Bill Brown (filmmaker)
Bill Brown | |
---|---|
Born |
William Brown Lubbock, Texas |
Nationality | American |
Education |
CalArts (MFA 1997)[1] Harvard (BFA 1992)[2] |
Known for | Documentary film, Photography |
Awards |
New York Underground Film Festival Award (2002) USA Film Festival Texas Award (2000) |
Bill Brown is a "nomadic"[3] filmmaker, photographer, and author from Lubbock, Texas. He has produced films on the United States–Mexico border, North Dakota missile silos, the Trans-Canada Highway, among other places. The films have been exhibited at numerous film festivals and museums, including the Museum of Modern Art in New York.[4][5] He describes his films as postcards with a pretty picture but instead of words on the back, his films are narrated with voiceover[6]. He's also the author of a zine called Dream Whip[7] which currently has 15 issues, and the book Saugus to the Sea (ISBN 978-0968974407).
Films
- Roswell (1994)[8]
- Hub City (1996) [9]
- Confederation Park (1999)[8]
- Buffalo Common (2001)[8]
- Mountain State (2003)[8]
- The Other Side (2006)[9]
- Chicago Corner (2009)
- Document (2012)
- Memorial Land (2012)
External links
- Bill Brown's website
- Youtube films
- Bill Brown at the Internet Movie Database
- Dream Whip Zine
- Samples and Collections from Dream Whip
References
- ↑ Notable alumni | california institute of the arts
- ↑ Project Page | Mountain State - Essay
- ↑ The Copyist Conspiracy
- ↑ MoMA.org | Film Exhibitions | 2003 | MediaScope: Bill Brown and Bjorn Melhus
- ↑ MoMA.org | Film Exhibitions | 2006 | TOMORROWLAND: CalArts in Moving Pictures
- ↑ Interview with Bill Brown
- ↑ Bill Brown
- 1 2 3 4 Peripheral Produce | Catalog
- 1 2 Catalog | Homeland Insecurity DVD: Films by Bill Brown | Microcosm Publishing
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