Nationality British Occupation Artist | Name Nick Jordan | |
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Nick jordan artist top 11 facts
Nick Jordan is a visual artist and experimental filmmaker based in Manchester, UK. Jordan's work has been exhibited widely, including at Innsbruck International Biennale (Austria); ICA (London); Kunstmuseum (Bonn); Academia de Cine (Madrid); Garage Center for Contemporary Culture (Moscow); Musée du quai Branly (Paris). Nick Jordan also works in a collaborative practice with fellow artist Jacob Cartwright, see Jacob Cartwright and Nick Jordan.
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- Nick jordan artist top 11 facts
- Nick jordan commas official video
- Filmography
- Famous dex x nick jordan where is my mind official video
- References

The artist's practice is cross-disciplinary, encompassing film, drawing, painting, photography, objects, publications and collaboration, and often explores the relationship between the natural world and cultural history.

Nick Jordan's short films deploy a documentary approach, photographed in direct response to particular locations. The edited works present oblique, layered narratives and cinematic sequences; with treated soundtracks that combine voice-overs, original musical scores and ambient sound recordings.
Nick Jordan's films have won a number of awards, with screenings at many international film festivals, including BFI London Film Festival;Encounters Short Film and Animation Festival; Kassel Dokfest; Edinburgh International Film Festival (EIFF); São Paulo International Short Film Festival; VIS Vienna; Portland International Film Festival; IndiLisboa; Clermont-Ferrand International Short Film Festival; Interfilm Berlin; Documenta (Madrid).
Nick Jordan is the co-director of Between Two Rivers (2012) – a feature-length documentary about the town of Cairo, Illinois. The film was awarded Best Film at Big Muddy Film Festival (2012) and River’s Edge International Film Festival (2012)
Publications include Alien Invaders, published by Book Works, which takes the form of a guidebook to non-native species found in Britain, and the effects on native wildlife.
Other publications include Some Mild Peril (Castlefield Gallery, 2004);The Audubon Trilogy (Dedecus, 2010), a chapbook and series of short films drawn from the writings of 19th-century artist and frontiersman John James Audubon, following his escapades along the Ohio river and Mississippi river; and Heaven, Hell and Other Places, a documentary on Emanuel Swedenborg, commissioned by The Swedenborg Society.