- Bruce Conner
Infobox Artist
bgcolour = #6495ED
name = Bruce Conner
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birthdate = 1933
location =McPherson ,Kansas
deathdate = 2008
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nationality = American
field =home movies ,sculpture ,drawing ,painting ,collage ,photography ,assemblage ,pranks
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awards =Bruce Conner (
November 18 1933 -July 7 2008 ) was an Americanartist renowned for his work in film, drawing,sculpture ,painting ,collage , andphotography , among other disciplines.Biography
Early life
Born in
McPherson, Kansas , Conner was raised inWichita, Kansas , attended Wichita University (now Wichita State), and received his B.F.A in Art atNebraska University in 1956. Conner then received a scholarship to theBrooklyn Museum Art School, where he studied for a semester. He then attended the University of Colorado on scholarship; also there was Jean Sandstedt, who he had met at Nebraska and who would become his wife. OnSeptember 30 ,1957 , the two married and immediately flew to San Francisco. There, Conner quickly assimilated into the city's famous Beat community and founded theRat Bastard Protective Association . [Its members includedJay DeFeo ,Michael McClure (with whom Conner attended school in Wichita),Manuel Neri andJoan Brown . See Solnit, Rebecca. "Heretical Constellations: Notes on California, 1946–61", in Sussman [ed.] . "Beat Culture and the New America". pp. 69–122, especially 71.] Gathering scraps from abandoned buildings, women’s undergarments (includingnylon stockings ), pieces of olddoll s andVictoriana , he created gauzy assemblages which garnered his first art-world attention. These assemblages represented what Conner saw as the discarded beauty of modern America. They deal with issues like the atom bomb,violence against women , andconsumerism . Social commentary and dissension remained a common theme among his later works.Career
Conner worked in a variety of mediums from an early age. His first solo gallery show in New York City took place in 1956 and featured paintings. His first solo shows in San Francisco, in 1958 and 1959, featured paintings, drawings, prints, collages, and assemblages. Conner’s first and possibly most famous film, entitled "
A Movie " (1958), combined his thrift store hunting process and his use of still photography. It is referred to as the piece that brought Conner to notoriety. In skillfully editing stock footage, Conner created abstract metaphors of mankind's violence. He subsequently made nearly two dozen non-narrativeexperimental film s.While Conner was living in
Massachusetts in 1963,John F. Kennedy was assassinated. Conner filmed the television coverage of the event (near Kennedy's birthplace) and edited and re-edited the footage with stock footage into another meditation on violence which he titled "Report". The film was issued several times as it was re-edited.The Batman Gallery in San Francisco had showings of Conner's work; a solo show of Conner's inaugurated the gallery and in 1964 Conner had a show there that lasted for three days, with Conner never leaving the gallery.
According to Conner's friend and fellow film-maker
Stan Brakhage in his book "Film at Wit's End", Conner was signed into a New York gallery contract in the early 1960s, which stipulated stylistic and personal restraint beyond Conner's freewheeling nature. Conner reacted by attending openings, only to move among the crowd wordlessly pinning buttons that read "I am Bruce Conner" or "I am not Bruce Conner" to their clothes. Many send-ups of artistic authorship followed, including a five page piece Conner had published in a major art publication in which Conner's making of a peanut butter, banana, bacon, lettuce, and Swiss cheese sandwich was reported step-by-step in great detail, with numerous photographs, as though it were a work of art. Brakhage reported that when Conner moved to Mexico in the mid-1960s, he (Conner) painted the word "LOVE" on a roadway, only to be forced to scrub it off by officials. Conner subsequently moved back to San Francisco, working for a while selling beads onHaight Street as his art career floundered outside of the gallery system which had made him a star earlier in the decade.Conner, however, produced work in a variety of forms from the 1960s forward. He was an active force in the
San Francisco counterculture of the mid-1960s as a collaborator in light shows for the legendary Family Dog at theAvalon Ballroom . He also made intricate black-and-white mandala-like drawings (many of which he lithographed into prints) and collages made from 19th-century engravings.During the 1970s he focused on drawing and photography, including many photos of the late 1970s West Coast
punk rock scene (a 1978 film used Devo's "Mongoloid" as a soundtrack), and producing dramatic, life-sized photograms as well as elaborately-foldedinkblot s. In the 1980s and 1990s Conner continued to work on collages, including ones using religious imagery, and inkblot drawings that have been shown in numerous exhibitions, including the 1997Whitney Biennial . Throughout Conner's entire body of work, the recurrence of religious imagery and symbology continues to underscore the essentially visionary nature of his work. [SF Weekly profile of Conner by Peter Byrne: [http://www.sfweekly.com/2000-09-13/news/artjournalism/fullDennis Hopper on Bruce Conner, retrieved July 12, 2008] ]His films are distributed by
Canyon Cinema . In 1999, to accompany a traveling exhibition, a majormonograph of his work was published by theWalker Art Center , titled "2000 BC: The Bruce Conner Story, Part II". The exhibition, which featured specially built in-gallery screening rooms for Conner's films as well as selected assemblages, felt-tip pen and inkblot drawings, engraving collages, photograms, and conceptual pieces, was seen at the Walker, the Modern Art Museum in Fort Worth, thede Young in San Francisco, and the Museum of Contemporary Art in Los Angeles.Films
Conner first attracted attention with his moody, nylon-shrouded assemblages, which were complex amalgams of such found objects as women's stockings, bicycle wheels, broken dolls, fur, fringe, costume jewelry and candles, often combined with collaged or painted surfaces. Erotically charged and tinged with echoes of both the
Surrealist tradition and of San Francisco's Victorian past, these works established Conner as a leading figure within the international assemblage "movement." Conner began making short movies in the late 1950s. His innovative technique can be seen in his first film, "A Movie ". His subsequent films are most often fast-paced collages of found and new footage. Conner was among the first to use pop music for film sound tracks. His films have inspired generations of filmmakers, and are now considered to be the precursors of themusic video genre.Conner's works are often metamedia in nature, offering commentary and critque on the media — especially television and its advertisements — and its effect on American culture and society. His film "Report" (1967) which features repetitive, found footage of the Kennedy assassination paired with consumerist imagery — most notably the film's final image of an enlarged "SELL" button — is perhaps one of Conner's works with the most impact. A more iconic piece than "Television Assassination", "Report" "perfectly captures Conner's anger over the commercialization of Kennedy's death" while also examining the media's mythic construction of JFK and Jackie — a hunger for images that "guaranteed that they would be transformed into idols, myths, Gods." [ Jenkins, Bruce. "Bruce Conner's "Report": Contesting Camelot. "Masterpiece of Modernist Cinema." Ed. Ted Perry. Indiana University Press, 2006.]
Conner's collaborations with musicians include DEVO ("Mongoloid"),
Terry Riley ("Looking for Mushrooms" and "Easter Morning"},Patrick Gleeson and Terry Riley (Crossroads),Brian Eno and David Byrne ("America is Waiting", "Mea Culpa") and three more films with Gleeson ("Take the 5:10 to Dreamland", "Television Assassination", and "LUKE"). His film of dancer and choreographerToni Basil , "Breakaway" (1966), featured a song recorded by Basil.Death
Conner died on
7 July 2008 inSan Francisco and is survived by his wife, American artist Jean Sandstedt Conner, and his son, Robert.Filmography
* "A MOVIE" (1958)
* "Cosmic Ray" (1962)
* "Vivian" (1963)
* "Ten Second Film " (1965)
* "Easter Island Raga " (1966)
* "Breakaway" (1966)
* "Report" (1967)
* "The White Rose" (1967)
* "Looking for Mushrooms " (1967)
* "Permian Strata " (1969)
* "Marilyn Times Five " (1973)
* "Crossroads" (1976)
* "Valse Triste " (1977)
* "" (1977)
* "Mongoloid" (1978)
* "Mea Culpa" (1981)
* "America Is Waiting " (1982)
* "Television Assassination " (1995)
* "Looking for Mushrooms " (long version, 1996)
* "LUKE " (2006)
* "EVE-RAY-FOREVER (three screen DVD projection) " (2006)
* "His Eye Is on the Sparrow " (2007)
* "Easter Morning " (2008)Contributions
2008 "Life on Mars," the 2008 "Carnegie International" [http://blog.cmoa.org/CI08/2008/02/bruce-conner.php]
References
External links
* [http://www.gallerypauleanglim.com/conner_bruce.html Bruce Conner is represented by Gallery Paule Anglim in San Francisco, CA]
* [http://bushofghosts.wmg.com/watch_video.php Watch Bruce Conner's film, "Mea Culpa" with music by Brian Eno and David Byrne, from "My Life in the Bush of Ghosts".]
* [http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2008/07/08/BAKA11L94C.DTL "San Francisco Chronicle" obituary retrieved July 8, 2008]
* [http://www.nytimes.com/2008/07/09/arts/design/09conner.html?_r=1&scp=1&sq=bruce+conner&st=nyt&oref=slogin "New York Times" obituary 7/9/08]
*Dargis, Manohla (2008). [http://www.nytimes.com/2008/07/12/movies/12conn.html "An Appraisal: An Artist of the Cutting-Room Floor"] , "New York Times" July 12, 2008; retrieved July 12, 2008.
* [http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0175126 Bruce Conner at IMDB]
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