http://geocities.com/dreamwhipzine/
http://www.peripheralproduce.com/catalog.php#nextbestplace
http://channel.creative-capital.org/project_417.html
Bill Brown creates idiosyncratic documentaries that explore the relationship between people and the places in which they live. His four films, including Roswell, Hub City, Confederation Park and Buffalo Common have won awards at the Ann Arbor Film Festival, Kansas City Jubilee, and the Magnolia Independent Film Festival. In 1997-98 he was awarded a Fulbright Scholarship to study the Trans-Canada Highway.
You can take Bill Brown out of Texas, but you can’t take the Texas out of Bill Brown. His films are vast and expansive and take you on a road trip across the back roads of forgotten places. From his award winning Confederation Park, which carefully depicts an aimless American kid setting out across the Trans-Canada Highway, to Buffalo Common, which observes the dismantling of nuclear missile silos across North Dakota, Bill’s films blur the difference between documentary and personal filmmaking and create a time-capsule of the subtle changes of the North American landscape. His films have won many awards and screened at nearly every film festival on the planet, he has received both Rockefeller and Creative Capital grants, and in November 2003, the Museum of Modern Art presented a retrospective of his work. His ‘turn-ons’ include blimps, elevated trains, and vegan bratwurst, but the steady tug of time passing and Hummers leave him less excited.
Posted by walkinginplace at November 19, 2004 10:34 PM