Bruce Conner 已去


 

http://artforum.com/news/#news20693  Bruce Conner (1933–2008)

07.07.08

Bruce Conner, a San Francisco–based artist known for his assemblages, films, drawings, and interdisciplinary works, passed away Monday afternoon. Conner moved to San Francisco in 1957 and quickly found his place within the city’s vibrant Beat community. His gauzy assemblages of scraps salvaged from abandoned buildings, nylon stockings, doll parts, and other found materials gained him art-world attention, as did A Movie (1958), an avant-garde film that juxtaposed footage from B movies, newsreels, soft-core pornography, and other fragments, all set to a musical score. (In 1991, A Moviewas selected for preservation by the United States National Film Registry at the Library of Congress.) Conner was active in the Bay Area’s 1960s counterculture scene, designing light shows for Family Dog performances at the Avalon Ballroom, and in the ’70s focused on drawing and photography. Art-world recognition resumed in the ’80s and continued to the present: Conner was included in the 1997 Whitney Biennial, was the subject of a touring survey in 1999–2000, and is featured in the current Carnegie International. At Conner’s request, there will be no funeral.

One Response to “Bruce Conner 已去”

  1. wenhua Says:

    What can one say about the film work of Bruce Conner.
    Bruces’ films are pivotal and represent a
    revolutionary change in style amongst the films of
    avant garde and experimental filmmakers around the
    world. The art of found footage filmmaking was
    capulted into a new world with films such A MOVIE made
    in 1952 by Bruce Conner. Bruce was not the first
    filmmaker to incorporate found footage into his films.
    Many had done this before him such at Joseph Cornell
    in his mater work ROSE HOBART, and even the
    surrealists of the 1920’s utilized found footage as
    seen in Rene Claire’s ENTRACTE. However Bruce in the
    first experimental filmmaker to fully explore and
    investigate the depths of found footage filmmaking.

    As seen in COSMIC RAY Conner uses found footage to
    touch on themes, of war, sexuality, political parody,
    social injustice attempts to discover the soul of
    human kind. The used of his impacting imagery makes us
    aware of the value of each and every frame as if time
    has an urgency. Bruce’s films are not intended to loll
    us to sleep although there are moments of peace, like
    in A MOVIE or CROSSROADS. However these moments
    quickly vanish when we discover in CROSSROADS that the
    beautifully shaped clouds we are looking at are
    actually radioactive from the atomic weapon which was
    just detonated.

    Virtually every experimental/avant garde filmmaker has
    been influenced by the films of Bruce Conner. Whether
    it be Craig Baldwin, Jay Rosenblatt, Martin Arnold,
    Abigail Child, Stan Brakhage, Peter Hutton, or myself.
    We are all dazzled and amazed and affected by not only
    the strong striking imagery, however, the rhythms of
    the music, editing that is timed one step of our
    ability to see, the use of lighting, the film’s
    rawness and the recurring themes.

    Bruce Conner’s work in cinema rightly deserves the
    recognition received and the truly historic place that
    they have garnished in the history of
    experimental/avant garde cinema.

    An attempt to describe the impact of Bruce Conners’
    films on the millions of people who have experienced
    and viewed them during the past 56 year would almost
    be impossible. A complete listing of partial and one
    man showings by Bruce Conner would be at least 200
    pages long, not to mention the thousands of screenings
    of his films at Museums, Galleries, small film
    showcases, and classrooms throughout the world.

    This is hardly a filmmaker in the world, including
    those that produce commercial narrative films, that is
    not familiar with name and work of Bruce Conner.

    Bruce Conner’s work in cinema rightly deserves the
    recognition received and the truly historic place that
    they have garnished in the history of
    experimental/avant garde filmmaking. These films will
    live on in their spirit and will continue to influence
    the world that is and that which is let to come.

    We who him will greatly miss him

    Dominc Angerame 2008

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