Suzan Pitt
Suzan Pitt
Main page

Suzan Pitt

logo
Community Hub0 subscribers
What are your thoughts?
Be the first to start a discussion here.
Be the first to start a discussion here.
Suzan Pitt

Suzan Pitt Kraning (born Suzan Lee Pitt; July 11, 1943 – June 16, 2019), known professionally as Suzan Pitt, was an American film director, animator, painter, and fashion designer best known for her surrealist animated shorts, including Asparagus (1979).

Though never commercially successful as an animated filmmaker, Pitt's films developed a cult following, especially following Asparagus' pairing with Eraserhead (1977) during the latter's run on the midnight movies circuit. Outside of filmmaking, Pitt was well known for her painted graffiti coats, which debuted alongside Keith Haring's at Patricia Field's store in 1984. She also taught animation at Harvard University, Minneapolis College of Art and Design, and California Institute of the Arts.

Though best remembered for her films, Pitt found more financial success as a painter, with her works being in the collections of the Museum of Modern Art in New York, Walker Art Center in Minneapolis, and the Ludwig Museum in Cologne. Pitt died of pancreatic cancer in 2019, shortly after receiving the Lifetime Achievement Award from Animafest Zagreb.

Suzan Lee Pitt was born in Kansas City, Missouri on July 11, 1943. Her father, John Pitt, owned a tire distributorship. Her mother, Belva Pitt (née Baughman) made women's hats. Pitt reported that her grandmother, also a milliner, was the only "artist" in her family besides her. From an early age, Pitt loved to draw, sometimes locking herself in her room to draw when she felt overwhelmed or scared. Pitt would also often play dolls with her sister, Melinda, experiences which she later attributed to inspiring her films. In a 1979 interview, she stated that "as children we take objects and move them around. Inanimate objects seem to have life...Then as you grow up you're expected to take all that and make it disappear in the closet. What happens to that impulse, that drive to transfer what you see around you into playthings?"

Pitt's interest in art was encouraged by her family, and she attended both the University of Alabama and Cranbrook Academy, graduating from the former in 1965 with a BFA in painting. Pitt named artists such as Richard Lindner, David Hockney, and Francis Bacon as inspirations for her work at the time. Pitt also considered becoming an actor, but "discovered [she] was a ham".

After completing her degree at Cranbrook Academy, Pitt decided against pursuing a master's, as she felt that her "time was more valuable just on her own". By this time, Pitt had married Alan Kraning. Her husband worked at the University of Minnesota, and Pitt found work at several nearby universities teaching painting and attending classes. While teaching at the Minneapolis College of Art and Design, Pitt began experimenting with animation using a 16mm film camera and paper cut-outs. Her first film, Bowl Theatre Garden Marble Game (1969), showcased Pitt's filmmaking philosophy; feeling that her paintings were "in a state of arrested movement" having "[gone] somewhere and were going somewhere", Pitt decided to try animation to bring her ideas to life. Pitt's next film, Crocus (1971), also employed cut-out animation and began a trend in Pitt's work of associating sexuality with vegetables and flora. Crocus caught the attention of the Whitney Museum of Art in New York City, and the museum's film department commissioned Pitt to make an animated commercial for the museum. The resulting film, Jefferson Circus Songs (1973), saw Pitt using pixilation. The film featured students of hers from the Walker Art Center. That same year, Pitt also created a commercial to raise funds for the museum's New American Film Series.

Pitt's best-known film, Asparagus (1979), took four years to make. After receiving a grant from the American Film Institute, Pitt took a job teaching at Harvard while also working on Asparagus. She oftentimes used the university's camera equipment to film scenes. Pitt completed sections of the film while living in both New York City and Germany. Pitt employed traditional cel animation, but also used a mixed media approach where she constructed a miniature theater set, wherein she combined cel animation and stop motion. Asparagus debuted as part of an installation at the Whitney Museum of American Art in 1979. The installation included the movie-theater set piece used in the film, which held an audience of 15 people. Asparagus also screened with David Lynch's Eraserhead for two years on the midnight movie circuit. The film won Pitt several high-profile awards, including best film at the ASIFA East Awards, Ann Arbor Film Festival, Baltimore Film Festival, and Atlanta Independent Film and Video Festival, and remains her most acclaimed and critically successful work.

Following the success of Asparagus, Pitt turned away from traditional animated films and designed animated projections for various theatrical projects, in particular two groundbreaking operas in Germany: The Magic Flute for the Staatstheater Wiesbaden in 1983 and The Damnation of Faust for the Staatsoper Hamburg in 1988. In addition, she created large-scale multimedia shows, including a collaboration with John Cage at Harvard University in 1976 and at the Venice Biennale in 1980.

See all
User Avatar
No comments yet.