European Media Art Festival

{{Short description|Annual festival and congress for film in Osnabrück, Germany}}

{{Use British English|date=December 2018}}

{{Infobox film festival

| name = European Media Art Festival

| image =

| image_size =

| caption =

| number =

| founded = 1981

| founders =

| location = Osnabrück, Germany

| language = International

| website = [https://www.emaf.de www.emaf.de]
[https://www.emaf.de/en/ www.emaf.de/en] (English)

}}

The European Media Art Festival (officially abbreviated as EMAF){{cite web |title=About us |url=https://www.emaf.de/en/About%20us.html |website=European Media Art Festival |accessdate=24 December 2018}} is an annual festival and congress for film and media art which takes place every April/May in Osnabrück, Germany.{{cite web |title=European Media Art Festival Osnabrück |url=https://www.nordmedia.de/pages/veranstaltungen/festivals/filmfestivals_in_niedersachsen/subpages/european_media_art_festival_osnabrueck/index.html |website=Nordmedia |language=German |accessdate=24 December 2018}}

Overview

The festival offers its visitors a current overview of experimental films, installations, performances, digital art, and hybrid forms, ranging from personal and political subjects or formal experiments to provocative statements about media art and society. The Festival sees itself as a place of experimentation and a laboratory where extraordinary works, experiments and ventures are created and presented. It is the largest showcase of experimental short films and feature films, digital art, animation, and multimedia, in the world of media art,{{cite web |title=European Media Art Festival: a unique platform for digital and media art |url=http://www.around-germany.com/1075/european-media-art-festival-a-unique-platform-for-digital-and-media-art/ |website=Around Germany |accessdate=24 December 2018}} presenting as many as 250 works{{cite web |title=EMAF 2007 |url=http://digicult.it/news/emaf-2007/ |website=Digicult |accessdate=24 December 2018}} out of up to 2500 entries during an event attended by about 14,000 participants as of 2018.{{cite web |title=Osnabrück European Media Art Festival |url=https://www.german-films.de/festivalguides/festview/detail/festival/osnabrueck-european-media-art-festival/index.html |website=German Films |accessdate=24 December 2018}} The festival has an "open policy" with room for projects ranging from "process-based experiments and technological innovations to dexterous crossovers between the media and genres."{{cite web |title=European Media Art Festival (osnabruck) |url=https://www.filmfestivals.com/festival/european_media_art_festival_osnabruck |website=Film Festivals |accessdate=24 December 2018}} Students are included as filmmakers, exhibitors and visitors.

History

Image:Schloss_Osnabrueck_Innenhof.jpg (view from the inner court)]]

The European Media Art Festival started in 1981 as an experimental film workshop (the official organising body is still called the "Experimentalfilm Workshop"),{{cite web |title=Team |url=https://www.emaf.de/en/Team.html |website=European Media Arts Festival |accessdate=24 December 2018}} with the intention of providing a platform of expression for innovative and experimental art from the genres of film, video, multimedia and new media.{{cite web |last1=Lehmkuhl |first1=Verena |title=25 Years of Media Art in Osnabrück: The European Media Art Festival |url=https://www.goethe.de/en/kul/flm/20373383.html |website=Goethe Institute |accessdate=24 December 2018}} The first workshop was organised by the Department of Media Studies at the University of Osnabrück. In 1988, the "Film and Television Year" proclaimed by the European Economic Community offered an opportunity to expand the workshop into something greater. A team of students developed the concept under the new title "European Media Art Festival".

Notability

The European Media Art Festival is well-covered in regional media, with summaries in national dailies and trade papers as well as in magazines on art, movies and multimedia; there is also commercial and public broadcast coverage in regional and national programmes. The Festival is considered one of the most important media art festivals in Europe{{cite journal |last1=Fabini |first1=Dana |title=European Media Art Festival Osnabrück |journal=Idea |date=2003 |issue=14 |url=http://idea.ro/revista/?q=en/node/41&articol=155 |accessdate=24 December 2018}} (and worldwide),{{cite web |title=European Media Arts Festival Tour |url=https://www.miad.edu/european-media-arts-festival-tour-v15-570 |website=Milwaukee Institute of Art & Design |accessdate=24 December 2018}}{{cite web |title=European Media Art Festival, Osnabrück |url=https://ag-kurzfilm.de/en/ordentliche_mitglieder/105.html |website=AG Kurzfilm (German Short Film Association) |accessdate=24 December 2018}} attended by German and European producers, European TV companies, representatives of festivals, academies, agencies and distributors, setting trends in the international media art scene, highlighting socially-relevant events and giving artists an opportunity to be heard and established, defining itself above all as the avant-garde of media art and promoter of young media creators.

The Festival has featured film retrospectives by important international artists such as Shelly Silver, Michael Snow, Peter Greenaway, Fernando Birri, Al Razutis and David Rimmer.

Awards

The European Media Art Festival has presented up to four awards and prizes each year (values as of 2018):

  • EMAF Award (5,000), for a trendsetting work in media arts
  • Newcomer Award (€1,500)
  • Dialogue Award for the Promotion of Intercultural Exchange (€1,500), awarded by the German Ministry of Foreign Affairs (German: Dialogpreis des Auswärtigen Amtes)
  • German Film Critics Prize (Best German Experimental Film/Video, €1,000), awarded by the Association of German Film Critics (German: EMAF-Medienkunst-Preis der Deutschen Filmkritik)

The deadline for submission of material to be presented each year is in January.{{cite web |title=European Media Art Festival |url=http://film.britishcouncil.org/european-media-art-festival |website=British Film Council |accessdate=24 December 2018}}

Other activities

The Festival also functions as a distributor of experimental and media art works through cooperation with numerous cinemas and museums as well as the Goethe Institute's international affiliates, organizing tour packages of films and videos through the Experimental Film Workshop, booked and presented in non-commercial cinemas, galleries, museums and other national and international cultural locations. These have included tours across Germany, other European countries, as well as to Australia, Brazil, China, Japan, Lebanon, Mexico, New Zealand, Russia and the U.S.

Themes

Since 2000, the Festival has been organized according to a particular theme:

class="wikitable"

|+EMAF THEMES

!Year

!Theme

!Ref.

2000

|//Now Future

|

2001

|Inside Outside

|

2002

|Colour

|

2003

|Larger than Life

|

2004

|Transmitter

|

2005

|Document

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2006

|Smart Art

|

2007

|20 Years of Being Confused

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2008

|Identity

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2009

|The future lasts longer than the past

|

2010

|Mash Up

|

2011

|This is Media Art

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2012

|25 years Jubilee

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2013

|Mapping

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2014

|We, the enemy

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2015

|Irony - subversive interventions in media art

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2016

|The Future of Visions: Don't expect anything

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2017

|Push - living in the hyper information age

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2018

|Report - notes from reality

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2019

|Wild grammar

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2020

|First Person Plural

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2021

|Possessed

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2022

|The Thing Is

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2023

|Trembling Time

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2024

|Feelers, Sensors

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References

{{reflist}}