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LAFF: Marilyn Brakhage Q&A Part 3 - Jan. 11, 2009

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Uploaded by on Mar 18, 2009

January 11, 2009.
Marilyn Brakhage Q&A - Part 3
Moderator: Adam Hyman
Location: The Spielberg Theatre at the Egyptian Theatre.

Los Angeles Filmforum was delighted to open its 2009 season with a marvelous program of films by the master avant-garde filmmaker Stan Brakhage, hosted by Marilyn Brakhage in her first appearance in Los Angeles.

The Machine of Eden (1970, 16 mm, silent, 11 min)
Burial Path (1978, 16mm, color/silent, 15min (18fps))
He was born, he suffered, he died (1974, 16 mm, silent, 7 min)
Visions in Meditation #4 (1990, 16 mm, silent, 19 min)
Boulder Blues and Pearls and (1992, 16 mm, Sound by Rick Corrigan, 23 min)
Persians 1-3 (1999, 16 mm, silent, 8 min)
Chinese Series (2003, 35mm, silent, 2 min)

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MARILYN BRAKHAGE is a graduate of the Motion Picture Studies and Art History departments of Ryerson and York Universities (Toronto). She has worked as a film distributor, programmer, freelance writer and home educator, and is currently managing the estate of her late husband, filmmaker and theoretician, Stan Brakhage (1933-2003). Published articles include "Frames of Mind: Stan Brakhage's Thot Fal'n" (to accompany the RAI DVD of The Cut-Up Films of William Burroughs), "Rhythms of Vision in Stan Brakhage's City Streaming" (Canadian Journal of Film Studies, Spring 2005), and "On Stan Brakhage and Visual Music," (vantage point on-line magazine, www.media-net.bc.ca, 2008). Marilyn Brakhage currently lives in Victoria, British Columbia.


STAN BRAKHAGE, 1933-2003
Born in Kansas City, Missouri in 1933, Brakhage moved to Denver, Colorado at the age of six. He sang as a boy soprano soloist, dreamed of being a poet, and graduated from South High School in 1951 with a scholarship to Dartmouth. After one semester, he left to pursue a life in the Arts, returning to Denver to make his first film in 1952.

As a young man, Brakhage lived in San Francisco and New York associating with many other poets, musicians, painters and filmmakers, including Robert Duncan, Kenneth Rexroth, John Cage, Edgard Varese, Joseph Cornell, Maya Deren and Marie Menken. A youthful "poet-with-a-camera," Brakhage soon emerged as a significant film artist, evolving an entirely new form of first person, lyrical cinema.

Brakhage married Jane Collom in 1957, and from the early 60s they lived in Rollinsville, Colorado, making films and raising their five children. Brakhage also continued to travel around the country and abroad becoming a leading figure of the American avant-garde film movement. He lived in Boulder from1986, and in 2002 moved to Canada with his second wife, Marilyn, and their two children.

Before his death in March, 2003, Brakhage had completed more than 350 films, ranging from the psycho-dramatic works of the early 1950s to autobiographical lyrics, mythological epics, "documents," and metaphorical film 'poems' -- variously employing his uniquely developed hand-held camera and rapid editing techniques, multiple superimpositions, collages, photographic abstractions, and elaborate hand-painting applied directly to the surface of the film. A deeply personal filmmaker, Brakhage's great project was to explore the nature of light and all forms of vision while encompassing a vast range of subject matter. He frequently referred to his works as "visual music" or "moving visual thinking." The majority of his films are intentionally silent.

Brakhage taught at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago and as Distinguished Professor of Film Studies at the University of Colorado at Boulder. The recipient of three Honorary Degrees and numerous prestigious awards, he lectured extensively on filmmaking and the Arts, and is the author of 11 books including his seminal 1963 work, Metaphors On Vision, and his more recent series of essays, Telling Time. - Marilyn Brakhage, December 2007


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