BY THE EDITORS |
Here Are the Works of Art the TFF 2014 Winners Will Take Home
At TFF, our winning filmmakers don't just take home laurels; they're also gifted with original works of art by world-class NYC artists. Here we present this year's artists and the work they've given to this program.
The 2014 Tribeca Film Festival, presented by AT&T is happy to announce the participants in this year’s Tribeca Film Festival Artists Awards Program, sponsored by Chanel.
This year, eight contemporary artists, including Tim Barber, Tony Bennett, Stephen Hannock, Matthew Modine, Catherine Murphy, James Nares, Alexis Rockman, and Clifford Ross will continue TFF’s unique tradition of artists supporting one another with the donation of their artwork, which will be presented to the filmmakers whose films are selected by the TFF jury as winners in their respective categories. The Tribeca Film Festival Artists Awards Program was created by TFF co-founder Jane Rosenthal to celebrate New York artists.
The work will be exhibited free and open to the public during the Tribeca Film Festival from April 16th-27th, between the hours of 10am-10pm, at the New York Academy of Art, 111 Franklin Street, Manhattan. New Yorkers and festival-goers alike will be able to view the works before they are taken home by the award-winning filmmakers.
Without further ado, here are the works of art TFF's winning filmmakers will take home as awards this April.
Tim Barber: Untitled (Ali's vein), 2013, C-print, edition : AP, 16 x 20 inches
Tony Bennett: Central Park, NY, 2009, Watercolor, 20 x 24 inchesStephen Hannock: The Ballad of the Great Eastern, 2014, Woodcut print on paper, 19 x 15.75 inchesMatthew Modine: Stanley Kubrick, Director's Chair, Photo, Camera: Rolleiflex TLR Medium Format 2 1/4" x 2 1/4, 36 x 36 inchesCatherine Murphy: View of Hoboken and Manhattan, 1975, lithograph, 12 3/4 x 16 3/8 inchesJames Nares: Untitled, 2010, Iridescent pigment and wax on paper, 2010, 60 x 44 inchesAlexis Rockman: Iguaca, 2011, Lithograph, Ink and Soil from Iguaca Falls, Puerto Rico, on paper; Paper: ragcote; Edition: 50, 30 x 22 inchesClifford Ross: Water XIX, 1998, Silver gelatin print, 28 1/2 x 24 1/2 inches
About the Artists
- Tim Barber grew up in Amherst, Massachusetts, lived in the mountains of Northern Vermont for a few years, studied photography in Vancouver B.C., and now lives in New York City. A photographer, curator, and designer, Barber runs the creative community website, time-and-space.tv, (formerly known as tinyvices.com).
- Tony Bennett: No one in popular American music has recorded for so long and at such a high level of excellence than Tony Bennett. In the last ten years alone, in the sixth decade of his career, he has sold ten million albums. Bennett has received 17 Grammy awards, is a Kennedy Center Honoree and an NEA Jazz Master. Tony Bennett is a dedicated painter whose interest in art began as a child. He continues to paint every day, even as he tours internationally. He has exhibited his work in galleries around the world. Three of his paintings are part of the Smithsonian Museum’s permanent collections, including his portrait of his friend Duke Ellington, which became part of the National Portrait Gallery’s collection in 2009. Bennett founded Exploring the Arts to support arts education in public high schools.
- Stephen Hannock is an American Luminist painter known for his atmospheric nocturnes, which often incorporate text inscriptions that relate to family, friends, or the events of daily life. He has demonstrated a unique appreciation for contemporary storytelling through the painting medium. His inventive machine polishing of the surfaces of his paintings gives a characteristic luminous quality to his work. His design of visual effects for the 1998 film, What Dreams May Come, garnered him an Academy Award®. His works appear in collections worldwide, including the Metropolitan Museum of Art, the Whitney Museum of American Art, the National Gallery of Art in Washington, DC., and the Yale University Art Gallery. Hannock recently received an honorary doctorate in fine arts from Bowdoin College.
- Matthew Modine has worked with many of the film industry’s most acclaimed directors including Christopher Nolan, Oliver Stone, Sir Alan Parker, Stanley Kubrick, Robert Altman, Abel Ferrara, Jonathan Demme, and John Sayles to name but a few. Among his acting awards are the Golden Globe, an Independent Spirit Award, and two Golden Lion Awards from the Venice Film Festival. In addition to acting, Matthew has also been writing and directing films for over two decades and recently developed two immersive, interactive, award-winning apps. As a photographer, Modine began shooting on the set of Kubrick's Full Metal Jacket. His iconic images have appeared in the highly acclaimed, award-winning Full Metal Jacket Diary. His photography has been exhibited in museums and prestigious venues the world over, including the Rome Film Festival and the Stanley Kubrick Exhibition.
- Catherine Murphy’s recent paintings and drawings show a profound interest in depicting common surroundings that usually escape our notice, but nevertheless influence our perception. Recreating images from her memory and dreams, rather than photographs, she stages the objects that then become the subject matter for her work. She studied at Skowhegan School of Painting and Sculpture in Maine and received a BFA from Pratt Institute in Brooklyn in 1967. Murphy has also been awarded with National Endowment for the Arts Grants (1979 and 1989), a Guggenheim Fellowship (1982), and membership to the American Academy and Institute of Arts and Letters (2002). She was a Senior Critic at Yale University Graduate School of Art for 22 years and currently holds the Tepper Family Endowed Chair in Visual Arts at the Mason Gross School of the Arts at Rutgers. Works by Murphy are in important private and public collections, including the Whitney Museum of American Art, the MoMA, and the Art Institute of Chicago. Ms. Murphy is the distinguished recipient of the 2014 Robert De Niro, Sr. Prize for her achievements in Painting.
- James Nares’ paintings seek to capture the very moment of their own creation. They are most frequently made in a single brush stroke, recording a gestural passage of time and motion across the canvas. Nares’ films and videos reference many of the same preoccupations with movement, rhythm, and repetition, while also ranging further afield in their scope. His work is included in a number of public and private collections including the Museum of Modern Art, the Whitney Museum of American Art, and the Albright-Knox Art Gallery. In 2008, Anthology Film Archives hosted a complete retrospective of his films and videos. In 2013, Nares’ film, Street, was on view at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, and will also be featured in the New Frontier program at this year’s Sundance Film Festival. Later in 2014, Rizzoli will publish the first monograph dedicated to James Nares’ work in all media over the last four decades.
- Alexis Rockman’s canvases present a darkly surreal vision of the collision between human civilization and the natural world. His art draws from a diverse range of inspirations, including Old Master paintings, science fiction, and above all, natural history. He was recently the subject of a major 2010–11 retrospective at the Smithsonian Museum of American Art, entitled Alexis Rockman: A Fable for Tomorrow. In 2012, he completed work for Ang Lee on his latest film, Life of Pi, where he served as “Inspirational Artist.” Rockman’s work has been featured in Wired, The New York Times, and The Wall Street Journal, and is in the collections of museums such as LACMA, the Guggenheim, and the Whitney Museum of American Art. Alexis Rockman is represented by Sperone Westwater in New York.
- Clifford Ross is a multimedia artist who began his career as a painter and sculptor after graduating from Yale University. In the mid-1990s, Ross became interested in photography, pioneering breakthrough techniques in the field. In 2002, Ross invented and patented the revolutionary R1 camera, which allowed him to produce some of the highest resolution, large-scale landscape photographs in the world. His work has been the subject of international museum exhibitions and can be found in numerous public collections, including the MoMA, the Metropolitan Museum of Art, the Guggenheim Museum in New York, the J. Paul Getty Museum, and the Museum of Fine Arts in Houston. In 2011, a large selection of Ross' Hurricane waves were included in Coal + Ice, a photographic exploration of global warming held at Three Shadows Photography Art Centre, Beijing. Recent works include his animated landscape video Harmonium Mountain, featuring an original score by Philip Glass, a 28 x 28 foot stained glass wall for the U.S. Federal Courthouse in Austin, Texas, and a video projection, set to the live music of Taikoza Japanese Drums, under the archway of the Manhattan Bridge in Brooklyn, for the Dumbo Arts Festival. A major exhibition of Ross' work is set to open in May 2015 at MASS MoCA in North Adams, MA.