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Charadrius Dubious

Cathy Lee Crane

2014 00:08:00 United States English B&W and Color Stereo 16:9 Video
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Description

An excerpt from Assassin of Youth: A Kaleidoscopic History of Harry Anslinger’s War on Drugs [University of Chicago Press (2016)] as written and spoken in voice over by Alexandra Chasin. “Charadrius Dubius: A Play of Birds, Plants, and People in the Contact Zone,” inverts Book 9 of Homer’s Odyssey, taking the perspective of the Lotus Eaters—and then inverts that perspective too. Disciplines from the Northern Hemisphere—Literature, Botany, Anthropology—go swirly in Equatorial climes. Humans from the Northern Hemisphere eat the local Lotus flower, changing the nature of contact.  The number three takes flight. Everything comes from the sea and returns there after contact.

Charadrius Dubious was co-created with Alexandra Chasin.

About Cathy Lee Crane

Since 1994, Cathy Lee Crane has crafted a body of work that mines the historical archive to produce lyrical films of speculative history. She received the Guggenheim Fellowship in 2013 in recognition for her unique re-combinations of archival and staged material. Pasolini’s Last Words (2012) was supported by the New York State Council on the Arts and the New York Foundation for the Arts Fellowship. It premiered at the Festival du Nouveau Cinema as a “gem of world cinema”. Crane received the first survey of her work in 2015 as part of the American Original Now series at the National Gallery of Art. Six of her award-winning short films are distributed on 16mm by Canyon Cinema and Lightcone. Crane's first feature-length narrative film The Manhattan Front (2018) premiered at SFIndie Fest to rave reviews. Film theorist Noel Burch has called it “a masterpiece”. Since 2017, her ongoing work on the US/Mexico border, funded by the El Paso Community Foundation’s Border Arts Residency and the Creative Arts Fellowship at the Rockefeller Foundation Bellagio Center has produced numerous iterations of its cross-platform design: Crossing Columbus (2020) a feature-length documentary awarded Best Feature Documentary at the Syracuse International Film Festival, terrestrial sea (2022) a short film awarded a Jury Citation from the Festival de Cinema da Fronteira in Brazil and presented as part of the (X)-trACTION collective she co-founded in 2020 with artists Jason Livingston, Laurie McKenna, Nicole Antebi, and Erin Wilkerson. As the 2022 Artist-in-Residence at the Harun Farocki Institute in Berlin, she presented a 14-channel sculptural installation work-in-progress Drawing the Line from which two diptychs have been produced for NOW!Journal and as part of the Video Art Section at El Kazma (Gabes, Tunisia) in 2023. Crane is a Professor of Film at Ithaca College.