This project is a study of Dartington under the leading question "What is Dartington?' and
comprises a number of interlinked methodological phases of enquiry. The first explores
Dartington's use of film as a process of documenting its experimental activities, and as a
commercial product in the form of the films made and distributed by the Dartington Hall Film Unit.
The second strategy engages with archive film materials in the production of compilation videos,
which were then developed into a series of Photoworks designed to facilitate a personal
interpretation of its particular history.
The third approach resulted in the production of three forty minute videos {After the Facts 2003)
which articulate an understanding of Dartington's history of engagement with film, a personal
experimental engagement with filmmaking, and an interrogation of the possibilities of applying a
particular reading of the experimental ethos of Dartington to a filmic practice. A pervading
concern has been with the mythic nature of Dartington during the inter-war years and the function
of the filmic form in myth generation and perpetuation.
The final part of the project presents an overview of these strategies, assessing their successes
and limitations. By the ordering of the visual archive, the creative juxtaposition of historic and
contemporary images in the Photoworks, and the interfacing of place and self in After the Facts
the intention has been to show the ways in which a creative practice has been able to understand
Dartington as a changing and variable experience.
Date of Award | 2004 |
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Original language | English |
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Awarding Institution | |
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Film and the Dartington Experience
Hilton, D. E. (Author). 2004
Student thesis: PhD