artist showcase gunvor nelson

The filmmaker and artist Gunvor Nelson was born in 1931 in Stockholm, but grew up in the small town of Kristinehamn, Sweden. After studying art in Stockholm, she moved to San Francisco in 1953 where she studied and later taught art and film at San Francisco State University (1969-70) and the San Francisco Art Institute (1970-1992). In the 1960s, Nelson made the films Schmeerguntz (1966), Fog Pumas (1967) and My Name is Oona (1969) (the former two with Dorothy Wiley), all of which are considered classics of experimental film history for their personal, complex, innovative, distinctive and surreal montage, often with a feminist and absurdist perspective. Nelson, like many other filmmakers and artists active in the San Francisco Bay Area at the time, hung out in the circles around Canyon Cinema, a group including personalities such as Bruce Baillie, Chick Strand, James Broughton and Robert Nelson. In these four programmes, encompassing films completed between 1966 and 1991 all shot on 16mm, a plethora of formal approaches and areas of interest are explored, from the early work’s energetic playfulness, dictated by a multifarious montage straddling the overtly critical, absurdist, comic and even anarchic, to the latter work’s more emphasised engagement with memory, reconnection, family history and ageing. Rather than seeing her work in terms of “experimental”, “avantgarde” or “feminist”, Nelson prefers “personal” as the most apt description of her way of working, and she has always filmed from a close and private perspective in her own way, and often things and people in her vicinity and the environment she lives in: herself, in her home, her garden, her family, her friends, the river outside her house in Kristinehamn, in San Francisco, at Muir Beach and not least in relation to her own painting. In Nelson's films, animation is often interspersed with filmed material in interlinked collages, in which she in various ways overpaints, ruptures, redirects and superimposes images in parallel and fluid montages. The films often move playfully and complexly in time and space without clear delineation, where unexpected collisions are followed by more documentary or narrative content. Central also is Nelson's work with the interaction of sound (and voice) and the expansion of the image to achieve unforeseen constellations. There is an enhanced sense of the tactile here: multilayering, the expansion and contraction of movement, the image as palimpsest. She writes: “I want my images to contain a kind of enigmatic depth, a charge and an energy that can convey more than what is discovered at a quick glance at the surface. The images must contain many dimensions and layers of meaning beyond the obvious. I see this as an advantage: film consists of more than one image and is made up of many frames in a row, a number of images that can amplify or collide with each other in exciting and unexpected ways.” In 1993, Nelson moved back to Kristinehamn, where she is still active as artist and videomaker.

(Martin Grennberger & Daniel A. Swarthnas)

Thanks to Filmform (Anna-Karin Larsson, Andreas Bertman), Light Cone (Miguel Armas) and Canyon Cinema (Seth Mitter) for providing the analogue prints of this programme.

fr 16/09 4 pm | programme 1: beginnings, bodies and surrealism

In the introductory programme, we are confronted with a disarming striptease in Take Off, unforeseen absurdities and anachronisms in Fog Pumas, light streaks on swimming bodies in Moon's Pool, and in Schmeerguntz's found footage montage, beauty contest and fashion alternate with pregnancy, diaper changes, gunk, vomiting, sports and fights. On Schmeerguntz, coined after Nelson’s father’s nonsense word for sandwich (‘smörgås’ in Swedish), critic Ernest Callenbach wrote: ”A society which hides its animal functions beneath a shiny public surface deserves to have such films as Schmeerguntz shown everywhere”.

(Martin Grennberger & Daniel A. Swarthnas)

Schmeerguntz

D: Gunvor Nelson & Dorothy Wiley, 16mm, b&w, sound, 15 min, 1966

Fog Pumas

D: Gunvor Nelson & Dorothy Wiley, 16mm, b&w, sound, 25 min, 1967

Take Off

D: Gunvor Nelson, 16mm, b&w, sound, 10 min, 1972

Moon’s Pool

D: Gunvor Nelson, 16mm, b&w, sound, 15 min, 1967

Field Study #2

D: Gunvor Nelson, 16mm, colour, sound, 8 min, 1988

Prints courtesy of Filmform, Stockholm

Gunvor Nelson - MOON’S POOL (1967)
Gunvor Nelson - MOON’S POOL (1967)

sa 17/09 11:30 am | programme 2: the gaze of the returnee

The films My Name Is Oona, Red Shift and Time Being constitute a trilogy which, with varied optics, shapes and temporalities, deals with the imaginative and inventive world of childhood, family, the relationship of memory to the present, the fragility of ageing and the end of life.

(Martin Grennberger & Daniel A. Swarthnas)

Frame Line

D: Gunvor Nelson, 16mm, b&w, sound, 22 min, 1988

Light Years Expanding

D: Gunvor Nelson, 16mm, colour, sound, 25 min, 1987

Natural Features

D: Gunvor Nelson, 16mm, colour, sound, 28 min, 1990

Prints courtesy of Filmform, Stockholm and Light Cone, Paris

Gunvor Nelson - LIGHT YEARS EXPANDING (1987)
Gunvor Nelson - LIGHT YEARS EXPANDING (1987)

su 18/09 2 pm | programme 3: family sphere

The films My Name Is Oona, Red Shift and Time Being constitute a trilogy which, with varied optics, shapes and temporalities, deals with the imaginative and inventive world of childhood, family, the relationship of memory to the present, the fragility of ageing and the end of life.

(Martin Grennberger & Daniel A. Swarthnas)

My Name is Oona

D: Gunvor Nelson, 16mm, b&w, sound, 10 min, 1969

Red Shift

D: Gunvor Nelson, 16mm, b&w, sound, 50 min, 1984

Time Being

D: Gunvor Nelson, 16mm, b&w, sound, 6 min, 1991

Prints courtesy of Filmform, Stockholm

Gunvor Nelson - FRAME LINE (1988)
Gunvor Nelson - FRAME LINE (1988)

su 17/09 6 pm | programme 4: muir beach

Two films focusing on friends and life in and around Muir Beach, California. Kirsa Nicholina documents a pregnancy and childbirth at home. Five Artists BillBobBillBillBob, made together with Dorothy Wiley, is a personal film with a documentary approach and which revolves around five male artists, but is equally a film about everyday life, family relationships and the circle of artists they all belonged to expressed from two women’s point of views.

(Martin Grennberger & Daniel A. Swarthnas)

Kirsa Nicholina

D: Gunvor Nelson, 16mm, colour, sound, 16 min, 1969

Five Artists BillBobBillBillBob

D: Gunvor Nelson & Dorothy Wiley, 16mm, colour, sound, 70 min, 1971

Prints courtesy of Canyon Cinema, San Francisco

Gunvor Nelson - MY NAME IS OONA (1969)
Gunvor Nelson - MY NAME IS OONA (1969)