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Gloria's Call

Cheri Gaulke

2018 00:16:47 United StatesEnglishColorStereo16:9HD video

Description

In 1971, graduate student Gloria Orenstein receives a call from surrealist artist Leonora Carrington that sparks a lifelong journey into art, ecofeminism, and shamanism. A wife and mother of two writing her dissertation for New York University, Orenstein never expects to have her life transformed through female friendship. After corresponding for a time, Carrington whisks Orenstein off to the cafes of Paris where she witnesses the visionary art and personal struggles of Leonora Carrington, Jane Graverol, Leonor Fini and Meret Oppenheim. This leads Orenstein to write groundbreaking scholarly articles about women in surrealism. A decade later, Orenstein is a beloved professor at the University of Southern California, creating the first international conference on Ecofeminism. She receives another call, this time from a shaman who whisks her off to the mountaintops of Samiland to experience her own mystical journey, one she thought was reserved only for the artists of surrealism.

Gloria’s Call uses art, animation and storytelling to celebrate this wild adventure from the cafes of Paris to the mountaintops of Samiland. Orenstein’s delightful tale brings alive an often-unseen history of women in the arts.

This work was produced by artists Cheri Gaulke (director), Cheryl Bookout, Anne Gauldin, Sue Maberry and Christine Papalexis with funding from the Southern California chapter of the Women's Caucus for Art. The idea for the film was born during a presentation by renowned scholar Dr. Gloria Feman Orenstein at the SCWCA Surrealist Tea in October 2016. In February 2018, the national Women’s Caucus for Art presented Dr. Orenstein with a Lifetime Achievement Award.

About Cheri Gaulke

Cheri Gaulke is a pioneer in the feminist art movement in Los Angeles, working in film and non-traditional media. Her work has been presented in film festivals internationally, in museums and a Smithsonian-touring exhibition, and alternative settings including buses, churches, and prehistoric temples. Media-based artworks include video installations, documentaries, narratives, animation, and experimental. Gaulke has received artist fellowships from the National Endowment for the Arts, California Arts Council, City of Los Angeles and California Community Foundation. In 2003, her oral history was inducted into the UCLA Film and Television Archives in the collection Out of the Seventies: L.A. Women in Film and Video. Gaulke is based in Los Angeles where she is also an award-winning educator committed to empowering youth voices. Gloria’s Call is Gaulke’s 25th work in film/video (single channel or video installation). Current projects include a feature-length documentary called Acting Like Women: Performance Art and the Woman’s Building, about a 1970s-80s movement that continues to reverberate in the art world today.