Place of Birth:
Kansas City, Missouri, USA
Date of Birth:
1/14/1933
Stan Brakhage is one of the most influential filmmakers in American avant-garde cinema, noted for his unflinching social commentaries and technical innovations. Over his nearly 40-year career, he has made over 200 films of varying length. He made his first film, Interim (1952) at age 18 after dropping out of college. Brakhage films seek to change the way we see. They encourage viewers to eschew traditional narrative structure in favor of pure visual perception that is not reliant on naming what is seen; rather his goal is to create a more visceral visual experience, for he believes that a "stream-of visual-consciousness could be nothing less than the pathway of the soul." To this end, his films are shot in highly sensual colors and utilize minimal soundtracks. His work can be divided into distinct periods. His first short films explored the properties and possibilities of light. In many of his experimental ventures, Brakhage has forgone traditional cinematography in favor of working directly with the film stock itself. He has occasionally painted, inked, scratched and dyed images onto it; he has also tried pasting organic objects on the film. His most famous example is the 1963 short Mothlight in which he glued moth wings onto the stock. Some of his early films were based on his most intimate experiences that included making love to his new bride--depicted on negative film--in Wedlock House: An Intercourse (1959), and an attempt to bring his dead dog back to life with a camera in Sirius Remembered (1959). During the 1960s, Brakhage's iconoclastic views were celebrated for their poetry, but during the '70s, his focus changed to social issues and he alienated many supporters with such disturbing film series as the "Pittsburgh documents" in which he presented many gruesome views of inner city life with films such as Act of Seeing with One's Own Eyes (1971) which was shot in a morgue. He also continued with autobiographical material with the "Sincerity/Duplicity series. During the 1980s, Brakhage's focus again changed--this time he became intrigued with creating truly "abstract" films such as Arabics (1982) which consists of brilliant bursts of colored light which he claims, represent "envisioned music." In addition to filmmaking, Brakhage also wrote books about films and filmmaking and also served as a teacher.
A Visit to Stan Brakhage
Sonic Youth: Koncertas Stan Brakhage Prisiminimui (April 12, 2003)
Encomium
In the Mirror of Maya Deren
Stan & Jane Brakhage
Brakhage Crosses Central Park
Cat's Cradle
Window Water Baby Moving
Dog Star Man: Part IV
Doodlin': Impressions Of Len Lye
Flesh of Morning
Brakhage
Reflecting Thought: Stan Brakhage
Please Leave a Message: Anthology Film Archives Voicemails Through the Ages
Trumpit
I Met Stan Brakhage (At Moma, N.Y.C)
Vakvagany
A Visit to Stan Brakhage
Garden Path
Cannibal! The Musical
Z (Zee Not Zed)
Joseph Cornell: Worlds in a Box
The One Romantic Venture of Edward
The Extraordinary Child
I... Dreaming
As I Was Moving Ahead, Occasionally I Saw Brief Glimpses of Beauty
Song 1
The Stars Are Beautiful
Faust's Other: An Idyll
Wedlock House: An Intercourse
Birth of a Nation
Dog Star Man: Part I
Dog Star Man
Dog Star Man: Part II
Prelude: Dog Star Man
Dog Star Man: Part III
As Is Was
The Art of Vision
Free Radicals: A History of Experimental Film
For Stan
Grand Opera: An Historical Romance
Filmmakers
Invocation: Maya Deren
Watunna
Tortured Dust
Looking at Forest of Bliss
Stan Brakhage Exits the Cinema and Enters the Light of Day
Reality's Invisible
Jonas in the Desert
Notes on Marie Menken
Keepers of the Frame
Keeping an Eye on Stan
Stan Brakhage on Jim Davis
Stan Brakhage on Gregory Markopoulos
Abstract Cinema
Diaries, Notes, and Sketches
Life with Stan #4: Stan Painting
BRAKHAGE ON BRAKHAGE