Sekcje 2025: Punk, Glitch, Traces: Austrian Experimental Cinema

  • Traces

    Traces

    Short films set by now-iconic feminist artists, as well as younger generations.

    Their contributions range from anarchic performances, documentary sketches and queer gems to animations or found footage films. You’ll find complex explorations of repressed political history and structural social exclusion, cinematic reflections on architecture and pointed portraits, as well as elaborate artistic challenges to new technologies, including AI, and more comic relief. 

    21.09.2025
    20:30
    Kinoteka

    Im Leo

    Miriam Bajtala

    Austria / 2003 / 2 min

    Im Leo shows a figure dressed in red standing in the balcony doorway of the model of a white room and at the same time outside, in the open field. Using a mirror she holds in her hand, Bajtala redirects the sunlight, blinding the camera´s lens and simply obliterating the picture at rhythmic intervals.

    Unearthing. In Conversation

    Belinda Kazeem-Kamiński

    Austria / 2017 / 13 min

    On an empty movie hall stage, Belinda Kazeem-Kamiński uses ethnographic photos to undertake a performative search for presentation strategies capable of resisting the colonial regime of the gaze: self-empowerment via visibility and the opportunity to gaze back — “Until the lion has his or her own storyteller, the hunter will always have the best part of the story”.

    We’ll Always Have Paris

    Ella Raidel

    Austria / 2020 / 4 min

    The famous quote that lends the film its title is called into question. Paris is not the obvious choice for the setting of a ghost story. The excess of romance surrounding the French metropolis and its cultural symbols makes them seem almost unsuitable as a backdrop for horror. Not so in Ella Raidel’s work, where the Eiffel Tower, the Champs-Élysées, grand fountains, and neatly trimmed hedges appear as a false Paris, drenched in rain above the Chinese housing complex of Tianducheng. An architectural film, a critique of capitalism, a meditation on representation and simulacrum.

    Exhibition Talks

    Sasha Pirker, Lotte Schreiber

    Austria / 2014 / 9 min

    If, as Walter Benjamin claimed, buildings are appropriated in a twofold manner through use and perception; that is, tactically and optically, then Sasha Pirker’s and Lotte Schreiber’s Exhibition Talks can be seen as an attempt to somewhat decouple this mode of reception. While the soundtrack deals with the use of aut, the Tiroler Architekturforum’s exhibition spaces, and the conditions of the individual spaces and possibilities to adapt them for one’s own purposes; the visual track offers fragmentary, static, black-and-white views of the same spaces, which stay in the visual register simply by being linked above the montage to a coherent spatial whole.

    I don´t want to be filmed but rather shoot myself

    Friedl vom Gröller

    Austria / 2023 / 3 min 40 sec

    The film is a dialogue and a record of an encounter between two filmmakers who – as becomes immediately clear – share much more than just a common medium. It reveals everything that a portrait can contain beyond the filmed face: a “film of relations” – between the filmer and the filmed, the apparatus of the analogue projector with its glaring light, and the projection of yet another film with yet another face, itself captured while watching. It is an “expanded portrait”: the mirror into which Friedl vom Gröller films and encounters herself filming – an archetypal moment of every self-portrait – opens up the space, as does the projection of her film Max Turnheim (2002–2022), which depicts a young man at different stages of his life.

    Egypt

    Kathrin Resetarits

    Austria / 1997 / 10 min

    The director has made a very special silent film which consists of rich gestured stories in the sign language. The translation is effected by written words, feature film sequences, voices in off and music. Here there are no extensive explanations, no “relevance justifications” simply something recorded, a successful reminiscence on the expressivity of early cinema. Something which is simultaneously commonplace and, for most people, foreign. Thus Resetarits relativizes the implicit agreement that documentaries are first and foremost concerned with the tristesse of human existence.

    Friedl

    Christiana Perschon

    Austria / 2023 / 2 min 38 sec

    Friedl vom Gröller is the next artist Christiana Perschon films as part of her portrait series. Here, however, it is less about the act of portraiture itself and more about the encounter between two generations of Austrian female filmmakers. The performative exploration of being together animates the seconds captured on film as Gröller smokes a cigarette. It is striking that vom Gröller, who in many of her own films unabashedly places herself at the center of attention, this time seeks to escape the camera’s gaze. Gradually, we perceive how consciously she shapes her own image. This characteristic affirmation of the “I” seen through the eye of another gives Perschon’s film its power and expressiveness.

    Passages

    Lisl Ponger

    Austria / 1996 / 12 min

    The director creates an imaginary map of the 20th century on which stories of emigration are engraved like worn traces of Western memory. Photographs taken by attentive tourists appear, in their tense relationship with the soundtrack, as a postcolonial journey. Finally, the magnificent neon signs of “Hotel Edison” and “Radio City” evoke the origins of this form of world appropriation, the era of great expeditions, and the time when technical apparatus and means of transportation fundamentally transformed the perception of modern man. This attentive film demonstrates that, when it comes to images, neither hermetic memory nor immutable innocence exists, and found footage art requires no artificial manipulation to reveal the boundary between privacy and hidden political agendas.

    Beaches

    Astrid Ofner

    Austria / 2019 / 10 min

    Images of a family vacationing by the sea: in a changing palette of colors, grainy Super 8 footage tells the story of gently foaming waves breaking on the shore of an Adriatic beach. Small children play in the water under the watchful eye of their mother. Soon, their father joins them. An older woman walks by, and later a man flies a kite in the foreground. The images are tinted in soft shades of pink, yellow, and blue. Astrid Ofner’s fragile, analog film footage could convey a longing for summer hours past and tender family bonds, if it weren’t for Sylvie Rohrer’s quick-tempered off-screen narration, attacking the images of the quietly rippling sea from the very beginning.

  • Glitch

    Glitch

    Short films set by now-iconic feminist artists, as well as younger generations.

    Their contributions range from anarchic performances, documentary sketches and queer gems to animations or found footage films. You’ll find complex explorations of repressed political history and structural social exclusion, cinematic reflections on architecture and pointed portraits, as well as elaborate artistic challenges to new technologies, including AI, and more comic relief. 

    20.09.2025
    20:30
    Kinoteka

    …a car…

    Carola Dertnig

    Austria / 2010 / 8 min

    A familiar scenario and an everyday situation: parking a car. Carola Dertnig examines various daily routines for their comic potential, and here it is driving’s turn. Dressed like a “hot chick,” the artist maneuvers and parks her huge car in Vienna’s Apollo Garage, which becomes the stage for her latest slice-of-life comedy.

    Carte Noire

    Michaela Grill

    Austria, Canada / 2014 / 2 min 30 sec

    White flashes in the darkness of night. As if etched, as if pasted in. Flickering specters, ghostly visions. A true phantom ride, a film of tension. In carte noire, a dark road movie miniature, the artist continues her cinematic exploration from the abstraction of an object to its alienation. This time, she turns to a classical, highly charged motif from popular culture and cinema: a solitary car ride along an empty country road, which almost automatically evokes cross-genre associations.

    Amazon Woman

    Anna Vasof

    Austria / 2021 / 4 min

    While other body parts perform their specific functions as instruments, the head serves as a multifunctional tool. In 24 ten-second shots, Amazon Woman’s director explores what the head is capable of. Each scene—mostly depicting repetitive routines—presents Vasof’s head in isolation, scaled down and displaced; it acts as an object or tool in the hands of a body that, in place of its own head, possesses this object or tool. What consequences arise from the inception of head and body?

    Jet

    Michaela Schwentner

    Austria / 2003 / 6 min

    The exhilarating dynamism of this film results from a precisely composed interplay of color and form, which significantly shapes the viewer’s perception. The director employs a method akin to that of electroacoustic sound artists, who use a variety of painterly elements, allowing them to interact, overlap, or contrast. The journey through this landscape of sound and image passes quickly, apparently pausing only when the music becomes exceptionally concentrated. In fact, it stops when the viewer is gently brought back to earth by the landscape scenes at the conclusion.

    Lezzieflick

    Nana Swiczinsky

    Austria / 2008 / 7 min

    Lezzieflick is a deconstructive remix of stereotypical representations of lesbian sex in heterosexual pornography. Body forms become fluid, constantly changing, and the women no longer appear as passive objects of voyeuristic desire. Both the content of the image and the usual position of the subject are displaced. The filmic material seems to dissolve in satisfaction. Is there such a thing as beautiful “hardcore” camerawork?

    sexy

    Kurdwin Ayub

    Austria / 2013 / 3 min

    The background story for sexy unfolds on a huge television. Miley Cyrus’s music video “We Can’t Stop” is playing, which the artist Kurdwin Ayub watches, copies, and ultimately interprets. In sexy, both women are engaged in the casual self-empowerment of their bodies. However, Kurdwin Ayub’s protagonist does not have the tools to become an international star. Where Miley Cyrus sells her appeal as a natural feeling of being alive, Kurdwin Ayub’s alter ego is tormented by doubts about the fervor of exhibiting herself.

    Distortion

    Lydia Nsiah

    Austria / 2016 / 5 min

    In everyday video file consumption, interference signals usually indicate corrupted data or overloaded computers; here, however, they guide Nsiah’s rhythmic montage and Billy Roisz’s finely modulated soundtrack (distilled from the visual material) back into the avant-garde laboratory. The play with excessive demands becomes a questioning of what is given (both technologically and perceptually) and a design of what is new.

    Powder Placenta

    Katrina Daschner

    Austria / 2015 / 9 min

    Powder Placenta is a fairytale that narrates the interconnectedness of seemingly separate spaces, spheres and strata, and shows how they desire to be intertwined. Once again and at long last, everything becomes one, no matter how it is normally categorized: artificial or real, two- or three-dimensional, fantasy or reality. This is achieved through the montage, inspired by a vision of life that allows all things to merge together. Longing has come to an end, the celebration of life in all its glory has begun.

    Me, Myself and I

    Claudia Larcher

    Austria / 2022 / 5 min 30 sec

    The triplet in the title basically give it away already: identity in the digital age, especially in the face of image production and reproduction processes, is subject to incessant multiplication. Or to put it another way: the ego, what one could also call the “digital subject”, is now subject to a technologically fuelled tendency to splinter, while also being shrouded in a nebulous illusion of unity. Larcher has processed dialogues that she has conducted with various chatbots on the subject of identity and turned them into a script that interconnects fragments of ego perception in a multidirectional manner.

    Happy Doom

    Billy Roisz

    Austria / 2023 / 3 min 30 sec

    Happy Doom is an audiovisual poem, an ode to color intoxication and vertigo. The screen a vibrating membrane that simultaneously spits and swallows colors and noisy beats – a hypnotic deformed circumpolar psychedelic short trip. The deep sine wave that initially sounds almost like a four-to-the-floor kick drum, increasingly unravels, frays, and is gradually replaced by various hits, stabs and structures of white noise.

    Art Education

    Maria Lassnig

    Austria, USA / 1976 / 8 min

    Humorous, feminist interpretations of paintings by Vermeer, Michelangelo, and others. John the Baptist appears as a real talking head in the bowl carried by Judith: “Oh, why did I resist her?”. The director demystifies the cult of masculinity in famous works of art, while also revealing less canonical interpretations of well-known masterpieces.

    Klitclique: In Pairs

    Klitclique

    Austria / 2020 / 2 min

    Goethe and Schiller, Marx and Engels, Batman and Robin, or the TV detective and his dog Rex – the list of iconic male duos is endless. But women in pairs? Anna Spanlang’s music video for Klitclique stages male bromances such as Vladimir Putin and Xi Jinping, Jerry Seinfeld and Larry David, or Chip and Dale, while G-udit and $chwanger rap in their melancholic-ironic style about being the last female rap duo. After all, the golden rule of success for women is this: make a name for yourself as a duo or collective, but then achieve real success solo as an “exceptional woman”.

  • Punk

    Punk

    Short films set by now-iconic feminist artists, as well as younger generations.

    Their contributions range from anarchic performances, documentary sketches and queer gems to animations or found footage films. You’ll find complex explorations of repressed political history and structural social exclusion, cinematic reflections on architecture and pointed portraits, as well as elaborate artistic challenges to new technologies, including AI, and more comic relief. 

    19.09.2025
    18:00
    Kinoteka

    Rouge et Noir

    Linda Christanell

    Austria / 1993 / 10 min

    The scene of events is a table in a room. The table is set; a celebration has taken place. A woman is in the scene. A wild drama full of lust, seduction, irony and violence comes to its end.

    Ball-Head

    Mara Mattuschka

    Austria / 1985 / 6 min

    Hands vigorously pull scraps of paper from an old-fashioned printing press, while their owner remains invisible. The shrouded head, wrapped in muslin, reappears, and black paint is smeared across its surface. The body itself is transformed into a machine, the head into a matrix. The shaving of the head becomes a spectacular event.

    The Birth of Venus

    Moucle Blackout

    Austria / 1970-72 / 5 min

    The basic material consisted of about 30 photographs depicting some close friends and a dead pig the artist had found on the road. The introductory scene shows Botticelli’s Birth of Venus, with the figures on both sides fading into one another, followed by Venus herself in a symmetrical montage with the pig. Three Beatles songs underscore the performance through their lyrics. The pig is used as a symbol and a metaphor carrying multiple associations.

    I Deeply Regret

    Karø Goldt

    Germany, Austria / 2008 / 2 min

    The video i deeply regret is about a failed chance of revenge and satisfaction. It shows the attempt to liberate oneself from the victim´s role by a fantasy of self-empowerment. In other words: after a long, long time someone fights back, while humming the theme song from Rocky.

    Finale

    Sabine Marte

    Austria / 2007 / 4 min

    In a wrestling ring, a woman (Sabine Marte) confronts a sand-filled punching bag (Bill). There is something awkward and unsettling about this small “battle video.” The movements seem strangely illogical and discomforting, as if reversed. A reversed fight is not a fight. Instead, equally unsettling, a physical relationship develops between the woman and the slowly moving, greasy-skinned dummy, which gains a sexualized intensity.

    Streamlet Sneaking in Shamelessly Thighwetting

    Ashley Hans Schiern & Ursula Pürrer

    Austria / 1985 / 4 min

    Zigzag streamlet sneaking in shame-

    lessly twighwetting.

    (…) knees are glowing –

    icy fingers are melting now –

    (…) mirror-pictures are trembling.

    Ruby Skin

    Eve Heller

    USA / 2005 / 4 min 30 sec

    In Ruby Skin (so named for the complexion of the film emulsion found fading into red), mysterious clatter creates a fractured concrete poetry that sticks to us like cling wrap. Is this a language-poetry slasher film? Or the keys to the kingdom? Alarming and sensuous, quizzical yet ultimately intelligible in every sense of the word.

    Mensch Maschine Or Putting Parts Together

    Adina Camhy

    Austria / 2019 / 8 min

    The starting point is a true story: instead of the synthesizer she dreams of, the narrator receives a food processor as a gift. Confused, she sets out to find the possible reasons for this. What identities and gender constructions are inscribed in these devices? What are the relationships between people and machines, bodies and devices, the domestic sphere and the artistic field? It is a feminist essayistic film in the form of an audiovisual remix: an experimental collage of sound and image, sketch-like and associative.

    Syntagma

    Valie Export

    Austria / 1984 / 20 min

    The striking insistence in Syntagma on depicting the fragmented body of the woman, mostly mute, has a twofold and seemingly contradictory effect. Fragmentation initially appears as the repetition of trauma, until finally its frenetic pace transforms into a deliberate composition composed of arms, legs, shoulders, breasts, and faces. A depersonalized review of the “commodity’s” quality emerges. Objectifying women, however, does not mean that they become objects.

  • Canale Grande

    Canale Grande

    Canale Grande

    reż. Friederike Pezold (Pezoldo)
    Austria, Niemcy / 1983 / 88 min / premiera polska

    One of the hidden masterpieces of Austrian cinema, a perfect example of subversive cinematography.

    In this low-budget effort, the protagonist (played by the director herself) has had enough of conventional television and invents her own, highly personal form of close-up viewing. Pezold’s signature style is thoroughly contemporary and fresh. The atmospheric cityscapes have a moving, time-capsule quality.

    21.09.2025
    18:00
    Kinoteka

    Friederike Pezold (Pezoldo)

    Since 1969! ClimateArtPieces shown in various museums. 1970 after her occupation with drawing and designs for a new “sensual” architecture, she starts working with video and photography. 1971 she created her first video graphics. In photo series and video films she recreated the body parts and their movement: “New bodily sign language”. 1972: GenderArt with “the flexible Sex”. And since 1974 founding of “Tai Chi for the Eyes” + “Slower, less, emptier on the screen”. 1977 she also founded “Radio free Utopia” which mainly consisted of a recording device and a monitor on her own body to carry the revolt program freely and independently through the city against the quota. 1996 foundation of “the 1st Viennese Museum for Videoart and Bodyart”. 2002-2020 “1st, digital & real revolt-people for the deceleration, emptying, de-noising of the future digital world” (there are the Thinker, the Monk and and… were partly shown in the film Revolution of the Eyes. However, they are real, i.e. digital and real) and the “1st look-image-pauses and arrow-images”. During that time her program was mostly “to refuse the art business!” Her works were shown at the Berlinale, the Documenta in Kassel, the Biennales in Paris, Lyon and Venice, the Whitney Museum, MOMA and the Centre Pompidou, among others. She has lived in NY, Paris, Vienna, and is currently based in Salzburg.

    Director: Friederike Pezold (Pezoldo)

    Production: Friederike Pezold (Pezoldo)

    Language: German

    Subtitles: Polish, English