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.
The lonely crowd: Dwoskin, Durgnat
and the London Film-Makers’ Co-op
HENRY K. MILLER
Stephen Dwoskin and Raymond Durgnat first met in 1966. Both taught
in art schools, Dwoskin at the London College of Printing, Durgnat at St
Martin’s, and both were early members of the London Film-Makers’
Co-op (LFMC), founded that autumn. Durgnat first saw Dwoskin’s films
during the Co-op’s inaugural ‘Spontaneous Festival of Underground
Movies’, which was staged at the Jeanetta Cochrane Theatre – attached
to another art school, the Central – and promoted by Durgnat in the
newly launched underground paper IT. The following summer Durgnat
published the first substantial article on Dwoskin, ‘Dwoskin’s dream-
films’, in the second issue of the LFMC’s journal Cinim, which Dwoskin
designed. The moment is freighted with countercultural mystique. But
the encounter of Dwoskin and Durgnat took place in the margins of, or in
unfamiliar incarnations of, these much attended-to sites and institutions,
and their friendship developed apart from them.
While Dwoskin’s relationship with the LFMC and with the funding
bodies which began to support artists’ films in the 1970s was never easy,
he had the support of some of the writers grouped around Screen,
including Laura Mulvey and Paul Willemen. Durgnat, however, was
persona non grata: ‘They’re very possessive about me now, though,
Ray’, Dwoskin told him in an interview published in 1984, when they
were both teaching at the Royal College of Art. ‘They don’t want heretics
like you writing about me.’
1
Nonetheless, Durgnat’s perspective on his
work was one that Dwoskin to some extent endorsed, and the two of
them collaborated on a film project whose theme may have been inspired
by the LFMC’s chaotic early years. Though Durgnat had more in
dossier
1 Raymond Durgnat, ‘Directing the
avant garde’, Films on Screen and
Video, May 1984, p. 11.
87
Screen 57:1 Spring 2016
© The Author 2016. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of Screen. All rights reserved
doi:10.1093/screen/hjw011
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