
Ed Emshwiller
Directing • Born 1925-02-16 – Died 1990-07-27
Biography
Born in 1925, Ed Emshwiller studied graphic design at the University of Michigan and L'Ecole des Beaux Arts in Paris. By the late '60s Emshwiller was working as a science fiction illustrator, and had established his place in the American avant-garde cinema with such works as Relativity (1966) and Image, Flesh and Voice (1969). His early films featured collaborations with dancers and choreographers—a theme he carried over into his videoworks. As both an artist and a teacher, Emshwiller’s pioneering efforts to develop an alternative technological language in video were enormously influential. His early experiments with synthesizers and computers included the electronic rendering of three-dimensional space, the interplay of illusion and reality, and manipulations of time, movement, and scale that explore the relationship between "external reality and subjective feelings." Emshwiller was among the first artists-in-residence at the TV Lab at WNET, where he produced the groundbreaking Scape-mates (1972). Sunstone (1979) was made over a period of eight months at the New York Institute of Technology. Emshwiller passed away in 1990 and an extensive collection of his work is housed by Anthology Film Archives.
Filmography
10 credits
Home Movies 1971-81
Movie • 1985

Galaxie
Movie • 1966
Self

Hallelujah the Hills
Movie • 1963
Gideon

Family Focus
Movie • 1976
Himself

Diaries, Notes, and Sketches
Movie • 1968
Self

Lost, Lost, Lost
Movie • 1976
Self

Painters Painting
Movie • 1973

Birth of a Nation
Movie • 1997

Solstice and Solyanka
Movie • 1975

Notes on the Buffalo Conference: “Autobiography in American Independent Cinema”
Movie • 1973