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ROBERT
BREER
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SCHER
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ARNOLD
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SCHER
ORNA
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ROBERT
BREER
Biography
Robert Breer's career as artist and animator spans 50 years and
his creative explorations have made him an international figure.
He began his artistic pursuits as a painter while living in Paris
from 1949-59. Using an old Bolex 16mm camera, his first films, such
as Form Phases, were simple stop motion studies based on
his abstract paintings.
Breer has always been fascinated by the mechanics of film. Perhaps
his father's fascination with 3-D inspired Breer to tinker with
early mechanical cinematic devices. His father was an engineer and
designer of the legendary Chrysler Airflow automobile in 1934 and
built a 3-D camera to film all the family vacations. After studying
engineering at Stanford, Breer changed his focus toward hand crafted
arts and began experimenting with flip books. These animations,
done on ordinary 4" by 6" file cards have become the standard
for all of Breer's work, even to this day.
Influences
Like many of his generation, Breer's early work was influenced by
the various European modern art movements of the early 20th century,
ranging from the abstract forms of the Russian Constructivists and
the structuralist formulas of the Bauhaus, to the nonsensible universe
of the Dadaists. Through his association with the Denise René
Gallery, which specialized in geometric art, he saw the abstract
films of such pioneers as Hans Richter, Viking Eggeling, Walter
Ruttman and Fernand Léger. Breer acknowledges his respect
for this purist, "cubist" cinema, which uses geometric
shapes moving in time and space. In 1955, he helped organize and
exhibited in a show in Paris entitled "Le Mouvement" (The
Movement), which paved the way for new cinema aesthetics. During
this period, Breer also met the poet Alan Ginsberg and introduced
him to his film Recreation (1956), which made use of frame-by-frame
experiments in a non-narrative structure. Although Breer disdains
being labeled a beatnik, the film does capture some aspects of beat
poetry and music.
When Breer returned to the United States in the late 1950s, the
American avant-garde was thriving and films by Kenneth Anger, Stan
Brakhage, Peter Kubelka and Maria Menken were creating a new visionary
movement. Breer found kindred spirits within the New York experimental
scene. As Pop Art emerged as a phenomenon in the 1960s, Breer befriended
Claes Oldenburg and others. He worked on the TV show, David
Brinkley's Journal, filming pieces on art shows in Europe;
at the same time, he made his debut documentary on the sculptor
Jean Tinguely in 1961, Homage to Tinguely. Screened at
the Museum of Modern Art, it reflects Breer's interest in mechanical
forms and the fine art of moving sculpture; techniques he used in
his work, as his own kinetic sculpture was sparked by Tinguely's
keen interest in mechanical gadgets, kinetic movement and abstract
forms.
Breer was influenced by the new performance art and "happenings"
making waves in the avant-garde of Europe and New York. He worked
briefly with Claes Oldenburg and his performance pieces resulting
in a 13 minute film, Pat's Birthday (1962). Breer also
befriended artists like Nam June Paik, Charlotte Mormon and others
exposed to the new trends in multimedia events.
While he was working on the film Fist Fight, he met Stockhausen,
then working in Cologne on Originale, a performance piece.
The composer's work soon came into vogue in American circles and
he was asked to perform his piece in New York's Judson Hall in 1964.
Breer presented Fist Fight as part of this performance,
making the film a visual event in its own right.
Always whimsical, Breer soon developed a line technique related
to the free form work of Swiss painter Paul Klee. Such short narrative
pieces as A Man with his Dog Out for Air (1958) and
Inner and Outer Space (1960) use the dynamics of drawing and
line to capture the essence of humor and motion. Time and time again,
he relies on the roots of simple techniques of pencils or 4 x 6
cards for inspiration. While Breer rarely uses conventional storytelling
techniques, these films have a sense of the quick movements of a
Tex Avery cartoon and the wit of an electric comic strip.
Historical Perspectives
Breer continued to search for historical perspectives in his work
and discovered the color theories of Chevreul and Rood. He also
began a series of minimalist pieces based on number series, which
were nonfigurative and based on geometry and formal issues. 66,
69 and 70 rely on formalist images from his early research into
color paintings.
The 1970’s brought Breer into a more commercial world of animation
and he worked for the Children's Television Workshop in 1971 doing
animation for The Electric Company. His popular Gulls
and Buoys relates back both to the poetry of William Carlos
Williams and the early rotoscoping techniques devised by Max Fleischer
back in 1916. Breer explored the latter method in order to give
a live-action sense to the animated form. Disney and other commercial
studios still use this method to animate reality-based scenes. With
his new interest in technology, Breer was invited to Japan with
other artists to work on the Pepsi Pavilion, making a set of mobile
sculptures. While in Japan, he made Fuji, again using rotoscoping
combined with Japanese textural imagery.
Returning to the United States, for his next work, LMNO
(1978), he once again sought out historical references. A homage
to one of the fathers of animation, Émile Cohl, it uses a
simple French policeman as a main character. Cohl became famous
for his Fantoche stick figure, which predated Mickey by 20 years.
Using the simple technique of 4 x 6 index cards, this film used
every imaginable technique from spray paint to pencils. His next
film, TZ, continues this line of energetic experiments
and is a portrait of his new living space then near the Tappan Zee
bridge, in New York's Hudson River Valley. Breer often uses domestic
imagery in his work, incorporating objects surrounding the artist
to fantasy sequences using Polaroid photographs reworked with erasable
marker pens. The compositions, as always on 4 x 6 index cards, are
enhanced by kitchen clatter in a free stream of consciousness approach.
Breer's work continued his experiments with various techniques and
materials with Swiss Army Knife with Rats and Pigeons (1980),
which again includes live-action and line techniques.
Raising a family throughout the 1980s, Breer began to work with
what he considers "children's animation," resulting in
A Frog on a Swing (1988), which is dedicated to his daughter.
He also experimented with associative spontaneity in Trial Balloons,
a metaphor for anything experimental.
In recent years, Breer continued to make one film per year. His
Sparkill Ave! (1993) is a homey study on his new neighborhood
using hundreds of still photographs, combined with index card drawings.
As always, he prefers animation "close to home."
Breer continued exploring animated forms while teaching animation
at Cooper Union in New York City. When asked about his current work,
he says that he still relies on the history of cinema and early
"gadgets" as the source of his inspiration. Recent work
Now You See It (1996), exhibited at the American Museum of the Moving
Image, in New York, used a two sided panel which spun into an animated
film much like a Thaumatrope, the first cinematic device that used
persistence of vision back in 1826. Like two slides flipping back
and forth, it is a continuous animation based on his explorations
into the devices of cinema's early history (and prehistory), which
dazzled audiences by creating visual kinesis. His two latest films,
ATOZ (2000) and What Goes UP (2003) are featured in the 2004 Carnegie
International Exhibition. He will exhibit a film and installation
in the Group Show: REPETITIONS January / February 2005 at the Maya
Stendhal Gallery.
At the heart of his work is the imagination of the artist mixed
with the inquisitive mind of the mad scientist, delving into lost
archives of cinema to revive forgotten art forms and giving them
new life for generations to come. This is the secret to Breer's
unique world.
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