Mining the unconscious through lush explorations of images, this program of new works by American avant-garde filmmakers immerses us in the sensual qualities of cinema itself. Dominic Angerame's Premonition (1995, 10 mins) is a haunting portrait of the San Francisco cityscape. In The Book of Red (1994, 10 mins), Janie Geiser uses doll-like figures to construct a fantasy in which a woman's world is torn apart and imagined anew. In Phil Solomon's Figure/Ground (The Snowman) (1995, 10 mins), the surface shimmers and shifts to create an unsettling evocation of childhood. Peggy Ahwesh's The Color of Love (1994, 12 mins) is a lovingly brash pean to female sexuality. In Consideration of Pompeii (1995, 10 mins), masterly hand-painted by Stan Brakhage, is a three-part meditation on loss and ephemera. Andrew Noren's Imaginary Light (1994, 31 mins) is a study of the delicacies of light and shadow revealed in everyday views. Guest-curated by S. F. Cinematheque's Steve Anker and PFA's Kathy Geritz.