Diaries, Notes, and Sketches
Also known as Walden, Jonas Mekas’s first diary film is a six-reel chronicle of his life in 1960s New York, int...
Directing
Gregory J. Markopoulos (March 12, 1928 - November 12, 1992) was an American experimental filmmaker. Born in Toledo, Ohio to Greek immigrant parents, Markopoulos began making 8 mm films at an early age. He attended USC Film School in the late 1940s, and went on to become a co-founder — with Jonas Mekas, Shirley Clarke, Stan Brakhage and others — of the New American Cinema movement. He was as well a contributor to Film Culture magazine, and an instructor at the Art Institute of Chicago.
In 1967, he and his partner Robert Beavers left the United States for permanent residence in Europe. Once ensconced in self-imposed exile, Markopoulos withdrew his films from circulation, refused any interviews, and insisted that a chapter about him be removed from the second edition of Visionary Film, P. Adams Sitney's seminal study of American avant-garde cinema. While he continued to make films, his work went largely unseen for almost 30 years.
Browse movies and TV shows featuring Gregory J. Markopoulos
Also known as Walden, Jonas Mekas’s first diary film is a six-reel chronicle of his life in 1960s New York, int...
Includes 'portraits' of Marianne Faithfull, Thelonious Monk and 28 others, some known, some less so.
Shot in Florence, the film draws on Leonardo da Vinci’s notebooks and Paul Valéry’s essay on da Vinci’s creativ...
Jonas Mekas assembles 160 portraits, appearances, and fleeting sketches of underground and independent filmmake...
Swain is inspired by Nathaniel Hawthorne’s Fanshawe, features a dreamlike narrative of a young man’s ritualized...
Prometheus, on an Odyssean journey, crosses the Brooklyn Bridge in search of the characters of his imagination....
An early exploration of intimacy and perception, the film portrays the body’s beauty and sexuality as animated...
In 1963 Boultenhouse wrote, produced, and directed Dionysius,which he described as a “free treatment of Euripid...
Shot in thirty-two hours at the abandoned Baybridge Theater in Brooklyn, in cinemascope and Eastman color. The...
In 1964 Film Culture magazine chose Andy Warhol for its annual Independent Film award. The plan was to show som...
Beavers intercuts scenes of traffic in Bern with details from the 15th-century altarpiece The Martyrdom of St....
Filmed in Rome in the 1980s, the work draws on Borromini’s Baroque architecture and Il Sassetta’s St. Martin an...
Markopoulos’ first attempt at making a 35mm feature film, clearly inspired by the cinema of Jean Cocteau, was l...
Distilled in 1996 from an earlier 50-minute trilogy, this 26-minute film was shot in Greece and Austria and str...
Filmed when Beavers was 18–19, this self-portrait depicts him and Gregory J. Markopoulos in their Swiss apartme...
Miser Ebenezer Scrooge is awakened on Christmas Eve by spirits who reveal to him his own miserable existence, w...
Portrait studies of Mrs. Hodges, Gail Beavers (the filmmaker’s sister) and Gregory J. Markopoulos.
Dedicated to Dieter Meier. voice-over by Gregory Markopoulos, reading an excerpt in English translation of Paul...
Short film shot in Rapallo, 1987.
The trilogy 'Of Blood, of Pleasure and of Death' (1947-1948), which began with Psyche (1947), the first film, p...