Péter Forgács

Péter Forgács
Born 1950 September 10.
Nationality Hungarian
Field art, film
Works Private Hungary Series, El Perro Negro, Miss Universe 1929, Wittgenstein Tractatus, The Maelstrom, The Danube Exodus

Péter Forgács (1950) is a media artist and independent filmmaker based in Budapest, Hungary. He is best known for his "Private Hungary" series of award winning films based on home movies from the 1930s and 1960s, which document ordinary lives that were soon to be ruptured by an extraordinary historical trauma that occurs off screen.

Contents

Biography

Since 1976 Péter Forgács is active in the Hungarian art scene as media artist/filmmaker. In the late 1970s and '80s he collaborated with the contemporary music ensemble Group 180 Group 180, at the same time he started to worke in the Balázs Béla Film Studio. Forgács established the Private Photo & Film Archives Foundation (PPFA, 1983) in Budapest, a unique collection of amateur film footage from the '920, and has made this material "the raw data" for his unique postmodern re-orchestrations of history. In 2002 The Getty Research Institute held an exhibit The Danube Exodus: Rippling Currents of the River. His international debut came with the Bartos Family (1988)[1], which was awarded the Grand Prix at the World Wide Video Festival in The Hague (1990). Since then Forgács has received several international festival awards in Budapest, Lisbon, Marseilles, [San Francisco International Film Festival] Golden Gate Award 1998, Tribeca Film Festival/New York, 2005 and Berlin, Prix Europa 1997. Forgács won the 2007 Erasmus Prize, which is "awarded to a person or institution which has made an exceptionally important contribution to culture in Europe."[1]

Filmography

Installations and Performances

Awards

Works in Public Collections

External links

External links

References

  1. ^ Praemium Erasmianum Foundation. Presentation Erasmus Prize to Péter Forgács - 29 November 2007. Retrieved August 27, 2008.