowitz), Willis and Schlemowitz will discuss the history of magic lantern performance, the use of projected images in scientific lectures, and the challenges and rewards of studying and performing with the lantern today.
Presented At
Block Cinema: Northwestern University Evanston, IL
Film Synopsis
A magic lantern performance by Artemis Willis (in collaboration with lanternist Joel Schlemowitz), in which projected images from the fields of astronomy and medicine merge seamlessly on the screen.
In Urania and the Asclepiades, a magic lantern performance by Artemis Willis (in collaboration with lanternist Joel Schlemowitz), projected images from the fields of astronomy and medicine merge seamlessly on the screen, transporting us from the heavenly to the human and back, with possible detours.
Created for The Heart’s Knowledge: Science and Empathy in the Art of Dario Robleto, this performance explores how the lantern has connected popular audiences to the cosmos and microcosmos, often by way of ancient myths. Vignettes drawn from the work of women who lectured on the international circuit a century ago pay tribute to these underrecognized ladies of the lantern, while also creating new mythologies about women and screen media.
Featuring original magic lantern slides and a c.1890 mahogany biunial (or double) magic lantern combining two projectors in a single device.
About the Speaker
Artemis Willis is a media historian, media arts curator, and media maker. She is currently at work on a book manuscript on the history. theory, and practice of the magic lantern, titled Lanternology. She received her Ph.D. in Cinema and Media Studies from the University of Chicago.
Joel Schlemowitz is an experimental filmmaker based in Brooklyn who works with 16mm film, shadowplay, magic lanterns, and stereographic media. He is the author of Experimental Filmmaking and the Motion Picture Camera: An Introductory Guide for Artists and Filmmakers (Focal Press/Routledge).