Jesse Lerner is a filmmaker and writer based in Los Angeles. His documentaries include Frontierland (with Rubén Ortiz Torres), about the Latino experience in the United States;[1]Ruins (about the history of Mexican archeology and the traffic in fakes), The Atomic Sublime (about Abstract Expressionism and the Cold War), The Absent Stone (with Sandra Rozental, about the monolith of Coatlinchan) and The American Egypt (about the Mexican Revolution in Yucatán).
Lerner books include F is for Phony (with Alexandra Juhasz), a survey of faked documentaries,[3] and The Mexperimental Cinema (with Rita Gonzalez). Two of his publications were associated with film series: Ism Ism Ism (which showed at the Los Angeles Filmforum, the Museo de Arte Moderno Buenos Aires, and the Museo Nacional de Arte Reina Sofía) and The Mexperimental Cinema (screened at Berkeley's Pacific Film Archive, Mexico City's Centro Nacional de las Artes, and the Harvard Film Archive).
The Fragmentations Only Mean ... (2022) Co-director, camera and editor, DCP. Color. 72 minutes.
The Absent Stone (2013) Co-director, camera and editor, with Sandra Rozental. 35mm. Color. 82 minutes.
Atomic Sublime (2010) Director and editor. 16 mm on digital video. B & W and color, 72 minutes.
Two Very Short Films about Maya Revival Architecture (2009) Director, 16mm, color, 2 minutes.
Magnavoz (2006) Director, editor and camera. 16 mm B & W. 25 minutes.
T.S.H. (2004) Director, editor, camera and sound. 16 mm B & W. 6 minutes.
The American Egypt (2001) Director, editor and camera. 16 mm B & W and color. 57 minutes.
Ruins (1999) Director, editor and camera. 16mm B & W, 78 minutes.
Mexopolis (1997) Co-director and camera, with ADOBE L.A. Super-8 color film, 11 minutes.
Frontierland/Fronterilandia (1995) Co-director, -editor, -camera and -sound, with Rubén Ortiz Torres. 16 mm, super-8 and high-8 video, B & W and color, 56 minute (broadcast) and 78 minute (film) versions.
Natives (1991) Co-director, -editor, -camera and -sound, with Scott Sterling. 16mm B & W, 25 minutes. Distributed by Subcine, Third World Newsreel.
How Many Stars, How Many Stripes? (1990) Co-director, -camera, -editor, and -sound, with Fernando Anguita. 16 mm, B & W, 10 minutes.
Books
The Catherwood Project (Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press, 2017).
Lean-Droka-Tz (Buenos Aires: Fundación Espigas, 2013). With Ana Longoni and Mariano Mestman.
The Maya of Modernism (Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press, 2011). Available in Spanish as Los Mayas del modernismo (CDMX.: Siglo XXI, 2019).
The Shock of Modernity/El impacto de la modernidad (Madrid: Turner, 2007).
Co-editor
Co-editor, with Rubén Ortiz Torres, El Fin: Compendio de Lecturas (CDMX: Patronato de Arte Contemporáneo, 2022).
Co-editor, with Luciano Piazza, Ism Ism Ism: Experimental Film in Latin America (Oakland: University of California Press, 2017).
Co-editor, with Rubén Ortiz Torres, L.A. Collects L.A.: Latin America in Southern California Collections (Berlin: Bom Dia, Boa Tarde, Boa Noite, 2017).
Co-editor, with Rubén Ortiz Torres, How to Read Pato Pascual: Disney’s Latin America and Latin America’s Disney (London: Black Dog, 2017).
Co-editor, with Holly Willis, More Than Meets the Eye: The Videos of Tran T. Kim-Trang (Los Angeles: Scalar, 2016).
Co-editor, with Alexandra Juhasz, F is for Phony: Fake Documentary and Truth’s Undoing (Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 2006).