Marco Brambilla

Marco Brambilla is an Italian-born Canadian video artist.

Marco Brambilla
Occupationvideo artist

His video installations have been screened at Venice Film Festival (2011) and the Sundance Film Festival (2012), and in May 2011, his first major retrospective opened at the Santa Monica Museum of Art.

Transit, a collection of photographs Brambilla took in and around airports, was published by Booth-Clibborn Editions in 2000.[1]

Work

  • Creation (Megaplex) VR, 2020, single-channel high-definition video installation
  • "The Seven Deaths of Maria Callas", 2020, visual intermezzos for Marina Abramovic's opera
  • "Pelléas et Mélisande", 2019
  • Nude Descending A Staircase No. 3, 2019, 3-channel high-definition video installation
  • The Master Builder, 2019, single-channel 3-D video installation
  • Lunar Atlas, 2016, multi-channel high-definition video installation
  • Crystal Observatory, 2015, high-definition video installation
  • Constellation, 2015, high-definition video projection
  • Apollo XVII, 2015, 4K ultra-high definition, dual-screen video tile display in custom enclosure
  • Echo, 2014, ultra high-definition video installation
  • Anthropocene, 2013, 3-channel video installation
  • Creation (Megaplex), 2012, single-channel high-definition video installation
  • Civilization (Megaplex) 3-D, 2011, single-channel high-definition video installation
  • Evolution (Megaplex) 3-D, 2010, single-channel high-definition video installation
  • Civilization (Megaplex), 2008, single-channel high-definition video installation
  • "Power", 2010, music video performed by Kanye West
  • Cathedral, 2007, single-channel high-definition video installation
  • Sync, 2005, 3-channel video installation
  • Halflife, 2002, 3-channel video installation
  • Wall of Death, 2001, single-channel video installation
  • Approach, 1999, 4-channel video installation suspended in custom enclosures with ceiling mounts
  • Getaway, 1999, single-channel video installation
  • Cyclorama, 1999, 9-channel video installation

Awards and recognition

Brambilla received the Tiffany Comfort Foundation Award for Film and Video in 2002 and the Colbert Foundation award in 2000.[2]

His short film Sync (2005) was screened at the 2006 Cannes Film Festival and at the Sundance Film Festival[3] as part of film anthology Destricted.

Filmography

Notes

  1. "Transit / Marco Brambilla". TCDC Resource Center. Thailand Creative & Design Center. Archived from the original on 2008-06-05. Retrieved 2008-02-03.
  2. "Marco Bambrilla". Destricted. Revolver Entertainment. Archived from the original on 2008-01-02. Retrieved 2008-02-03.
  3. Dirosa, Joe (2006). "Marco Brambillo – Sync". New York Artist Series. Archived from the original on 2012-04-24. Retrieved 2008-02-03.
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