Birthday: 1930-06-30
Place of Birth: Toronto, Canada
Biography: Joyce Wieland (1931-1998) was an experimental filmmaker and artist, whose work challenged and bridged boundaries among avant garde film factions of her time. Her works introduced a kind of manual manipulation of the filmstrip that inscribed an explicitly female craft tradition into her films, while also playing with the facticity of photographed images. Wieland's output was small, but received considerable attention in comparison to other female avant garde filmmakers of her time. As both a gallery artist and a filmmaker, Wieland was able to crossover between those realms and garner attention and support in both. In 1963 Wieland and Snow moved to New York where they lived for ten years. She attracted critical recognition of her work but eventually moved back to Toronto. Wieland later divorced Snow and kept a low profile until her death in 1998 from Alzheimer's disease. She was made an Officer of the Order of Canada in 1982.
An unreleased diary film shot during the Fairleigh-Dickinson Artist Seminar simultaneous to the prod...
View Movie
Ken Jacobs’s most elusive and mysterious film is at once an allegory of movie-making, a demonstratio...
View Movie
A camera moves back and forth at an increasing pace. Back and forth, back and forth......
View Movie
Joyce Wieland: “Hollis and I came back to Toronto on holiday in the summer of '67. We were staying a...
View Movie
Various unrelated vignettes, often juxtaposing sound and image....
View Movie
The rising moon is the main theme in this short movie of three people and an animal going about thei...
View Movie
Experimental short in which a camera pans quickly in a small apartment space; Disembodied voices spe...
View Movie
A serendipitous encounter with a younger artist gives legendary Canadian art icon Michael Snow the o...
View Movie
Wavelength consists of almost no action, and what action does occur is largely elided. If the film c...
View Movie
"I decided to make a film at my kitchen table, there is nothing like knowing my table. The high art ...
View Movie
In this "fourteen-part drill for the camera," Frampton created a portrait gallery of his art-world f...
View Movie
Zorns Lemma is a 1970 American structuralist film by Hollis Frampton. It is named after Zorn's lemma...
View Movie
The movie takes a rather negative look at things despite the fact that it was shot in reversal film....
View Movie
Considered one of Canada's most important women artists of the second half of the 20th century, Joyc...
View Movie