Abigail Child has been at the forefront of experimental writing and media since the 1980s, having completed more than thirty film and video works and installations, and six books. An acknowledged pioneer in montage, Child’s early film work addressed the interplay be- tween sound and image in the context of resh aping narrative tropes, in a manner that prefigured many contemporary and future media concerns. Her major projects include Is This What You Were Born For?: a 9 year, 7-part work; B/Side: a film that negotiates the politics of internal colonialism in New York City; 8 Million: a collaboration with avant-percussionist Ikue Mori that re- defines the “music video”; The Suburban Trilogy: a modular digi-film that prismatically examines a politics of place and identity; and MirrorWorlds: a multi-screen installation that incorporates parts of Child’s “foreign film” series to explore narrative excess. A new film, A Shape of Error, is constructed as an imaginary ‘home movie’ of the life of Mary Shelley.
Child has exhibited worldwide, with retrospectives at Anthology Film Archives (NY), the San Francisco Cinematheque, Sala Trevi in Rome, Exis (Korea), and Harvard Cinematheque, and in important showcases such as The Whitney Biennale, the Viennale and MoMA’s Millenium show. Her work is featured at numerous international film festivals, including the New York Film Festival, Rotterdam, Locarno and London Festivals, among others and is in the permanent collections of MOMA, NY, Centre Pompidou, and Arsenal Berlin. Child has received numerous awards and accolades, including the Rome Prize, a Radcliffe Institute Fellowship, Guggenheim Fellow, Fulbright Award and the Stan Brakhage Award. Harvard University Cinematheque has created an Abigail Child Collection dedicated to preserving and exhibiting her work. As a teacher at the School of the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, Child has been instrumental in building an expansive media and film art program; she has influenced a generation of younger artists. Child is also the author of five books of poetry (A Motive for Mayhem, Scatter Matrix and Artificial Memory among them) and a book of critical writings: THIS IS CALLED MOVING: A Critical Poetics of Film from University of Alabama Press (2005).
Directing
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Female
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Newark, New Jersey, USA
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Cinexpérimentaux 14 : Rencontre avec Abigail Child
Radio Adios
Peripeteia I
Peripeteia II
Surface Noise
Except for the People
A Shape of Error
Unbound
Mercy
Prefaces
Perils
Mayhem
Covert Action
Acts and Intermissions
Both
Mutiny
Elsa merdelamerdelamer
The Suburban Trilogy
Game
Some Exterior Presence
Daylight Test Section
Vis à Vis
Swamp
Fucking Different New York
Is This What You Were Born For?
B/Side
(If I Can Sing a Song About) Ligatures
Mirror World
To and No Fro
Salomé
On the Downlow
Ornamentals
Pacific Far East Line
Riding the Tiger: Letters from Capitalist China
8 Million
Origin of the Species
BLUE EDIT
Dark Dark
Cake + Steak
The Future is Behind You
Surf + Turf
Below the New: A Russian Chronicle
Precipice
Subtalk
The Party
La Lucha (The Struggle)
Tar Garden
Through the Looking Lass or Snow White