
Stan
Brakhage (1933 - 2003) completed his first film, Interim,
in 1952 at the age of nineteen, and as of 1998 has completed
300 personal, independent works ranging in length from
9 seconds to four hours and incorporating a wide variety
of innovative and uniquely expressive forms and techniques.
He has, in addition, written several books, including
Metaphors on Vision, A Moving Picture Giving and Taking
Book, The Brakhage Lectures, Seen, Film Biographies, The
Brakhage Scrapbook, Film at Wit's End, I...Sleeping and
The Domain of Aura.
Brakhage has lectured extensively over the past 35
years at universities, colleges, museums, galleries,
film societies and film festivals throughout the world,
his interests and areas of knowledge including the histories
and aesthetics of music, painting, poetry and film.
In addition to his public lecturing, Brakhage taught
film history and aesthetics from 1969 through 1981 at
The School of the Art Institute of Chicago and since
1981 has been teaching in the Department of Film Studies
at the University of Colorado, Boulder, where he is
a Distinguished Professor.
Brakhage
lived for many years with his growing family in the
Colorado mountains near Boulder and during that time
made films primarily inspired by and expressive of the
environment in which he lived (though that source being
"as diverse as to have included love-making, childbirth,
children's play, mountains in snow-storm, potted plants,
flames of heart and forest fires, trips to town and,
even, journeys around the world"). Since 1986 Brakhage
has been living in the town of Boulder, where he gives
ongoing support to many younger filmmakers as well as
continuing his own prolific output of work, creating
work that is photographed, hand-painted on film and,
most recently, films created by scratching and gouging
the film emulsion itself.
Stan Brakhage has received a number of honors and awards
for his contributions to the arts, including: The Brussels
World Fair Protest Award (1958), Film Culture's Fourth
Independent Film Award (1962), a Rockefeller Fellowship
(1967-1969), three Museum of Modern Art Retrospectives
(1971,
1977
& 1996), a Brandeis Citation (1973), the Colorado
Governor's Award for the Arts and Humanities (1974),
a Guggenheim Fellowship (1978), the Jimmy Fyan Morris
Memorial Foundation Award (1979), a Telluride Film Festival
Medallion (1981), an Honorary Doctorate from the San
Francisco Art Institute (1981), the Maya Deren Award
for Independent Film and Video Artists (1986), the Denver
International Film Festival Award for Outstanding Achievement
in the Art of Film (1988), a University of Colorado
Medal (1988), and the MacDowell Colony Medal (1990).
- - from - - www.zeitgeistfilms.com
Stan Brakhage, the most lyrical, introspective and
audacious practioner of the New American Cinema, died
on Sunday, March 9th, 2003, in Victoria, British Columbia.