wcnebloom april2015

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magbloom.com | April/May 2015 | Bloom 25 On April 26, the Indiana University Cinema will present the U.S. debut of Whatever Comes Next, a documentary about local painter Annemarie Mahler. The film had its world premiere in Switzerland last Novem- ber and won a Winter 2015 Silver Award for documentary feature from the Interna- tional Independent Film Awards. With an original score by the Norwe- gian-French composer Olav Lervik, the film focuses on the 89-year-old Mahler’s current, day-to-day life in Bloomington and at her summer home on Cape Cod. “Annemarie has had a very eventful life, so the film could have focused on the past,” says Hildegard Keller, the film’s ‘Whatever Comes Next’ producer-director and a professor of Germanic Studies at IU. “But Annemarie lives in the moment, always open to new experiences and embracing whatever comes next, which is why I chose to focus on her present life.” Born in Vienna in 1926, Mahler fled the Nazis in 1939, eventually ending up in Bloomington, where she’s lived and painted since 1957. When Keller initially approached Mahler about making the docu- mentary, she had little interest. “When Hildegard asked me about what might have happened if my family and I had stayed in Vienna, I was offended, because it dredged up memories I did not want to think about,” Mahler says. “But then I thought that if the film can help more people see my paintings, that could be for my chil- dren, who otherwise will have a big storage problem deciding what to do with all my paintings one day.” From the start, Keller did not want to make a conventional biopic. Instead, she called on her background in puppetry and stage theater to create two interwoven levels: one depicting Mahler’s everyday life and work and another delving into the art- ist’s inner life via staged vignettes featuring miniature figurines and voice-over narra- tion drawn from Mahler’s writings. Keller hopes the film’s double structure will enable viewers to “feel the depth of this person, her vitality and strength and her art,” she says, as well as “the depth and complexity of any life and of the multitude of voices we all have in us.” The Bloomington premiere of Whatever Comes Next is part of the IU Cinema’s Inter- national Arthouse Series and will be shown at 6:30 p.m., April 26. Keller and Carter Ross, the director of photography, will be in attendance at the free but ticketed showing. —Jeremy Shere Film About Local Painter To Open at IU Cinema Caption. Photo by Tyagan Miller

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Page 1: WCNeBloom april2015

magbloom.com | April/May 2015 | Bloom 25

On April 26, the Indiana University Cinema will present the U.S. debut of Whatever Comes Next, a documentary about local painter Annemarie Mahler. The film had its world premiere in Switzerland last Novem-ber and won a Winter 2015 Silver Award for documentary feature from the Interna-tional Independent Film Awards.

With an original score by the Norwe-gian-French composer Olav Lervik, the film focuses on the 89-year-old Mahler’s current, day-to-day life in Bloomington and at her summer home on Cape Cod.

“Annemarie has had a very eventful life, so the film could have focused on the past,” says Hildegard Keller, the film’s

‘Whatever Comes Next’

producer-director and a professor of Germanic Studies at IU. “But Annemarie lives in the moment, always open to new experiences and embracing whatever comes next, which is why I chose to focus on her present life.”

Born in Vienna in 1926, Mahler fled the Nazis in 1939, eventually ending up in Bloomington, where she’s lived and painted since 1957. When Keller initially approached Mahler about making the docu-mentary, she had little interest.

“When Hildegard asked me about what might have happened if my family and I had stayed in Vienna, I was offended, because it dredged up memories I did not want to think about,” Mahler says. “But then I thought that if the film can help more people see

my paintings, that could be for my chil-dren, who otherwise will have a big storage problem deciding what to do with all my paintings one day.”

From the start, Keller did not want to make a conventional biopic. Instead, she called on her background in puppetry and stage theater to create two interwoven levels: one depicting Mahler’s everyday life and work and another delving into the art-ist’s inner life via staged vignettes featuring miniature figurines and voice-over narra-tion drawn from Mahler’s writings.

Keller hopes the film’s double structure will enable viewers to “feel the depth of this person, her vitality and strength and her art,” she says, as well as “the depth and complexity of any life and of the multitude of voices we all have in us.”

The Bloomington premiere of Whatever Comes Next is part of the IU Cinema’s Inter-national Arthouse Series and will be shown at 6:30 p.m., April 26. Keller and Carter Ross, the director of photography, will be in attendance at the free but ticketed showing. —Jeremy Shere

Film About Local Painter To Open at IU Cinema

Caption. Photo by Tyagan Miller