Ben,
Sticking with major gallery- or museum-installed exhibitions, I thought of one
more, Barbara London's Video Spaces at MoMA, 1995.
Ron Green
356 W 7th Ave
Columbus OH 43201
614.421.2131
J. Ronald Green
Professor Emeritus of Film Studies
Department of History of Art
The Ohio State Universi
Ben,
One more that I thought of belatedly and that I didn’t see listed in the other
posts: the MindFrames show (focused on Buffalo in the 1970s) at ZKM back in
2006-7:
http://on1.zkm.de/zkm/stories/storyReader$5419
A lot of the work was shown digitally, but they had some pretty impressive
mu
Dear Ron Green, Adam Hyman, Chrissie Iles, Roger W. Beebe, Albert Alcoz,
Cindy Keefer, and Janis Crystal Lipzin:
Thank you all so much. Your detailed suggestions have been extremely
helpful-- if only I could have seen and experienced many of these events!
I especially appreciated lists of even
>
> Today's Topics:
>
> 1. Major exhibitions of moving image art (Green, Ron Green)
>
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> --
>
> Message: 1
> Date: Fri, 19 May 2017 13:25:33 +0000
> From: "Green, Ron Green"
> To: "frameworks@jonasmekasfilms.com&
Dennis posted about a screening series in Boston, but I read Ben's original
post as regarding exhibitions of moving images (installed) in art museums.
Here are a few CVM has provided films/digital versions for, though the
first is filmmaker-specific based on his films. Others are broader.
*Oskar F
Hi Ben,
I may have missed these but I don't think anyone's mentioned Steve Anker, Kathy
Geritz, Steve Seid's Radical Light, Pacific Film Archive, 2010, or Form and
Structure in Recent Film at the Vancouver Art Gallery, 1972, or Helen
Molesworth's Image Stream at the Wexner Center, 2003, or Anne