Regarded as one of the founders of the postwar American independent cinema, the legendary Maya Deren was a poet, photographer, ethnographer, filmmaker and impresario. Her efforts to promote an independent cinema have inspired filmmakers for over fifty years. Meshes of the Afternoon (1943) ranks among the most widely viewed of all avant-garde films. The eleven essays gathered here examine Maya Deren's writings, films, and legacy from a variety of intriguing perspectives. Some address her relative neglect during the rise of feminist film theory; all argue for her enduring significance. The essays cast light on her aesthetics and ethics, her exploration of film form and of other cultures, her role as (woman) artist and as film theorist. Maya Deren and the American Avant-Garde also includes one of the most significant reflections on the nature of art and the responsibilities of the filmmaker ever written--Deren's influential but long out-of-print book, An Anagram of Ideas on Art, Form and Film, in its entirety.
Among the topics covered in this volume are Deren's ties with the avant-garde of her day and its predecessors; her perspective on vodoun ritual, possession ceremonies, and social harmony; her work in relation to the modern dance tradition and its racial inflections; her thoughts, written in the shadow of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, about science, including how form can embody moral principles; the complex issue of the "woman artist" in an avant-garde dominated by men; her famous dispute with Anaïs Nin; and an exploration of issues of identification and desire in her major films.
As the first critical evaluation of the enduring significance of Maya Deren, this book clarifies the filmmaker's theoretical and cinematic achievements and conveys the passionate sense of moral purpose she felt about her art. It is a long-overdue tribute to one of the most important and least written about filmmakers in American cinema, an artist who formulated the terms and conditions of independent cinema that remain with us today.
About the Editor: Bill Nichols holds the Fanny Knapp Allen Chair of Fine Arts and is Professor of Art and Art History at the University of Rochester where he teaches in the Visual and Cultural Studies doctoral program. He is the author of Blurred Boundaries (1994), Representing Reality (1991), Movies and Methods (California, 1976 and 1985), and Ideology and the Image (1981).
Author(s): Bill Nichols
Publisher: University of California Press
Year: 2001
Language: English
Pages: 356
City: Berkeley
Tags: maya deren;art cinema;voudoun;haiti
Maya Deren and the American Avant-Garde
Contents
List of Illustrations
Preface
Acknowledgments
Introduction (Bill Nichols)
DEREN'S WORK AND THE ARTS
THE HISTORICAL LENS 1A
Poetics and Savage Thought (Annette Michelson)
The Modernist Poetics of Maya Deren (Renata Jackson)
IN THE EYES OF HER CONTEMPORARIES 2A
The Ethics of Form (Maureen Turim)
THE TERMS OF HER LEGEND AND LEGACY 3A
Maya Deren Herself (Catherine M. Soussloff)
DEREN’S WRITINGS AND FILM THEORY
THE HISTORICAL LENS 1B
Aesthetic Agencies in Flux (Mark Franko)
IN THE EYES OF HER CONTEMPORARIES 2B
Moving the Dancers’ Souls (Ute Holl)
THE TERMS OF HER LEGEND AND LEGACY 3B
Maya Deren (Jane Brakhage Wodening)
DEREN’S FILMS AND THEIR FORM
THE HISTORICAL LENS 1C
“The Eye for Magic” Lucy Fischer
IN THE EYES OF HER CONTEMPORARIES 2C
Maya Deren’s Ethnographic Representation of Ritual and Myth in Haiti (Moira Sullivan)
THE TERMS OF HER LEGEND AND LEGACY 3C
Seeing Double(s) (Maria Pramaggiore)
Maya Deren and Me (Barbara Hammer)
Appendix: An Anagram of Ideas on Art, Form and Film (Maya Deren)
List of Contributors
Index