The Artist in a Haunted House: Jeremy Blake and the Winchester Mystery House

Marcin Giżycki

kwartalnik.filmowy@ispan.pl
Polish-Japanese Academy of Information Technology (Poland)

Abstract

This year marks the tenth anniversary of the death of New York artists Jeremy Blake and Theresa Dun­can, who committed suicide within one week of each other in July 2007. She had a well-received animated film in her output. He was a rising star of video art, and his most important work was the Winchester trilogy, inspired by the mysterious Winchester Mystery House in San Jose, California, and the life of its creator Sarah Winchester, the heiress of fortune coming from the production of rifles well known from western films. According to legend, Ms. Winchester built this house in order to appease the spirits of Native Americans killed by Winchester rifles during the conquest of the Wild West. Despite success, Blake and his partner became paranoid, and their art did not offer them a refuge from evil powers.


Keywords:

Jeremy Blake, Theresa Dun­can, video art

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Published
2017-06-30

Cited by

Giżycki, M. (2017) “The Artist in a Haunted House: Jeremy Blake and the Winchester Mystery House”, Kwartalnik Filmowy, (97-98), pp. 313–320. doi: 10.36744/kf.2129.

Authors

Marcin Giżycki 
kwartalnik.filmowy@ispan.pl
Polish-Japanese Academy of Information Technology Poland

Krytyk i historyk sztuki; autor książek z dziedziny historii filmu i zjawisk kultury artystycznej. Wykładowca w Rhode Island School of Design w USA, profesor w Polsko-Japońskiej Aka­demii Technik Komputerowych w Warszawie. Opub­likował m.in. Nie tylko Disney - rzecz o kinie animowanym (2000), Koniec i co dalej? (2001), Słownik kierunków, ruchów i kluczowych pojęć sztuki drugiej połowy XX wieku (2002), Wenders do domu! Europejskie filmy o Ameryce i ich recepcja w Stanach Zjednoczonych (2006).



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Copyright (c) 2017 Marcin Giżycki

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