Dear Frameworks,

Please join us at MoMI Feb 10 and 11 to celebrate the life and work of Amy
Halpern. We will present three programs of films spanning Amy's career
which were beautifully curated by Mark Toscano and David Lebrun. We hope to
see many in the community there to honor Amy and her lasting legacy.

Warmly,
Becca Keating
Museum of the Moving Image


Films of Amy Halpern <https://movingimage.us/series/films-of-amy-halpern/>

Feb 10 — Feb 11, 2023

With special guest David Lebrun in person

Ferociously curious, brilliant, and talented, Amy Halpern (1953-2022) grew
up in New York studying dance, which provided her with a great appreciation
and gift for movement. This would be central to her filmmaking, in terms of
the cinematography and the actions captured, as well as in the strong
metaphors she summoned about breaking bonds and evoking freedom, beauty,
care, and wonder. Halpern formed close relationships with many in New
York’s experimental film community, including Ken and Flo Jacobs, with whom
she collaborated on the New York Apparition Company, devoted to 3D shadow
play.

Halpern made nearly 40 films and one feature, almost all on 16mm. During
the 40 years she spent in Los Angeles, she collaborated with such
luminaries as Pat O’Neill, Charles Burnett, and her husband David Lebrun.
Halpern grew close with the legendary filmmaker Chick Strand and appears in
her film Soft Fiction among other influential and formative west coast
experimental films. She and her films inspired countless artists, including
those she taught at various institutions around L.A., most notably at the
University of Southern California. Halpern brought people together for a
common good, cofounding two screening cooperatives: The New York Collective
for Living Cinema (1972–82) and the Los Angeles Independent Film Oasis
(1975–80).

In celebration of her life, films, and commitment to the moving image
community, MoMI is pleased to present three programs of Halpern’s work,
including her 1992 feature Falling Lessons. The programs were lovingly
curated by David Lebrun, Amy’s devoted husband and collaborator; and Mark
Toscano from the Academy Film Archive, where Halpern’s films are housed and
being restored. Special thanks to the Academy Film Archive for providing
the prints for these programs and Adam Hyman of Los Angeles Filmforum.

Organized by Curator of Persistent Visions Becca Keating

Co-presented by Maysles Documentary Center
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