Check out the Latest Articles:
06.01.10
Maya Deren at MOMA

Maya Deren’s Legacy: Women and Experimental Film
May 15–October 4, 2010

Maya Deren (American, 1917–1961) was a visionary of American experimental film in the 1940s and 1950s. A precocious student, she studied poetry and literature at New York University and Smith College, where she became interested in the arts. While working for modern-dance choreographer Katherine Dunham, Deren met her future husband, filmmaker Alexander Hammid, who introduced her to European avant-garde film. In 1943, the couple collaborated on the short film Meshes of the Afternoon, which has since become one of the most widely influential films of the American experimental-film movement.

Deren, who received the first Guggenheim Foundation grant for “creative work in the field of motion pictures” and formed the Creative Film Foundation to broaden support for experimental film, continued making and self-distributing her own films and lecturing and writing about avant-garde cinema theory until her untimely death at the age of forty-four. Her pioneering formal innovations—performing in front of the camera, using semiautobiographical content, and meshing literary, psychological, and ethnographic disciplines with rigorous technique—inspired future generations of experimental filmmakers.

This exhibition, which consists of a video installation in the Theater Galleries and short-film programs in the theaters, examines Deren’s legacy through both her own work and that of a trio of women directors upon whom she had an indelible influence: Carolee Schneemann, Barbara Hammer, and Su Friedrich.

Related Posts :

  • Installation view of "Breath: The Vertical Works" at Hangar Bicocca, Milan, Italy 2009 Anthony McCall is a key figure in the history ...

  • WIELS Contemporary Art Centre Felix Gonzalez-Torres Specific Objects without Specific Form January 16th - April 25th 2010 www.wiels. ...

  • In this year's Biennial more than half the artists represented are women, a record for the Whitney’s exhibition. Has the Whitney achieve ...

  • Reflections on Roland Barthes's Camera Lucida. Roland Barthes's 1980 book Camera Lucida is perhaps the most influential book ever pub ...



  1. It‘s quite in here! Why not leave a response?