Jason Koxvold
Jason Koxvold | |
---|---|
Born |
1977 Liège, Belgium |
Nationality | British |
Education | University of Edinburgh, Haileybury and Imperial Service College |
Known for | Film, Photography, and Interactive media |
Jason Koxvold (born in 1977 in Belgium) is a British artist and director based in New York City in the United States working in photography, interactive media and film. Best known for his stark, graphical large-format photographs depicting the topology of globalisation, he works in 4x5" and 8x10" using Kodak film, with lenses by Schneider Kreuznach and Nikkor.
Awards
Koxvold has judged the 2007 Emmy Awards, the 2008 AICP show, and the 2009 One Show Interactive Awards. His short films and music videos have screened at South by Southwest, the Los Angeles Film Festival, Hawaii International Film Festival, San Francisco Independent Film Festival and the RES (magazine) Los Angeles Screenings. His music video for Citizens Here and Abroad, 'You drive and we'll listen to music', won Best Short Film at the Queens International Film Festival[1] and Best Short Film in the Rockstar Games UPLOAD05[2] competition.
Collaborators
Some of Koxvold's most successful music videos were created for San Francisco band Citizens Here and Abroad (now separated). He has collaborated with multimedia artists Steve Lambert, Noah Kalina, and Adam Marks; participated in PSST! Pass It On. Koxvold was the title designer for the Ewan Macgregor-narrated film 'The Doctor, the Tornado, and the Kentucky Kid',[3] directed by Mark Neale.
References
Additional References and Interviews
- Music Video Asia S.F. Asian American Film Festival 2005
- Stash 22: PSST! PASS IT ON July 5, 2006
- 29 Brilliant Music Videos, January 21, 2008 Smashing Magazine
- Interview by Matthew Newton on cpluv, September 22, 2009
- We Heart, February 3, 2010
- It's Nice That, 12 April 2010
- Landscape Stories, Gianpaolo Arena, June 2010
- The New Minimum, Renegade Pencils, July 2010
- Nova Gallery, United Kingdom, December 2010
- Rethink LA, Architecture and Design Museum, Los Angeles, August 2011
- The Great Leap Sideways, Stanley Wolukau-Wanambwa, December 2011