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Hollis Frampton

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This book is a groundbreaking and comprehensive account of Hollis Frampton’s work in its totality, from his earliest films through the unfinished epic Magellan.
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  • 09 May 2023
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Hollis Frampton was an American filmmaker, photographer, and theorist who bridged the experimental film and contemporary art worlds in the 1960s and 1970s. Best known for avant-garde films including Zorns Lemma (1970) and (nostalgia) (1971), Frampton spent his later years working on the unfinished epic Magellan, a monumental cycle that used the metaphor of Ferdinand Magellan’s circumnavigation of the world to rethink the natures and meanings of history, modernity, and cinema. Frampton’s career was cut short by cancer at age 48, with his vast ambitions for the project left incomplete.

This book is a groundbreaking and comprehensive account of this remarkable figure’s work in its totality, from Frampton’s earliest films through Magellan. Michael Zryd explores the connections linking Frampton’s art and thought to other media forms, histories, and cultural frameworks. He foregrounds Frampton’s notion of the “infinite cinema,” which redefined the parameters of the medium to encompass all forms of moving image and sound media across the past and future of cinematic possibility. Zryd analyzes Frampton’s ambivalent relationship with modernism and the Enlightenment, showing how the artist navigated between attraction to radical artistic investigation and awareness of this tradition’s implication in colonialism and other oppressive power structures. Shedding new light on Frampton’s project of exploring and critiquing how cinema attempts to capture and understand the world, this book also considers his significance for contemporary art.

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Price: $35.00
Pages: 328
Publisher: Columbia University Press
Imprint: Columbia University Press
Series: Film and Culture Series
Publication Date: 09 May 2023
Trim Size: 9.25 X 6.12 in
ISBN: 9780231201575
Format: Paperback
BISACs:

PERFORMING ARTS / Film / History & Criticism, PERFORMING ARTS / Film / Direction & Production, ART / Film & Video, PERFORMING ARTS / Individual Director (see also BIOGRAPHY & AUTOBIOGRAPHY / Entertainment & Performing Arts)

At long last, we have an authoritative guide to the work of one of experimental film’s most intriguing and polymathic figures. Through his meticulous study of Hollis Frampton’s unfinished Magellan project, Michael Zryd illuminates the filmmaker’s oeuvre as a whole, shedding light on the relationship among cinema, modernism, and epistemology.
Michael Zryd is associate professor in the Department of Cinema and Media Arts at York University. He is coauthor of Moments of Perception: Experimental Film in Canada (2021).

Acknowledgments
Introduction: From the Chemistry of Cobalt to the Chemistry of Dirt
1. A Brief Introduction to Frampton’s Films before Magellan
2. An Introduction to Magellan
3. Metahistory and the Archive: “Historical Necessity” and Tradition
4. Encyclopedism, the Universe, and Everything
5. Archeology: Millennial Allegories of Art, Representation, and Politics in the Camera Arts
6. The Constellation
Conclusion: Virtual Future Metahistory
Notes
Bibliography
Index