The Story of Looking – with Mark Cousins

19 October 2017 | LIBRARY London, London, UK

Virtual Futures presents film director and writer Mark Cousins in conversation on his new book, The Story of Looking.

Join us as Mark Cousins shares how our looking selves develop over the course of a lifetime, and the ways that looking has changed through the centuries. From great works of art to tourist photographs, from cityscapes to cinema, through science and protest, propaganda and refusals to look, the false mirrors and great visionaries of looking, he will illuminate how we construct as well as receive the things we see.

As Cousins shares, “Looking can be an act of empathy or aggression. It can provoke desire or express it. And from the blurry, edgeless world we inhabit as infants to the landscape of screens we grow into, looking can define us.”

Mark Cousins is a Northern Irish author and filmmaker. His books include Watching. Real. People. Elsewhere and The Story of Film. His films – such as I am Belfast, The First Movie, Atomic and The Story of Film: An Odyssey – have won a Peabody Award, the Prix Italia and the Stanley Kubrick Award, and have been shown in MoMA in New York, at the Cannes film festival, and around the world. He is Honorary Professor of Film at the University of Glasgow. He lives in Edinburgh.

In conversation with Luke Robert Mason (Director, Virtual Futures).

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Plato & the Nerd – with Edward A. Lee