Jeremy Blake

Most Popular Jeremy Blake Trailers

Total trailers found: 10

Return: Native American Women Reclaim Foodways for Health & Spirit Trailer (2019)

19 March 2019

Concerned about the declining health of people all around them, Native American women are sparking physical and spiritual rejuvenation through reclaiming traditional foodways.

Punch-Drunk Love Trailer (2002)

11 October 2002

A socially awkward and volatile small business owner meets the love of his life after being threatened by a gang of scammers.

Winchester Redux Trailer (2004)

01 January 2004

Winchester Redux (2004) by the late, renowned digital artist Jeremy Blake (1971 – 2007) is an abridged version of the artist’s acclaimed Winchester Trilogy.

1906 Trailer (2003)

01 January 2003

How much do staircases and doors leading nowhere in the Californian Winchester House reveal about the owner’s superstitions and how much about the years of converting and rebuilding after the 1906 earthquake? In the centrepiece of his trilogy, Jeremy Blake fills the labyrinthine interiors of this architectural rarity with unreal light and colour apparitions of impressive beauty and oppressive impact.

The History of Glamour Trailer (1999)

16 July 1999

The story of rock'n'roll singer Charles Valentine, who came from small-town Ohio and conquered New York.

Winchester Trailer (2002)

08 July 2002

Combines static 16mm historical photographs of the famous Winchester house, drawings, and laborious digital manipulation to convey a psychological portrait of the famous San Jose landmark.

Guccinam Trailer (2000)

08 July 2000

installation/video art

Liquid Villa Trailer (2000)

08 July 2000

installation/video art

Chemical Sundown Trailer (2001)

01 January 2001

Blake’s Chemical Sundown aims at LA’s fantasy of exceptionally colorful sunsets that are in realn

Century 21 Trailer (2004)

08 July 2004

Century 21 moves from the roof of the Winchester house to zoom in on a complex of three domed, space-age movie theaters situated across the street: Century 21, Century 22 and Century 23, alluding to the fact that it is film, TV and the media that perpetuate the icon of the gunfighter.