Eric Patrick

Eric Patrick is an independent filmmaker, freelance animator, Guggenheim fellow, musician, and educator. He is currently a tenured professor in the Radio-TV-Film program at Northwestern University.[1]

Originally from Port Arthur, Texas, he played in a band throughout the Southern United States before he studied art and film at the University of New Mexico in Albuquerque.[2] He completed his MFA in experimental animation at California Institute of the Arts (1997).

Films

Patrick's films focus on low-tech, traditional, film-based techniques to explore ideas of consciousness and decay. According to the Southern Arts Federation, his films are "filled with eerily beautiful visuals that evoke a surreal, otherworldly feel which is complemented by the absence of a traditional narrative."[3] He has been awarded grants from the John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation,[4] the Texas Filmmakers’ Production Fund,[5] and The Rooftop Film Fund.

His films have won awards at The Black Maria Film Festival,[6] The Humboldt International Film Festival, Semana de Cine Experimental de Madrid, South by Southwest Film Festival (SXSW), The Ann Arbor Film Festival, U.S.A. Film Festival, Big Muddy Film Festival, and Festival de Cinema Independent de Barcelona.[7]

His filmwork includes Stark Film (1997), Ablution (2001), and Startle Pattern (2005).

Animation

Patrick has also worked as a commercial animator, most prominently for the Nickelodeon program Blue's Clues. He has taught film and animation production at the University of Texas Austin, University of North Carolina Greensboro, and Northwestern University.[8] His writing on animated documentaries and on ritual in animation have appeared in Animac journal.[9]

gollark: "Unlimited" seemingly meaning "1TB a month then you get a lower speed".
gollark: Here in the UK it seems that you can get unlimited mobile data plans pretty cheaply, which is nice.
gollark: Data caps kind of make sense in that they get people to reduce usage a lot but allow high-bandwidth access when needed... but are very annoying.
gollark: I think the idea is to provide a better alternative to existing satellite services, and to also compete against ADSL-type connections in rural areas.
gollark: It's better than existing satellite services.

References


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