Jennifer Reeves

Jennifer Todd Reeves[3] (born 1971)[1] is a New York-based independent filmmaker. She has also taught as a part time professor of film at Bard College, The Cooper Union, Millennium Film Workshop and the School of Visual Arts.[1]

Jennifer Reeves
Born1971
Ceylon, Sri Lanka[1]
NationalityAmerican
Alma materBard College[2]
OccupationFilmmaker
Years active1990–present
Notable work
Chronic, The Time We Killed, When It Was Blue
Spouse(s)
William Wu
(
m. 2006)
[3]
ChildrenTeo Reeves-Wu[4]

Background

Reeves's 16mm films are often experimental and deal with a range of issues, including mental health, politics, sexuality, feminism and the environment. Reeves began making her own films in 1990[1] and is known to provide her own writing, cinematography, editing and sound design in her works. Her films also feature collaborations with composers such as Marc Ribot, Skúli Sverrisson, Elliott Sharp, Zeena Parkins, Anthony Burr and Eyvind Kang. Reeves has produced many films over the years, the most noteworthy being The Time We Killed (2004) and When It Was Blue (2008).

Influences, style and themes

Reeves began to take an interest in film during her upbringing in Akron, Ohio[2] where she became passionate about analog media and foreign films. Her time at Bard College exposed her to avant-garde films and the works of Carolee Schneemann, from which Reeves’s own works draw inspiration.[2] Reeves has also identified filmmakers Stan Brakhage and Annabel Nicolson as major influences.[5] Consequently, many of Reeves’s films employ elements of abstraction, nostalgia, and projection. Thematically, her films tend to deal with a wide variety of issues, from sexuality and feminism to the environment and politics.

Work

The award-winning[1] The Time We Killed is a narrative-driven film that deals with the life of a New York writer during the aftermath of the September 11 Attacks.[2] Reeves's 2008 multiple-projection film When It Was Blue is a non-narrative piece which deals with a number of concurrent issues. The film makes use of a number of techniques to visually disorient the viewer, including hand-painted frames, a staple of Reeves's work. By juxtaposing nature and industry in an aesthetically chaotic manner, the film denies access to the planet and its resources as commodities to be objectified. Conversely, the film features footage of Reeves herself cut alongside shots of men looking from a distance, followed by a series of distressing images. This sequence symbolizes the objectification of the female body as something to be gazed upon, and also addresses the issue of othering.[6] In the aftermath of making When It Was Blue, Reeves found herself in possession of a large amount of 16mm film containing outtakes from the project. Concerned with her work's impact on the environment, she temporarily let the footage decompose in a landfill, then salvaged and hand-painted the resulting film. The project was titled Landfill 16, and through its repurposing of the film, the work draws connections to nature's losing battle to decompose the waste we produce.[7] In 2007, Reeves produced another 16mm double-projection film titled Light Work Mood Disorder, a work which pairs found footage of educational films with X-rays of the body. She degraded the film with a solution made from dissolved pills which were intended to treat a number of physical and mental conditions. The resulting damage to the film is akin to the adverse effects of overmedication.[5]

Personal life

Reeves married her husband William Wu in 2006.[3] The couple have a son, Teo.[4]

Filmography

  • Elations in Negative (1990)
  • Girls Daydream About Hollywood (1992)[6]
  • Taste It Nine Times (1992)
  • Monsters in the Closet (1993)[3]
  • Configuration 20 (1994)
  • The Girl's Nervy (1995)[8]
  • Chronic (1996)[9]
  • We Are Going Home (1998)[3]
  • Darling International (1999)[3]
  • Skinny Teeth (2001)[3]
  • Fear of Blushing (2001)[5]
  • The Sons of Bitches Turned Out the Lights (2003)
  • He Walked Away (2003-2006)
  • The Time We Killed (2004)[2]
  • Shadows Choose Their Horrors (2005-2015)[3]
  • Light Work I (2006)[3]
  • Light Work Mood Disorder (2007)[5]
  • When It Was Blue (2008)[6]
  • Trains Are for Dreaming (2009)[3]
  • Untitled Babies Short (2010)
  • Landfill 16 (2011)[7]
  • Strawberries in the Summertime (2013)[3]
  • Color Neutral (2014)[3]
gollark: (Sidenote: interestingly, apparently the development of farming actually led to significantly *worse* life for people for quite a long time, because it allowed much more population per land area, causing people to end up at a subsistence level and quite malnourished and stuff)
gollark: Modern supply chains are complex, and while we could not have those you would then lose out on stuff like microelectronics, medical things, and the economies of scale meaning you can have nice things cheaply.
gollark: How is that better? We need widescale coordination to do anything.
gollark: It's *great* if you like dying of otherwise preventable diseases, after a life basically free of any modern amenities consisting of... hunter-gathering, or whatever people did.
gollark: * carcinize

References

  1. "Jennifer Reeves". UbuWeb.
  2. "Jennifer Reeves at the Drawing Center: Paint It Wack". The Village Voice.
  3. "Jennifer Todd Reeves - IMDb". IMDb.
  4. "Photo: Jennifer Reeves with her son Teo and husband William Wu | Focus Features". Focus Features. Archived from the original on 2016-06-01. Retrieved 2016-04-27.
  5. "Handmade Cinema - A Guide to the People, Practices and Themes of Artisanal Moving Image Production". Handmade Cinema.
  6. "Spotlight | When It Was Blue (Jennifer Reeves, US) - Cinema Scope". Cinema Scope.
  7. "Landfill 16 » Ann Arbor Film Festival". Ann Arbor Film Festival. Archived from the original on 2016-05-13.
  8. MacDonald, Scott (2005). A Critical Cinema 5: Interviews with Independent Filmmakers. Berkeley, California: University of California Press. p. 333. ISBN 978-0-520-93908-0.
  9. Camper, Fred (June 19, 1997). "Chronic and More: Films by Jennifer Reeves". Chicago Reader.
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