Skip navigation

Main menu

  • What's On
  • Visit
  • Art
    • Discover Art
    • Artists
    • Artworks
    • Stories
    Stories
    Stories

    Watch, listen and read

  • Learn
    • Schools
    • Tate Kids
    • Research
    • Activities and workshops
    Tate Kids
    Tate Kids

    Games, quizzes and films for kids

  • Shop
Become a Member
  • Tate Britain
    Tate Britain Free admission
  • Tate Modern
    Tate Modern Free admission
  • Tate Liverpool + RIBA North
    Tate Liverpool + RIBA North Free admission
  • Tate St Ives
    Tate St Ives Ticket or membership card required
  • Families
  • Accessibility
  • Schools
  • Private tours
  • Discover Art
  • Artists
  • Artworks
  • Stories
  • Schools
  • Tate Kids
  • Research
  • Activities and workshops
Tate Logo
Become a Member
Tate Modern Film

American Inner Landscape

27 November 2016 at 17.00–19.00

​Will Hindle Pastorale d'Ete 1958, film still. Courtesy Canyon Cinema

Three experiments in personal and subjective filmmaking by Will Hindle, Bruce Baillie and Robert Fulton

The assignment the first time, given to me by the conditions of making the film, was not to make a beautiful film, but rather to make a document about this inner passage, a little-described, but very common – in fact universal – phase of being human: the evolution of consciousness through which every man and woman eventually must go.
Bruce Baillie on Quick Billy

This programme features three works surveying America’s (inner) landscape: Quick Billy, Baillie’s most personal piece; along with Pastorale d’Ete by Will Hindle, one of Baillie’s beloved friends, and the astonishing Starlight by Robert Fulton.

Robert Fulton, Starlight, USA 1970, 16mm, colour and black and white, sound, 5 min

‘A Tibetan Lama. His disciple. The disciple’s wife, young boy, and terrier. An old tugboat crossing the Mississippi River. A man in his seventh month of solitude, and the hermitage built by his own hands. The man’s bloodhound; his cat. Clouds crossing the Continental Divide. A mountain stream. A girl. The sun.’ –Robert Fulton

Will Hindle, Pastorale d’Ete, USA 1958, 16mm, colour, sound, 9 min

Joining the lyrical images of a singular high summer’s day, Hindle’s debut film is also one of the nation’s first works from the ‘personal film’ movement.

Bruce Baillie, Quick Billy, USA 1971, 16mm, colour and black and white, sound, 56 min

The essential experience of transformation, between Life and Death, death and birth, or rebirth, in four reels. The first three are adapted from The Tibetan Book of the Dead; the fourth reel in the form of a black-and-white one-reeler Western … The work incorporates a large body of material: dream, the daily recording roll-by-roll of that extraordinary period of the filmmaker’s life – “the moment-by-moment confrontation with Reality” (Carl Jung). Each phase of the work was given its own time to develop, stretching over a period of three-and-a-half years …  All of the film was recorded next to the Pacific Ocean in Fort Bragg, California …  the Sea is the main force though the film.

Bruce Baillie

Bruce Baillie Quick Billy Rolls 14, 41, 43, 46 and 52, USA 1968–70, 16mm, colour, silent, 18 min

‘Artifacts from the descending layers of an archaeological dig’
Bruce Baillie

Introduced by Garbiñe Ortega, series curator

Tate Film is supported by LUMA Foundation

Tate Modern

Starr Cinema

Bankside
London SE1 9TG
Plan your visit

Date & Time

27 November 2016 at 17.00–19.00

Artwork
Close

Join in

  • Twitter
  • Facebook
  • YouTube
  • Instagram
  • Pinterest
Sign up to emails

Sign up to emails

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

Tate’s privacy policy

About

  • About us
  • Our collection
  • Terms and copyright
  • Governance
  • Picture library
  • ARTIST ROOMS
  • Tate Kids

Support

  • Tate Collective
  • Members
  • Patrons
  • Donate
  • Corporate
  • My account
  • Press
  • Jobs
  • Accessibility
  • Privacy
  • Cookies
  • Contact
© The Board of Trustees of the Tate Gallery, 2026
All rights reserved