Dick Blau

Dick Blau (born 1943) is a professor of film at the University of Wisconsin–Milwaukee, a photographer and film maker, and a figure in the study of photography of the family [1]

Dick Blau
Born1943

Personal life

Blau was born in 1943. His mother is actress Beatrice Manley, his biological father the painter Albert Freedberg, and his adoptive father is the theater director Herbert Blau, who raised him from the age of six.[2] His longterm partner is Jane Gallop, a Distinguished Professor at the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee. Together they have two children, Max and Ruby.

Education

Blau holds a BA in English from Harvard University (1965) and a Ph.D. in American Studies from Yale University (1973). His doctoral thesis was titled, The body as ground of being in four novels of Herman Melville[3] (later published as The Body Impolitic by Editions Rodopi, 1979).[4]

Career

Blau is a professor of film in the Peck School of the Arts at the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee. His photographs and films have been exhibited internationally and are included in a number of museum collections.

His interests include portraiture, family dynamics, music and dance, gesture, ritual, and celebration.

Although Blau is best known for his work as a visual ethnographer, his photographic portraits of domestic life have appeared in the art tabloid Theory/Flesh;[5] a 2009 Intervalles issue on Interdisciplinary Transcriptions;[6] and the edited collection The M Word: Real Mothers in Contemporary Art (Demeter Press, 2011).[7] Along with Robert Mapplethorpe, Sally Mann, and Nancy Honey, Dick Blau has been noted as one of the greatest modern photographers of children because his portraiture goes beyond "the stalling dichotomy of innocence versus corruption" (Libby Brooks, The Guardian).[8][9] (See Also: Pictures of Innocence by Anne Higonnet, Thames and Hudson, 1998).

Films

Some of Blau's films include Up the Block One Sunday (1982), Tintinnabula (1986), and Jidyll (1990), all of which are currently distributed by Canyon Cinema.[10][11]

Screen performances

Blau performed in films by several significant directors. He narrated James Benning's Used Innocence (1989),[12] played Hamlet in Robert Nelson's Hamlet Act (1982),[13] and appeared in Stuart Sherman's Fish Story (1983).

Books

Bright Balkan Morning: Romani Lives and the Power of Music in Greek Macedonia, Photographs by Dick Blau, Text by Charles and Angeliki Keil, Soundscape by Steven Feld. (Wesleyan University Press, 2002). Blau's black-and-white photographs of Romani residents of the village of Iraklia create an enthographic portrait of a Balkan community.[14][15]

Polka Happiness, a full-length study of Polish-American music and culture (co-authored by anthropologists Charles and Angeliki Keil) was published by Temple University Press in 1992. This book explores the dance music of generations of Polish Americans and emphasizes the shared sense of belonging embodied in "polka sociability."[16][17]

Living With His Camera, Text by Jane Gallop/Photographs by Dick Blau (Duke University Press, 2003). Features photographs of Blau's own family alongside theoretical essays and personal reflections by Jane Gallop who invokes famous formulations of photography such as Roland Barthes' Camera Lucida and Susan Sontag's On Photography.[18][19][20]

Skyros Carnival by Dick Blau, Agapi Amanatidis, Panayotis Panopoulos, and Steven Feld. A VoxLox Book, 2010. An experiment in art and anthropology documenting two trips to the oldest Dionysian carnival in Greece, the Goat Dance of Skyros. This multi-sensory book is made up of pictures, text, sound and video.[21][22]

His most recent project Thicker Than Water: My Family in Photographs (1968–2012) (as yet unpublished), collects decades of personal family photography. Covering as much of the variety of family experience as he can in a range of settings that includes (among others) the kitchen, the bathroom, and the backyard, Blau looks at both the ordinary and the extraordinary aspects of family life. This book provides Blau's perspective on the material narrated by Gallop in Living With His Camera.[23] He writes, "These pictures are spontaneous transcriptions of my experience, an ethnography of family life, a phenomenology of domestic emotion...By selecting a moment, then stilling and framing it, I try to retain some feeling of the event itself. At the same time, I use the abstract nature of the picture-making process to clear a space for reflection. These photographs are my part of a discourse. Notes to the people I live with and love".[24]

gollark: Oh, and "you constantly just refer people to giant sets of papers and random YouTube videos".
gollark: Also "you aren't using actual evidence" and "you're constantly shifting the goalposts" and "you're not even bothering to explain your claims and just expect people to infer them from random papers" and "you say stupidly vague things and cite papers for evidence because they sound vaguely related".
gollark: Your quote, not the video which I have ignored.
gollark: Well, it's hardly a good-faith attempt to explain a point or something, and you're unlikely to make anyone actually do much about it by saying it again.
gollark: > Ah, yes, this video says saint Einstein is wrong therefore he is a moron indeed.> Ah, yesis generally used to precede "gotcha" sort of things i.e. snappy "arguments" which don't really mean much> saint Einsteinis basically you just pushing the whole "science = religion" thing you like

References

  1. Living With His Camera, Duke University Press, 2003.
  2. "B. Manley, 81; Actress Taught at CalArts - latimes". Articles.latimes.com. 2002-10-30. Retrieved 2015-12-24.
  3. Worldcat listing for The body as ground of being in four novels of Herman Melville
  4. "Présentation - Centre Interdisciplinaire de Poétique Appliquée". Cipa.ulg.ac.be. Retrieved 2015-12-24.
  5. "The M Word". Demeterpress.org. Archived from the original on 2015-12-12. Retrieved 2015-12-24.
  6. "Libby Brooks: The notional paedophile now dictates what we can look at | Opinion". The Guardian. 2014-05-05. Retrieved 2015-12-24.
  7. "Our image of children rests on who takes the picture | Libby Brooks | Opinion". The Guardian. 2014-05-05. Retrieved 2015-12-24.
  8. "Filmmaker". Canyon Cinema. Retrieved 2015-12-24.
  9. "UW-Milwaukee MFA in Film". Pantherfile.uwm.edu. Archived from the original on 2016-03-04. Retrieved 2015-12-24.
  10. https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0163888/
  11. "Film". Canyon Cinema. Retrieved 2015-12-24.
  12. Bright Balkan Morning website
  13. Overview of Bright Balkan Morning Archived May 18, 2012, at the Wayback Machine
  14. Polka Happiness website
  15. Review of Polka Happiness
  16. Living With His Camera website
  17. Bookslut Review of Living With His Camera
  18. "the thing itself: May 2009". Eman59photos.blogspot.com. Retrieved 2015-12-24.
  19. Skyros Carnival website Archived 2012-04-26 at the Wayback Machine
  20. Skyros Carnival on Indie Photobook Library
  21. The Mirror Stage" Interval(le)s II.2-III.1 (Fall 2008/Winter 2009)
  22. The Mirror Stage: Interview with Blau
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