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Lee and the Dream Machine
http://www.flickerflicker.com/flash/.../TheStory.html
Really, I think, behind everything, he was trying to teach people to see differently.” Genesis P-Orridge, on Brion Gysin The dream machine looks simple enough: A 100-watt light bulb, a motor, and a rotating cylinder with cutouts. Just sit in front of it, close your eyes, and wait for the visions to come. The dream machine offers a drugless high that its creator – poet, artist, calligrapher and mystic Brion Gysin – believed would revolutionize human consciousness. He wasn't alone. Kurt Cobain had a dream machine. And William S. Burroughs thought it could be used to “storm the citadels of enlightenment.” With a custom-made dream machine in tow, director Nik Sheehan takes us on a journey into the life of Brion Gysin – his art, his complex ideas, and his friendships with some of the 20th century's key counterculture figures. Gysin was fascinated by identity. He saw himself as a incarnation of the 10th-century King of Assassins, trained in counter-espionage during WWII, and wrote and rewrote his name in countless permutations, as if to make it disappear – in the process, inventing the cut-up technique that his lifelong friend, Beat novelist Burroughs, would make famous. Featuring greats like Burroughs (in archival footage), singer Marianne Faithfull, singer/artist Genesis P-Orridge of Psychic TV, poet John Giorno, rocker Iggy Pop, filmmaker Kenneth Anger, and artist/turntablist DJ Spooky, FLicKeR is a hypnotic documentary. Taking the dream machine as the basis of its explorations, FLicKeR asks crucial questions about the nature of art and consciousness, and imagines a humanity liberated to explore its creativity in complete freedom. ![]() A look at what's hot and what's not at this year's edition of the real-to-reel festival http://www.eyeweekly.com/film/feature/article/24352 In Flicker (****; April 23, 7pm, Royal; April 26, 7pm, Isabel Bader), Toronto director Nik Sheehan recounts the strange days of Brion Gysin, the visionary painter and writer who blew minds with two inventions: the literary cut-up technique (as popularized by his pal William S. Burroughs) and the Dream Machine, a mysterious contraption that offered the prospect of a drug-less high. Iggy Pop, Marianne Faithfull and Sonic Youth’s Lee Ranaldo (pictured) are just three of the luminaries we see experiencing the machine’s effects in Sheehan’s captivating portrait of an artist whose influence far outweighs his fame. |
Lee is indeed free... love it!
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Here's a website where you can have your own little dream machine experience.
http://www.netliberty.net/dreamachine.html |
they work well you just have to stick with it and follow the instructions. Gysin also experimented with mirror gazing, where you stare at the surface of the mirror, people can really lose themselves in a trance state.
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thats a really cool picture of lee
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Quote:
That works quite well, actually. For anyone interested. Here's a website that shows you how to build your very own Dreamachine, step by step. A friend of mine made one using these instructions, and we've been tripping ever since. http://www.interpc.fr/mapage/western...eamachine.html |
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