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Being John Smith

John Smith
2024 United Kingdom 27' English
Wed 26
March
21h00
Arlequin 1
Book
+ débat/Q&A : Recherche Médée
Fri 28
March
14h00
Saint André des Arts 3
Book
+ débat/Q&A : Being John Smith + Manal Issa 2024
Dans la même séance : Manal Issa, 2024 Medea Research
Dans la même séance : Manal Issa, 2024 Medea Research
© Being John Smith
© Being John Smith
© Being John Smith

After enduring many decades of embarrassment, John Smith finally admits that possessing the most common name in the English-speaking world has had a negative impact on his sense of self.


John Smith is a name that designates no one. Or rather a name that refers to anyone and everyone. Admittedly, a very banal initial observation but the filmmaker, who is his film’s namesake through no choice of his own, seems to find it punishing. What is this name borne by so many other people and how is a peaceful existence possible when what designates us in the first place designates no one? Although the fear of getting lost in the anonymity of an Internet flooded with John Smiths from the world over seems surmountable to the supremely ironic filmmaker, retracing his life presents a heavier, deeper challenge. John Smith rolls out an autobiographical story whose double game lies in the method: the filmmaker accompanies his archive images with a rigorous yet humorous commentary and propels his quest for identity through confessions and anecdotes. The spoken text creates a dissonance with what the images show: the identity of the film, like that of the filmmaker, takes shape as it advances. An impersonal hero he may be, but he is present to the things he experiences, confident of his political stances and the choices and commitments he has made.  Effortlessly, but like a film retracing a life, the narrative becomes infused with a testamentary atmosphere. Yet, the impending disappearance is basically also that of everyone. Starting with the greatest number, the Common People, and moving towards the most intimate, John Smith takes back ownership of his name and stakes his claim to this elusive commonality that fleshes out the fabric of ordinary lives. The image will remain as proof and an enduring presence.
 
Clémence Arrivé Guezengar

John Smith

Born in London,1952, he studied at North-East London Polytechnic and the Royal College of Art, after which he became an active member of the London Filmmakers’ Co-op. Inspired in his formative years by conceptual art and structural film, he also became fascinated by the immersive power of narrative and the spoken word, forming the foundation for the diverse body of work that he has developed over the past five decades. Often rooted in everyday life and personal experience, Smith’s films playfully explore and expose the language of cinema, subverting the perceived boundaries between documentary, fiction, representation and abstraction.
John Smith has made over 60 film, video and installation works that have been shown in independent cinemas, museums and art galleries around the world. His films are in the collections of Tate Gallery, Arts Council England, MoMA New York, FRAC Île de France, Paris; Kunstmuseum Magdeburg and Muzeum Sztuki, Lodz.

Wed 26
March
21h00
Arlequin 1
Book
+ débat/Q&A : Recherche Médée
Fri 28
March
14h00
Saint André des Arts 3
Book
+ débat/Q&A : Being John Smith + Manal Issa 2024
Dans la même séance : Manal Issa, 2024 Medea Research
Production :
John Smith
Photography, sound, editing :
John Smith
Copy contact :
John Smith / info@johnsmithfilms.com

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