American film director
Edin Velez is a Puerto Rican video artist, director and professor.[ 1] [ 2] He is best known for his work on the documentary films State of Rest and Motion and Dance of Darkness .[ 3] [ 4]
Life and career
Edin was born and raised in Puerto Rico and is currently based in New York. He studied painting at the University of Puerto Rico and the Institute of Puerto Rican Culture .[ 5] He moved to the US in the early 1970s and became part of the first generation of video artists working in SoHo, Manhattan .[ 6] [ 7] His directorial debut documentary film on Japanese Butoh , Dance of Darkness , was broadcast nationally in the US by PBS.[ 8] He is a professor and coordinator of the video program at Rutgers University–Newark .[ 9]
Edin has received numerous award, including American Film Institute's Maya Deren Award , fellowships from the Guggenheim Foundation , the U.S./Japan Friendship Commission, the Jerome Foundation and the New York State Council on the Arts .[ 10] [ 11] [ 12]
Selected exhibitions
Edin's work has been featured in numerous group exhibitions in such institutions as the Whitney Museum of American Art , Centre Georges Pompidou , documenta 8 , American Film Institute National Video Festival, Museum of Modern Art and International Center of Photography .[ 13] [ 14] [ 15]
Filmography
Year
Film
Director
Cinematographer
Notes
2017
State of Rest and Motion
Y
Y
Editor and producer
2012
My Brooklyn
N
Y
2009
Never Enough
N
Y
2009
RFK in the Land of Apartheid
N
Y
2007
A Certain Foolish Consistency
Y
Y
Producer
2002
This and That, and other Minor Misunderstandings
Y
N
Editor and producer
1995
Memory of Fire
Y
N
1992
Art on Film, Program 3: Form
Y
N
1990
A Mosque in Time
Y
Y
[ 16]
1989
Dance of Darkness
Y
Y
Museum of Modern Art
1987
Meaning of the Interval
Y
Y
Museum of Modern Art[ 17]
1984
AS IS
Y
Y
1984
Oblique Strategist
Y
Y
1981
Meta Mayan II
Y
Y
Museum of Modern Art
1978
TULE
Y
Y
Museum of Modern Art
References
External links
International National Artists