Retrospective: Pier Paolo Pasolini

Thu, Dec 19, 2013

“It is no exaggeration to suggest that (Pasolini) is the most influential cultural figure in Italy since the Second World War, and his influence remains largely undiminished since his assassination in 1975….”—Artforum

Columbus, OH—The next two months will see the Wex present a nearly complete retrospective of work by famed director Pier Paolo Pasolini, with many titles screening in newly restored 35mm prints.

Best known in the US as one of the great Italian postwar filmmakers, Pasolini was also an influential, outspoken, and openly gay poet, novelist, critic, journalist, playwright, and painter who held seemingly conflicting philosophies as both a Marxist and a Catholic, and was a staunch leftist who once spoke out against left-wing student protests in favor of the working-class police. Pasolini’s filmography represents perhaps the most subversive body of work ever put to film, still provoking outrage and charges of blasphemy in some quarters. However controversial, the themes he explores achieve a measure of timelessness and universality as many of his films are set in the distant past. Most importantly, his films often portray the lives of those existing on the fringes of society, in roles often played by nonprofessional actors.

The series was coproduced by the Wex. All films will screen in 35mm in Italian (with English subtitles realized by Luce Cinecittà), unless otherwise noted.

David Filipi, director of film/video (and one of the series’ co-organizers), notes, “The films of Pasolini are among the greatest in the canon of world cinema. It’s a tremendous thrill to bring Columbus audiences such an extensive survey of his work, as well as associated talks that will give viewers a much deeper look and understanding of this major filmmaker’s life, work, and continuing influence.”

 

Retrospective: Pier Paolo Pasolini

  • Pasolini and the Queer Avant Garde
    At this talk, Italian literature and film scholar Derek Duncan explores this connection and how it reinserts Pasolini into a Queer avant-garde tradition of filmmaking.
    Thu, Jan 16 | 5 PM
    FREE
  • Mamma Roma (Pier Paolo Pasolini, 1962)
    Fri, Jan 17 | 7 PM
  • Medea 1969, or Women’s Self-Abolition in the Years of Lead
    Louis-Georges Schwartz, associate professor of film studies in Ohio University’s School of Dance, Film, and Theater, examines Pasolini’s film Medea in the context of Italian feminism and the women’s struggle within militant movements between 1969 and 1978.
    Thu, Feb 13 | 5 PM
    FREE
  • Medea (Pier Paolo Pasolini, 1969)
    Thu, Feb 13 | 7 PM
Downloadable Assets

Retrospective: Pier Paolo Pasolini is coproduced by the Wexner Center for the Arts; Luce Cinecittà, Rome; and Fondo Pier Paolo Pasolini/Cineteca di Bologna.

This series is organized by David Filipi, director of film/video at the Wexner Center for the Arts, and by Camilla Cormanni and Paola Ruggiero, Luce Cinecittà, with Roberto Chiesi, Fondo Pier Paolo Pasolini/Cineteca di Bologna. Presented in association with the Ministry of Culture of Italy. This event is part of the celebrations of the Year of Italian Culture in the United States.

Significant contributions for the Wexner Center’s 2013–14 film/video season are made by the Rohauer Collection Foundation.

The preferred airline of the film/video program is American Airlines.

The Wexner Center also receives generous support from the Greater Columbus Arts CouncilThe Columbus FoundationNationwide Foundation, and the Ohio Arts Council, as well as from the Corporate Annual Fund of the Wexner Center Foundation and Wexner Center members.