Film/Video Screenings Artists' Television (ATV) Open Screening In the Gallery Window Installations

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Artists' Television Access
992 Valencia Street
San Francisco, CA 94110
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Monthly Calendar

ATA Screenings

Thursday, May 27, 2010. 8PM
Odds and Ends

Friday, May 28, 2010. 7:30 Door, 8PM Screening
CCSF Student Film Showcase

Sunday, May 30, 2010. 7PM
Mrs. Goundo's Daughter
presented by The San Francisco Bay Area Chapter of the US National Committee for UNIFEM

Thursday, June 3, 2010. 8PM
CCSF Production Class

Saturday, June 5, 2010. 8PM
Mike Kuchar
An Evening of Collected Consciousness

Sunday, June 6, 2010. 1PM
Set the Screen on Fire: Films for Social Change

Tuesday, June 8, 2010. 7PM
CHRONOTOPIA:
The Past, Present & Future of Queer Histories - Media Screenings

Thursday, June 10, 2010. 7.30pm
"The Inner Tour"
A.N.S.W.E.R. Coalition Film Screening

Saturday, June 12, 2010. 8PM
Experimental films and sounds from the Bay Area

Friday, June 18, 2010. 8PM
Top of the Food Chain

ATA Events

Tuesday, June 15, 2010. 7-10pm
Jessica Miller: Flagging Allegiance
Opening reception Tuesday, June 15th, 7-10pm

Open Screening

Thursday, June 17, 2010. 7pm Door, 8PM
OpenScreening

Window Installations

May 2, 2010 - May 30, 2010.
The S.S.S.S.S.S. Presents: OBAMA TRAUMA

June 1, 2010 - June 30, 2010.
Jessica Miller: Flagging Allegiance
June 2010

Archive

Find all the past shows and gallery and window exhibitions in the Archive

View the text-only full calendar

Return to: Specters & Machines

The Salariat in Parts

Zachary Epcar - 2009, 11:18, 16mm/DV, San Francisco, CA  

An office comedy of sorts, describing several points of correspondence between the material space of the office and the gastro-intestinal movements of its inhabitants. Some of the more discreet transactions of office life are enacted: the massaging of temples, the exchanging of fluids, the sublimating of desires, the ingesting of products promising digestive relief in a timely manner.

Questions with Zachary Epcar

Elizabeth Wing: The film has a very particular look to it, almost as though it were set twenty years ago or more (a pre-computerized world). Where did you film it, and what guided you in making these kinds of artistic choices?

Zachary Epcar: The film was shot on a set I assembled in a studio at Bard College. I was much less concerned at the time with assigning the office to any particular era than with avoiding what has become such a tired, completely standardized way of representing that space; the idea was that there is something beyond boredom and inanity, beyond the white walls and the identical cubicle stations, the malfunctioning copy machines and the oafish bosses-- the office as a site of transformation, where things like alka-seltzer and pepto bismol treat symptoms of much larger, much more severe bodily disfigurations.

EW: The sound design is powerful and surreal! Did this take a great deal of effort and planning? Did you learn some new tricks?

ZE: Quite a bit of tinkering was involved, late nights in my apartment, almost exclusively in my underpants (this is key), with sound recorder in hand, grunting, moaning, stamping, spilling milk, close-miking everything. Foley sound is a marvelous way of exercising control, of isolating and intensifying the aural as one might the visual. A big thanks to Samuel Breslin for sending my way one very special recording he made which turned out to be just what was missing and just what I needed.

EW: Many of the objects your characters use and and activities they do seem symbolic or iconic (the water cooler, Pepto Bismol and Alka-Seltzer, coffee, ficus trees, endless document stamping) of white-collar working life. Are these observations personal, or are they taken from others' experiences or expressions in media?

ZE: I have worked in offices before for brief stints, but this is no confessions of an administrative assistant-- it's speculative, it's what I see happening even if what I see happening isn't actually happening or, perhaps more accurately, just isn't seen.

Zachary Epcar is a film and video maker, born and raised in San Francisco, California, and a recent graduate of the Bard College Film and Electronic Arts Program in New York State.

Last updated 10/07/2009.