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Chick Strand

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Name
  
Chick Strand

Children
  
Eric Strand

Spouse
  
Neon Park (m. ?–1993)

Died
  
July 11, 2009

Role
  
Filmmaker


Chick Strand httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediaenthumbf

Movies
  
Soft Fiction, Fake Fruit Factory, Mosori Monika

Awards
  
Guggenheim Fellowship for Creative Arts, US & Canada

Wild rumpus film by chick strand


Mildred "Chick" Strand (December 3, 1931 – July 11, 2009) was an experimental filmmaker, "a pioneer in blending avant-garde techniques with documentary".

Contents

Chick Strand httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediaenff8Chi

Life

Chick Strand Soft Fiction Screening Set Occidental College The Liberal Arts

Born Mildred D. Totman in Northern California she was given the nickname "Chick" by her father. She married her first husband, Paul Anderson Strand, in 1957, and they had one son, film editor Eric Strand. Chick Strand studied anthropology at Berkeley, and in the early 1960s organised film happenings with Bruce Baillie. In 1961, Strand established the Canyon CinemaNews, a monthly filmmakers' journal which became a focal point for the West Coast independent film movement. Baillie, among others, founded a filmmakers' collective called Canyon Cinema in 1967.

Chick Strand Experimental filmmaking Chick Strand is coming to Tate Modern The

Strand met her second husband Neon Park, an artist, in the early 1960s in Berkeley. They were collaborators in art and life for over 30 years, dividing their time between Los Angeles and San Miguel de Allende, a small town in Mexico. In 1966 she enrolled in the ethnography program at UCLA, and after graduating in 1971 taught for 24 years at Occidental College. While in Mexico, Strand made documentary films about the people she met there. In later years she became a painter.

Work

Chick Strand Chick Strand Seora con Flores Harvard Film Archive

Mosori Monika (1969) is a documentary about colonialism in Venezuela, told from the points of view of an elderly Warao woman, a Franciscan nun and the filmmaker herself. Other films on Latin America include Cosas de mi Vida (1976), Guacamole (1976) and Mujer de Milfuegos (Woman of a Thousand Fires) (1976). Strand's ethnographic films are distinctive for their complex layering of sound and image, and the juxtaposition of found footage and sound with original images. Later works include Cartoon le Mousse (1979), Fever Dream (1979) and Kristallnacht (1979). Fake Fruit Factory (1986) is included on the National Film Preservation Foundation's 2009 DVD Treasures IV: American Avant-Garde Film, 1947-1986.

Chick Strand Goodbye Chick Strand KCET

Her films have been screened at the Museum of Modern Art and the Tate. An early promotional film for Sears, made with Pat O'Neill and Neon Park, is held along with her complete body of work in the collection of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences. The Academy Film Archive has preserved a number of Strand's films, including Cartoon Le Mousse, Eric and the Monsters, and Fever Dream. In 2011, Fake Fruit Factory was selected to the U.S. National Film Registry.

Chick Strand Chick Strand Experimental Cinema

Strand won the American Film Institute's Maya Deren Independent Film and Video Artists Award in 1996.

Filmography

Chick Strand EXPERIMENTA WEEKEND Chick Strand on Mosori Monika

  • Eric and the Monsters (1964)
  • Angel Blue Sweet Wings (1966)
  • Anselmo (1967)
  • Waterfall (1967)
  • Mosori Monika (1970)
  • Cosas de mi Vida (1976)
  • Elasticity (1976)
  • Guacamole (1976)
  • Mujer de Milfuegos (Woman of a Thousand Fires) (1976)
  • Cartoon le Mousse (1979)
  • Fever Dream (1979)
  • Kristallnacht (1979)
  • Loose Ends (1979)
  • Soft Fiction (1979)
  • Anselmo and the Women (1986)
  • Artificial Paradise (1986)
  • By the Lake (1986)
  • Coming up for Air (1986)
  • Fake Fruit Factory (1986), selected by the National Film Registry in 2011
  • Señora con Flores / Woman with Flowers (1995/2011)
  • References

    Chick Strand Wikipedia