London Film-Makers' Co-op

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The London Film-makers' Co-op, or LFMC, was a British film-making workshop founded in 1966. It ceased to exist in 1999 when it merged with London Electronic Arts to form LUX.[1] For most of its life the LFMC was based in Gloucester Avenue in Camden in a run down building which for a number of years also housed the London Musicians Collective. In 1997 the LFMC moved to the new Lux Centre, Hoxton Square.

It grew out of film screenings at the Better Books bookstore, part of the 1960s counter-culture in London.[2] and was founded by, amongst others, Steve Dwoskin and Bill Cobbing, inspired by Jonas Mekas's The Film-Makers' Cooperative in New York. One difference between the New York Co-op and the LFMC was that the LFMC was organized as an egalitarian, worksharing cooperative, which assisted production as well as distribution.[3]

It initially had close links with American experimental cinema. Dwoskin and Peter Gidal were ex-Factory artists and Carla Liss ran the co-op's distribution archive[4]

Filmmakers associated with the group include Malcolm LeGrice, Peter Gidal[5] and William Raban, who managed the LFMC workshop from 1972 - 76. Sally Potter made several short films at the LFMC in the early 1970s.[6]

Work produced by members of the LFMC in the late 1960s and early 1970s has been labelled Structural Film.[7]

[edit] References

  1. ^ BFI website, accessed May 4, 2008
  2. ^ Christoph Grunenberg and Jonathan Harris, Summer of Love: Psychedelic Art, Social Crisis and Counterculture in the 1960s, Liverpool University Press, 2005, p102. ISBN 0853239193
  3. ^ David E. James and Rick Berg, The Hidden Foundation: Cinema and the Question of Class, University of Minnesota Press, 1996, pp198-199. ISBN 0816627045
  4. ^ A.L.Rees, A History of Experimental Film and Video, 1999, BFI.
  5. ^ Bart J. Moore-Gilbert, The Arts in the 1970s: Cultural Closure?, Routledge, 1994, p231. ISBN 0415099064
  6. ^ Marsha MacCreadie, Women Screenwriters Today: Their Lives And Words, Praeger/Greenwood, 2006, p63. ISBN 0275985423
  7. ^ Tate Britain film programme, accessed May 4, 2008.

[edit] External links