Hunter_From_Elsewhere_–_A_Journey_With_Helen_Britton

<i>Hunter from Elsewhere – A Journey with Helen Britton</i>

Hunter from Elsewhere – A Journey with Helen Britton

German film


Hunter from Elsewhere – A Journey with Helen Britton is a German documentary that premiered at Munich's DOK.fest and was screened at the 38th Kassel Dokfest[1] in 2021. Filmmaker Elena Alvarez Lutz traces the career of artist Helen Britton, interviews companions, and accompanies Britton on her travels. The artist is shown in her studio in Munich, during exhibition preparations, and in doing research on old traditions of jewelry. This gradually creates an impression of Britton's creative process and her artistic motivation.

Quick Facts Hunter from Elsewhere – A Journey with Helen Britton, Directed by ...

In the US, the film was shown for the first time during NYC Jewelry Week 2022.[2] In Australia it premiered during Melbourne Design Week 2023.[3] In March 2024 the film was released in German cinemas.[4]

Synopsis

The film accompanies Helen Britton on her worldwide search for precious or everyday materials from which she makes jewelry, sculptures and other objects. She is shown walking on the beach, at flea markets, and exploring an abandoned house.[5] At numerous occasions she is filmed documenting her findings with her own camera. Britton's career is recounted: she grew up in Newcastle in New South Wales where she was able to observe how ore was first mined and then processed for shipbuilding. The industrial environment shaped her artistically; she not only took up photography and drawing but also making jewelry objects from simple materials. Around 2000 she moved to Munich to study at the Academy of Fine Arts with Otto Künzli, a student of Hermann Jünger. Today she is considered one of the most famous jewelry artists in the world. During the individual episodes of the film, companions, curators, collectors, and friends have their say. In Idar-Oberstein, which was once world-famous for gemstone jewelry, and in the Thuringian Forest in Lauscha, Britton takes up the trail of almost forgotten traditions of gemstone and jewelry processing. She is shown in conversation with craftsmen and in the search and finding of gemstones such as jasper or agate, which are hardly used any more.[6] The last part of the film shows Britton at work in her Munich studio, preparing a retrospective and talking to curators.[7] During the film, partly fictional texts written by Alvarez Lutz can be heard as voiceovers, the speaker is Leoncia Flynn.[8]

Production

Elena Alvarez accompanied Helen Britton over a period of four years. Alvarez chose the title because Britton not only collects materials, but also displays the instinct of a hunter. To realize the film, Alvarez, too, needed this hunting instinct.[6]

Reception

Dunja Bialas compares Alvarez's way of working with that of Britton, who once had translated the film Marius and Jeannette into a piece of jewelry made of a toothbrush. The director only works in the opposite direction and transforms Britton's jewelry into a film. With their work, both artists ensure that the audience's view of the seemingly worthless is altered.[9]

In her review on Bayerischer Rundfunk, Julie Metzdorf calls Hunter from Elsewhere an "amazing film" as it tells "stories about telling stories" and "in its slightly melancholic basic mood irretrievably negotiates the past and yet stands completely in the here and now".[6]


References

  1. "38. Kasseler Dokfest – Catalogue". Kassel Dokfest (in German and English). Filmladen Kassel e. V. pp. 19, 49. Retrieved 2021-11-02.
  2. "Hunter from Elsewhere: A Journey with Helen Britton on Film (November 15)". Federal Foreign Office. 2022-10-22. Retrieved 2023-05-20.
  3. Grübl, Josef (2024-02-28). "München-Premiere des Dokumentarfilms "Hunter from Elsewhere"". Süddeutsche.de (in German). Retrieved 2024-02-29.
  4. Grübl, Josef (May 5, 2021). "Filme über Kunst und Kultur". Süddeutsche Zeitung (in German). Retrieved September 11, 2021.
  5. Metzdorf, Julie (May 18, 2021). ""Hunter from Elsewhere": Vom Jagen und Sammeln einer Künstlerin". Bayerischer Rundfunk (Bavarian Broadcasting) (in German). Retrieved September 12, 2021.
  6. Bialas, Dunja (June 21, 2021). "The Alchemists". Art Jewelry Forum. Retrieved September 12, 2021.
  7. Bialas, Dunja. "Die Alchemistinnen". www.artechock.de (in German). Retrieved September 12, 2021.

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