- William Heick
William Heick (born 1916) is a San Francisco based photographer and filmmaker. He is best known for his ethnographic photographs and documentary films of North American Indian cultures. W.R. Heick served as producer-director and chief cinematographer for the [http://ls.berkeley.edu/dept/anth/dept.html Anthropology Department] of the
University of California, Berkeley on their National Science Foundation supported American Indian Film Project. His photographs capture the life and culture of Native Americans from theKwakiutl , Kashaya Pomo,Hupa , Navajo,Blackfoot andSioux . [http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=/chronicle/archive/1998/10/30/EB86274.DTL&type=printable] He filmed a number of award winning films in this series along with the documentaries "Pomo Shaman" and "Sucking Doctor", a Pomo doctoring ceremony considered by anthropologists to be one of the most complete and outstanding films of an aboriginal ceremony made to date.Art Photography
His fine art photography has been exhibited at the
San Francisco Museum of Modern Art , theCalifornia Palace of the Legion of Honor , the DeYoung Museum, the Seattle Museum of Art, the Henry Gallery (University of Washington), the [http://hearstmuseum.berkeley.edu/ Phoebe A. Hearst Museum of Anthropology] , and the University Art Gallery (Cal State at Chico) among others. His photographs have been selected for the permanent collections of the Museum of Modern Art, New York, the Smithonian Institute, the High Museum of Art, Atlanta, the Santa Barbara Museam of Art and the Monterey Peninsula Museum of Art.In a published "Art Scene" review Monterey landscape artist and art critic Rick Deregon wrote: "The special qualities of W.R. Heicks's images come from the simple relationship between the photographer and subject. With no agenda other than to capture the decisive inspirational moment and to illustrate the human parade Mr. Heick's work transcends straight journalism and aspires to an art of nobility and compassion."
Career
William Heick's career in photography began as a naval intelligence photographer during World War Two in the Pacific. After the war he studied photography at California School of Fine Arts (now the
San Francisco Art Institute ) under such notable teachers asAnsel Adams andMinor White . He became lifelong friends withImogen Cunningham andDorothea Lange and regards these two photographers as the primary influences on his photographic work.William Heick filmed two documentaries about Pacific Northwest Indian tribes, "
Blunden Harbour " (1951) and "Dances of the Kwakiutl " (1951).W.R. Heick worked through most of the 50's and 60's as producer-director, assistant historian and cinematographer for the world wide engineering firm of
Bechtel Corporation. While with Bechtel he wrote and filmed documentaries of their major projects with special emphasis on ethnic and social consideration in remote areas of the Arctic, South America, Africa, Greenland, Europe, The Middle East, Australia, Indonesia and the islands of New Guinea and Bouganville.William Heick produced two documentaries for the
Quakers . "Beauty for Ashes" documents the Quaker's project to rebuild forty churches that had been burned by nightriders during Mississippi's racial strife in the turbulent 60's. "Voyage of the Phoenix" documents the controversial voyage of the yacht "Phoenix," which sailed through the American battle fleet during the Viet Nam war to deliver medical supplies to North Viet Nam when the bombing of that beleaguered country was at its peak.In the late sixties and early seventies W.R. Heick served as cinematographer on three features films, all for the director/artist
Fredric Hobbs : "Troika" (1969, co-directed by Gordon Mueller), "Alabama's Ghost" (1973), and "The Godmonster of Indian Flat" (1973).During the mid-seventies, working as an independent producer with Gordon Mueller, W.R. Heick produced the "Indonesian Dance Series." This series, funded with grants from Caltex Pacific Indonesia and
Pertamina , documents fourteen traditional dance performances from the islands ofJava ,Bali ,Sumatra andKalimantan .W.R. Heick's later films include "The Other China," a four part mini-series filmed on location in
Taiwan in 1988 documenting the social and cultural fabric of Taiwan.References
* Boardman, Elizabeth Jelinek. "The Phoenix Trip: Notes on a Quaker Mission to Haiphong", 1985. ISBN 0914064223
* Santino, Jack, reviewer. "Sucking Doctor", The Journal of American Folklore, Vol. 95, No. 378 (Oct. - Dec., 1982), pp. 501-504 doi:10.2307/540768
* Ira Jacknis. "Visualizing Kwakwaka'wakw Tradition: The Films of William Heick, 1951-1963", BC STUDIES: The British Columbia Quarterly - A Special Double Issue-Number 125 & 126, 2000. ISBN 0000052949External links
* [http://www.artnet.com/artist/672858/william-heick.html William Heick photographs on Artnet]
* [http://www.mleestonefineprints.com/cgi-bin/gallery.cgi?photograph William Heick photographs at M Lee Stone Fine Prints Inc.]
* [http://www.imdb.com/name/nm1020267/ William Heick] on theInternet Movie Database
* [http://ls.berkeley.edu/dept/music/JavaneseGamelan/videography.html Javanese Music and Dance films by William Heick]
* The [http://www.bcstudies.com/ BC Studies] website displays William Heick's images in its banner.
* The website for William Heick's son, [http://www.bheick.com/wrbio.htm Bill Heick] , provides a biography of William Heick.
* [http://www.gualalaarts.org/Exhibits/Gallery/06-01Heick-Macauley.htm Gualala Arts Center exhibition notes.] Retrieved on January 27, 2007. This article was originated based on these exhibition notes, with prior permission from theGualala Arts Center.
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