Sara Angelucci

Sara Angelucci Trailers

Cirkut/Canadettes TrailerDouble Take TrailerWhen the Cricket Sings Trailer

Sara Angelucci is a photo and video artist born in Hamilton, Ontario and currently living in Toronto. She completed her B.A. at the University of Guelph and her M.F.A. at the Nova Scotia College of Art and Design. She has exhibited her photography across Canada including exhibitions at Le Mois de la Photo in Montreal, Vu in Quebec City, the Toronto Photographer's Workshop, the MacLaren Art Centre, the Art Gallery of Hamilton, the Richmond Art Gallery, and the St. Mary's University Art Gallery in Halifax.

Most Popular Sara Angelucci Trailers

Total trailers found: 7

Snow Trailer (2000)

01 January 2000

Uses the final fragments of home movies to create a series of "endings," each one being obliterated by the white dots that appear at the end of each filmstrip.

Seeking Grace Trailer (2003)

01 January 2003

"In Seeking Grace an elegant older woman (Gina) walks calmly with a flower pot on her head, her physical balance and confidence a metaphor for the grace I seek in my own life.

Cirkut/Canadettes Trailer (2019)

16 November 2019

For many years a long photograph featuring 60 women in western style costumes has hung in the hallway at the entrance of Sara Angelucci’s house.

In a Hundred Trailer (2000)

01 January 2000

In A Hundred examines the experience of time; both as an ongoing linear progression, as well as a circular pattern of remembered fragments.

Double Take Trailer (2007)

01 January 2007

Double Take explores the memory of identical twins whom together experienced a traumatic childhood event.

America il Paradiso Trailer (1997)

01 January 1997

This video addresses the complex and rich cultural history inherited by the children of immigrants. While official History is often presented as a single truth, "truth" is multi-layered and multi-valent.

When the Cricket Sings Trailer (2007)

01 January 2007

The video offers a nocturnal glimpse of Shanghai street life, depicting one of the typical neighbourhoods disappearing under the city’s urban development.