Event Details
Date & Time:
Fri February 6, 2026
7 PM-9:30 PM
Location:
The Block Museum of Art
40 Arts Circle Drive
Evanston, IL 60208
Audience:
Open to the public
Details:
Avant to Live! The Films of Craig Baldwin with guest Brett Kashmere
RSVP
San Francisco-based filmmaker Craig Baldwin embodies the subversive spirit of American underground film. Since the 1970s, Baldwin has been crafting dense, corrosive found-footage films that bend the detritus of American mass culture against the stagnant myths of Western progress. Though utterly singular, his work is uniquely challenging to characterize: as Brett Kashmere and Steve Polta, editors of the new, career-spanning volume Craig Baldwin: Avant to Live!) write, Baldwin’s films are “informed by left politics, cult cinemas, agit-prop activism, structural film, the Situationists, the Yippies, Arte Povera, media archeology, compilation documentary, and other found footage forms.”
For this screening celebrating the recent publication Avant to Live!, Kashmere will appear to present two of Baldwin’s most enduring films, TRIBULATION 99: ALIEN ANOMALIES UNDER AMERICA (1991) and ¡O NO CORONADO! (1992), in 16mm. Taken together, these two works offer a scathingly funny (and, in 2026, frighteningly relevant) counterfactual history of 500 years of colonial misadventure in this hemisphere.
Followed by a post-screening conversation between Brett Kashmere and Luisela Alvaray, Associate Professor at DePaul University.
Works screened:
TRIBULATION 99: ALIEN ANOMALIES UNDER AMERICA
(Craig Baldwin, 1991, 48 min, 16mm)
Arguably Baldwin’s most visionary assemblage, TRIBULATION 99 presents a dizzying 48-minute alternative history of CIA meddling in Latin American politics, congealed from the cinematic dregs of 20th-century educational and industrial ephemera, TV news, and B-picture sci-fi. Two years before the premiere of The X-Files, Baldwin describes American foreign policy as an occult struggle against a reptilian race of hollow-earth dwelling “Quetzals,” with crackpot narration that splits the difference between William Burroughs, Alex Jones, and Castle Films News Parade.
¡O NO CORONADO!
(Craig Baldwin, 1992, 40 min, 16mm)
In ¡O NO CORONADO!, Craig Baldwin combines his trademark techniques of “recycled cinema” with gloriously janky reenactments to tell the story of 16th-century conquistador Francisco Vázquez de Coronado’s ill-fated expedition in what is now the American Southwest. Baldwin’s appropriations from forgotten swashbucklers and old Lone Ranger episodes paradoxically may seem sardonic, but they cohere to form a damning account of colonial violence.
Total runtime: ~ 88 min
Screening materials courtesy of Canyon Cinema
Image credit: ¡O NO CORONADO! (1992) Craig Baldwin
About the guests:
Brett Kashmere is a media artist, curator, and writer living in Oakland, California. Over the past two decades, Kashmere has developed and organized numerous arts initiatives, community projects, and publications. He is Executive Director of Canyon Cinema Foundation and the founding editor of INCITE Journal of Experimental Media (established in 2008), an artist-run publication dedicated to the discourse, culture, and community of experimental film, video, and new media.
Kashmere’s writing on experimental cinema and alternative media exhibition has appeared in journals and magazines such as Millennium Film Journal, The Velvet Light Trap, The Brooklyn Rail, The Canadian Journal of Film Studies, Moving Image Review & Art Journal, PUBLIC, Esse, and Take One; compendiums and anthologies including Process Cinema: Handmade Film in the Digital Age, A Microcinema Primer: A Brief History of Small Cinemas, Carolee Schneemann: Unforgivable, and The Films of Jack Chambers; and web publications such as Senses of Cinema, the Women’s Film and Television History Network blog, Walker Reader, the NFB blog, and the Carnegie Museum of Art’s online journal, Storyboard. With Steve Polta, he is co-editor of the anthology Craig Baldwin: Avant to Live! (2023) and the zine Luther Price in San Francisco: A Remembrance.
Luisela Alvaray is Associate Professor at DePaul University, where she specializes in Latin American and transnational cinema and media, cultural studies, documentary film, and film historiography. Her research has been published in journals such as Cinema Journal, Transnational Screens, Studies in Hispanic Cinemas, Cultural Dynamics and Film & History. She has contributed to several edited volumes, including the forthcoming Locating Media Industries: Spaces, Places and Platforms, The Routledge Companion to Latin-American Cinemas, and Global Cinema Networks. Her most recent work explores the intersections of regional film cultures and global media flows, with a focus on Latin American storytelling in the digital and streaming era.
Contact The Block Museum of Art for more information: (847) 491-4000 or email us at block-museum@northwestern.edu
