Edited with introduction and text by Marie Warsh. Text by Nicole Miller, Chelsea Spengemann, Sara VanDerBeek. Interview with Mirra Bank, Martha Edelheit, Chelsea Spengemann. Afterword by Mirra Bank.
A timely volume on the work to uncover an important but neglected feminist experimental filmmaker and artist
Published with Soft Network.
This book is the first to focus on the life and work of Susan Brockman (1937–2001), a prolific American filmmaker and artist who was involved in the feminist art movement, the documentary filmmaking community and the downtown New York art scenes of the 1960s–'90s. Through her distinctive approach to framing, editing and collage, Brockman created interior worlds and tableaux that have a palpable but enigmatic emotional resonance. In 2021, Soft Network began a three-year journey in her archive, a project that uncovered her largely forgotten contributions to experimental image-making. This eponymous monograph charts the organization's process and methodology, revealing the immense effort that goes into caring for and creating access to an artist's legacy and proposing new ways of considering what this work can mean.
"Hot House Flower" (still), 1978, from 'Susan Brockman: Soft Network 01.'
in stock $25.00
Free Shipping
UPS GROUND IN THE CONTINENTAL U.S. FOR CONSUMER ONLINE ORDERS
FORMAT: Pbk, 6.75 x 9 in. / 112 pgs / 50 color / 15 b&w. LIST PRICE: U.S. $25.00 LIST PRICE: CANADA $35 GBP £20.00 ISBN: 9781940190358 PUBLISHER: Soberscove Press AVAILABLE: 12/9/2025 DISTRIBUTION: D.A.P. RETAILER DISC: TRADE PUBLISHING STATUS: Active AVAILABILITY: In stock TERRITORY: WORLD
Published by Soberscove Press. Edited with introduction and text by Marie Warsh. Text by Nicole Miller, Chelsea Spengemann, Sara VanDerBeek. Interview with Mirra Bank, Martha Edelheit, Chelsea Spengemann. Afterword by Mirra Bank.
A timely volume on the work to uncover an important but neglected feminist experimental filmmaker and artist
Published with Soft Network.
This book is the first to focus on the life and work of Susan Brockman (1937–2001), a prolific American filmmaker and artist who was involved in the feminist art movement, the documentary filmmaking community and the downtown New York art scenes of the 1960s–'90s. Through her distinctive approach to framing, editing and collage, Brockman created interior worlds and tableaux that have a palpable but enigmatic emotional resonance. In 2021, Soft Network began a three-year journey in her archive, a project that uncovered her largely forgotten contributions to experimental image-making. This eponymous monograph charts the organization's process and methodology, revealing the immense effort that goes into caring for and creating access to an artist's legacy and proposing new ways of considering what this work can mean.