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Andrew Noren
Andrew Noren
from Wikipedia

Andrew Noren (1943–May 2, 2015) was an American avant-garde filmmaker.

Key Information

Biography

[edit]

Andrew Noren was born 1943 in Santa Fe, New Mexico and grew up in Southern California.[1]

Noren moved to New York in the mid 1960s, where he worked as an editor at ABC. Through his job, he was able to access a Bolex 16 mm camera, with which he began making films. His first work, A Change of Heart, was a narrative feature film inspired by Jean-Luc Godard's Breathless. After the film's premiere, Noren met Jonas Mekas through a co-worker. He started working at the Film-Makers' Cooperative, where he became connected to local avant-garde filmmakers.[1][2]

Noren began making more experimental works toying with different documentary approaches. For Say Nothing, he recorded a single 30-minute shot in which he administers a screen test. Inspired by the Lumière brothers, his film The New York Miseries was a collection of three-minute takes documenting his own life. It, along with several other works from Noren's early period, were accidentally destroyed in 1970 and are now lost films.[2]

Noren's next film Huge Pupils was the first entry in The Adventures of the Exquisite Corpse, an ongoing film cycle continued growing for the rest of his career. The cycle came to include nine films: Huge Pupils, False Pretenses, The Phantom Enthusiast, Charmed Particles, The Lighted Field, Imaginary Light, Time Being, Free to Go (Interlude), and Aberration of Starlight.[3]

In 1972 Noren began working at the Sherman Grinberg Film Library as a researcher and licensing agent for archived stock footage and newsreels. After Sherman Grinberg went out of business in 1998, Noren founded the Research Source, a visual research and copyright clearance company.[4]

Noren died of lung cancer in 2015.[1]

Filmography

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  • A Change of Heart (1965)
  • Say Nothing (1965)
  • The New York Miseries (1966)
  • Bathing (1967)
  • The Wind Variations (1968)
  • Huge Pupils (1968)
  • False Pretenses (1974)
  • The Phantom Enthusiast (1975)
  • Charmed Particles (1978)
  • The Lighted Field (1987)
  • Imaginary Light (1994)
  • Time Being (2001)
  • Free to Go (Interlude) (2003)
  • Aberration of Starlight (2008)

Legacy

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In 2023, The Lighted Field was inducted into the National Film Registry for its cultural and historical importance.[5][6][7]

References

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Andrew Noren is an American avant-garde filmmaker known for his experimental works that intensely explore light, shadow, perception, and the ephemerality of everyday life, particularly through his decades-spanning series The Adventures of the Exquisite Corpse. Born in 1943 in Santa Fe, New Mexico, Noren grew up in California’s Inland Empire before serving in the Army, traveling in Europe, and eventually settling in New York City. He began making films in 1965 while working as an editor at ABC-TV, initially producing narrative and erotic works such as Change of Heart and diary-like pieces under the title The New York Miseries. Emerging in the late 1960s and early 1970s New York underground scene, his early output featured taboo-breaking eroticism and confrontational cinéma vérité, drawing comparisons to figures like Jack Smith and Barbara Rubin. Many of his pre-1970 films were lost in a warehouse fire, after which he focused on the Adventures of the Exquisite Corpse cycle (1968–2008), a nine-part project that evolved from sexually explicit diary material to highly abstract, high-contrast black-and-white studies of light and shadow, including standout entries such as Huge Pupils, Charmed Particles, The Lighted Field, and Imaginary Light. Noren’s mature style emphasized single-frame cinematography, rapid in-camera editing, time-lapse, and perceptual investigations of vision and time, often filmed in urban domestic settings. His work has been recognized for its visual intensity and philosophical depth, with institutions such as the Museum of Modern Art holding several of his films and some included in essential cinema collections. In later years, Noren withdrew many works from circulation, re-edited existing material, and lived quietly in North Carolina with his wife Risé Hall-Noren, leading to limited public access and a degree of obscurity despite his influence on American experimental cinema. He died of lung cancer in May 2015 at age 71.

Early life

Birth and upbringing

Andrew Noren was born in 1943 in Santa Fe, New Mexico. He grew up in California's Inland Empire. Limited public information exists regarding further details of his family background, early education, or specific childhood experiences in the region.

Entry into filmmaking

Move to New York and avant-garde connections

In the mid-1960s, Andrew Noren relocated to New York City, where he entered the city's burgeoning experimental film milieu after earlier travels and military service. He took a job as an editor for a television news program at ABC, a position that granted him occasional access to a Bolex 16mm camera, which he used on weekends and off-hours to pursue his own filmmaking experiments. This technical access proved instrumental in bridging his commercial editing work with emerging personal artistic ambitions within the avant-garde community. During this period, Noren formed a significant connection with Jonas Mekas, the influential filmmaker, critic, and founder of Anthology Film Archives, whose advocacy shaped much of the New York underground film scene. Through Mekas, Noren became involved with the Film-Makers' Cooperative, the artist-run distribution cooperative Mekas helped establish in 1962 to support independent and experimental filmmakers by handling rental and exhibition of their works outside mainstream channels. This affiliation provided Noren with a vital network for screening and distributing his early efforts, accelerating his shift from commercial television editing toward a committed practice in avant-garde cinema. His first films were produced amid this immersion in New York's avant-garde circles.

Early films (1965–1968)

Noren's early films from 1965 to 1968 represent his initial forays into avant-garde cinema, blending narrative, observational, and diary approaches while often incorporating explicit content that provoked controversy and censorship. Many of these works were destroyed in a fire in 1970, leaving limited surviving examples from this period. His debut, Change of Heart (1965), was a Godard-inspired experimental narrative feature depicting an unhappy young couple frequently shown naked, which resulted in obscenity charges at a California theater. The film was lost in the 1970 fire. Later in 1965, Say Nothing emerged as a 30-minute single-shot interrogation of an actress that hovers between documentary and fiction, and is the earliest surviving film from Noren's early period. In 1966, The New York Miseries featured Lumière-inspired single-take, 100-foot rolls of 16mm film documenting every aspect of his daily life. Bathing followed in 1967, while The Wind Variations (1968) offered a silent meditation on the modulation and transformation of winter light flowing through two windows. Also in 1968, Noren completed Huge Pupils, a 50-minute sexually explicit visual study of his daily life that served as the initial part of his long-term series The Adventures of the Exquisite Corpse; due to its outrageous content, the film encountered censorship battles, including the destruction of at least one copy by a film laboratory. Noren's perfectionism later led him to withdraw or reject certain works, though the primary loss of his earliest efforts stemmed from the 1970 fire.

The Adventures of the Exquisite Corpse

Project inception and structure

Andrew Noren launched his ambitious lifelong film cycle, The Adventures of the Exquisite Corpse, in 1968 and continued developing it until 2008, producing nine completed parts across nearly four decades. The title draws from the surrealist parlor game "exquisite corpse," in which participants create disjointed sections of a drawing or text that are later assembled into an unexpected whole, a principle reflected in the series' compilation-like structure that frequently repurposes, remakes, or recontextualizes earlier footage and motifs. Noren articulated the project's core preoccupation as "the lovers, light and shadow, and their offspring space and time," while describing himself as "a light thief and a shadow bandit" who worked with "retinal phantoms." He emphasized the illusory nature of cinematic perception, with light and shadow conjuring illusions of depth, duration, and spatial reality that he sought to expose and explore through abstraction. The cycle's formal evolution traced a trajectory from relatively intimate, color-based diary elements—particularly evident in the first part, Huge Pupils, which included explicit autobiographical content—toward increasingly abstracted, high-contrast black-and-white cinematography in the middle parts, and finally to digital editing techniques that produced stark silhouettes, voids, and flicker effects in later installments. The completed parts are: Part I: Huge Pupils (1968); Part II: False Pretenses (1974); Part III: The Phantom Enthusiast (1975); Part IV: Charmed Particles (1978); Part V: The Lighted Field (1987); Part VI: Imaginary Light (1994); Part VII: Time Being (2001); Part VIII: Free to Go (Interlude) (2004); and Part IX: Aberration of Starlight (2008). Noren progressively withdrew most of his work from circulation in later years, and following his death in 2015, his widow Risé Hall-Noren has maintained a restrictive policy that severely limits access to the films, including much of The Adventures of the Exquisite Corpse.

Completed parts and evolution

The cycle commenced with Part I: Huge Pupils (1968), an explicit diary film that captured Noren's daily life through intimate, sensuous, and sexually explicit imagery, establishing the series' autobiographical roots in personal observation and journal-like recording. Part II: False Pretenses (1974) introduced a transitional phase, blending the personal mode with references to classic cinema and a more structured approach to visual quotation. Part III: The Phantom Enthusiast (1975) is currently unviewable and inaccessible for study, creating a gap in the documented progression of the cycle. The series advanced with Part IV: Charmed Particles (1978), featuring high-contrast black-and-white cinematography and allusions to physics through depictions of energized particles forming and dissolving human outlines in a meditative, scientific-poetic manner. Part V: The Lighted Field (1987) incorporated an archival mix of footage drawn from diverse sources, achieving a layered, luminous composition that earned induction into the National Film Registry in 2023 for its cultural, historical, and aesthetic significance. Part VI: Imaginary Light (1994) stands as the shortest installment and marked a return to the use of sound after a period of predominantly silent works. Subsequent parts reflected increasing experimentation with form and medium. Part VII: Time Being (2001) represented the first use of digital technology in the cycle, distinguished by extremes in pacing and rhythmic variation. Part VIII: Free to Go (Interlude) (2003/2004) adopted a triptych structure with pronounced color warping effects that distorted and intensified chromatic perception. Part IX: Aberration of Starlight (2008) is the longest surviving part, characterized by heavy flicker techniques that accentuate rhythmic pulses of light and shadow. Across the cycle, Noren's approach evolved from the explicit, diary-derived realism of the early parts toward heightened abstraction, with the shift to digital tools in the later installments accompanied by a notable loss of mid-tones and grays in favor of stark contrasts and intensified explorations of light itself. This progression underscored an ongoing pursuit of perceptual and philosophical inquiry through evolving cinematic means.

Archival and professional work

Employment in film libraries and research

In 1972, Andrew Noren began working at Sherman Grinberg Film Libraries in New York as a newsreel and stock film archival researcher and licensing agent. He held this position for twenty-six years, during which he advanced to the role of director of archives. His employment provided extensive access to historical newsreel and stock footage collections, shaping his parallel career in archiving while supporting his independent filmmaking through direct engagement with primary visual materials. Following the closure of Sherman Grinberg in 1998, Noren founded Research Source, a company dedicated to visual research and copyright clearance services. This venture continued his expertise in archival licensing and research, maintaining the balance between his professional archival work and personal artistic output established in the 1970s. His time at Sherman Grinberg directly influenced his films through the incorporation of archival footage, exemplified by the use of black-and-white newsreel material from the library in The Lighted Field (1987).

Artistic style and techniques

Visual approach and philosophical outlook

Noren's visual approach is characterized by an obsession with the phenomena of light and shadow, including retinal afterimages and the perception of space and time as fluid, malleable dimensions. He developed a distinctive set of techniques to explore these concerns, such as single-frame shooting to capture minute changes, high-contrast black-and-white cinematography to emphasize tonal extremes, flicker effects to disrupt normal perception, superimposition to layer realities, radically slowed or accelerated pacing to alter temporal experience, and the repurposing of earlier footage to create new relationships within the image. His work evolved from early color using Kodachrome stock to a strict commitment to black-and-white due to the unavailability of Kodachrome stock , and later to digital processes that allowed for pure polarity of black and white with no gray tones. Noren articulated a philosophical outlook that viewed cinema as "refined, imaginative seeing," a means of accessing primal animal consciousness and engaging in a "spiritual transaction" between filmmaker and viewer . He famously remarked that “All narrative films are really documentaries about actors pretending,” underscoring his belief in non-narrative cinema as a more direct confrontation with reality . This outlook fueled a perfectionist approach to his practice, often resulting in extensive re-editing, withdrawal of works from circulation, and restriction of screenings to preserve the integrity of his vision.

Later years and final works

Digital transition and last films

Noren transitioned to digital filmmaking with Time Being (2001), the seventh installment of his long-term series The Adventures of the Exquisite Corpse, marking a shift from his earlier analog-based work while maintaining an emphasis on light, shadow, and perceptual phenomena. This work adopted a more restrained black-and-white approach in sections, serving as an entry into digital manipulation. He continued exploring digital abstraction in Free to Go (Interlude) (2003/2004), a masterpiece of digitally manipulated imagery that moves from representational scenes to highly abstract forms through intensive processing. The film borrows structural elements like triptych compositions and returns to silence, intensifying his focus on perceptual transformation. Aberration of Starlight (2008), his final major completed work, extended these techniques into a 90-minute visual symphony of astonishing variations on light, shadow, time, and spatial illusion, achieved through tour-de-force digital distortion and imitation of light effects. This piece, the longest of his surviving films, featured extreme manipulations including flicker, color warping, and a loss of traditional grayscale in favor of high-contrast and abstracted forms, with elements echoing or remaking motifs from earlier works such as Wind Variations. Noren maintained an ongoing engagement with the Exquisite Corpse cycle through these digital parts and beyond, working on related material until his death in 2015, though no further installments were publicly released after 2008. Known as a protective perfectionist, he withdrew films from circulation when dissatisfied, issuing a cease-and-desist order to Anthology Film Archives in 2004 to halt screenings of his works. This stance contributed to limited public access during his lifetime and persisted posthumously, with his later digital films remaining largely inaccessible, rarely screened, and without initial memorial tributes or widespread availability following his passing.

Death and legacy

Passing and posthumous status

Andrew Noren died of lung cancer on May 2, 2015, at age 71. Following his death, his widow Risé Hall-Noren, as executor of his estate, has maintained strict control over access to his films, resulting in limited circulation and few public screenings. Posthumously, Noren's film The Lighted Field (1987) was selected for inclusion in the National Film Registry in 2023 by the Library of Congress, acknowledging its enduring cultural, historical, and aesthetic significance. However, challenges persist in his legacy, including lost early works, reels that remain unviewable or unrestored, and ongoing restrictions on distribution that continue to limit broader engagement with his oeuvre.

References

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