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2025 April 16, 2025

Extensive scope of Swedish avantgarde at Austrian Film Museum

Österreichisches Filmmuseum

Austrian Film Museum logo

Works distributed by Filmform make up most of the two-day screening event “Sweden Images: The Amos Vogel Atlas 20” at the Austrian Film Museum. The programme is dedicated to the recently deceased Gunvor Nelson, who is presented by two films, and Staffan Lamm. Russelltribunalen (2006) by the latter is the newest film in the programme which chronologically streches back as far as to Reinhold Holtermann’s Stockholmsbilder – experiment (1929). Curated by Martin Grennberger and Stefan Ramstedt.

Film programme:
Works distributed by Filmform

1

Ansikten i skugga

Peter Weiss

1957, 00:13:00

2

Antifilm

Carl Slättne

1962, 00:04:53

3

Coca nr 1

Olle Hedman

1979, 00:00:36

4

En dag i staden

Pontus Hultén & Hans Nordenström

1956, 00:19:00

5

Förvandla Sverige

Jan Lindqvist & Stefan Jarl

1974, 00:30:00

6

KIRSA NICHOLINA

Gunvor Nelson

1969, 00:16:00

7

Mass - Monument for a Capitalist Society

Åsa Sjöström

1976, 00:14:00

8

N

Anne Robertsson

1967, 00:03:00

9

Renslakt vid Krutvattnet/Reindeer slaughter at Lake Krutvattnet

Louise O'Konor

1967, 00:06:00

10

Russelltribunalen

Staffan Lamm

2006, 00:09:27

11

Sightseeing

Peter Nestler

1968, 00:10:00

12

Study in Optical Rhythm

Björn Lüning

1953, 00:06:00

13

Travelog – bilder från en resa

Claes Söderquist

1969, 00:30:00

14

Velocipeden Union

Kjell Johansson

1965, 00:09:00

15

X

Pontus Hultén

1954, 00:10:00

What images of Sweden exist beyond the major canonized names whose radiance and international fame have forced all other images to the side, as in so many other countries with small film production histories? This program moves between formal experiments, activist documentaries, and animated films focused on kinetic research, investigating some of these hidden traces, broken narratives, and alternative histories.

The selection includes amateur filmmaker Reinhold Holtermann’s Stockholmsbilder (1930), which can be considered as the first Swedish experimental film due to its imaginative and suggestive camera editing; films made in the context of different movements and groups – such as Arbetsgruppen för film (later Filmform), Svenska Filmligan, and FilmCentrum – and works displaying, in one way or another, connections between Swedish experimental film culture, international avant-garde films, and art.

The program is dedicated to Gunvor Nelson and Staffan Lamm, both of whom recently passed away. They are very different filmmakers: Nelson is the most famous Swedish experimental filmmaker, Lamm a hardly known documentary and essay filmer. Yet, their different aesthetic approaches reflect the breadth of Swedish avant-garde film culture and also encompass the various political methods which are gathered in this program. (Stefan Ramstedt, Martin Grennberger / Translation: Ted Fendt)

With Stefan Ramstedt and Martin Grennberger in attendance.

Amos Vogel (1921–2012), an Austrian-born Jew, became one of the most important figures in international film culture after his emigration to the United States. The Amos Vogel Atlas is a series dedicated continuing Vogel’s oppositional legacy alongside the study of his literary estate, which is deposited in the Film Museum. Rarities from the collection represent key focal points.

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