1998 Broadway at 68th Street
New York, New York

Sudden blindness leads an artist on a journey to regain his independence and ultimately attain a different kind of vision in this haunting, original first-person documentary. In the spring of 1978, French painter and filmmaker Hugues de Montalembert was brutally assaulted in his Greenwich Village apartment. His assailants flung paint thinner into de Montalembert's eyes before fleeing. Rushed to the hospital, de Montalembert awoke the next morning almost totally blind. Only light and the most indiscriminate of shapes shone through the swath of darkness. A man who had depended on his vision to make his art was now deprived of the privilege of seeing his art, and the world at large. In Black Sun, de Montalembert narrates his long journey back from that abyss: the painful months of rehab, the strange and often erotic visions that fluttered through his headspace, his attempts to reassert his independence (at one point by traveling to Indonesia alone) and reclaim his identity as an artist. As the subject describes his experiences, director Tarn recreates de Montalembert's interior world through impressionistic visuals and a haunting self-penned score. Images of urban architecture, street scenes from exotic locales, and half-seen faces drift in and out of focus as spare, pulsing orchestral music combines with de Montalembert's richly accented voice to immerse us in the blind artist's perceptual web. Dreamlike and poetic, Black Sun is more than just one man's inspirational life story. It's a profound meditation on the artist's role, in de Montalembert's words, of "creating vision" out of darkness.
- Elliott Larkfield

Event submitted by Eventful.com on behalf of globetrotterny.

Added by badpageturn on May 16, 2006

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