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Jonas Mekas

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Jonas Mekas
Mekas in 1971
Born(1922-12-24)December 24, 1922
Semeniškiai, Lithuania
DiedJanuary 23, 2019(2019-01-23) (aged 96)
New York City, U.S.
NationalityLithuanian-American
Alma materUniversity of Mainz
Occupations
  • Poet
  • filmmaker
  • artist
Years active1954–2019
MovementAvant-garde cinema
Spouse
Hollis Melton
(m. 1974)
Children2
AwardsLithuanian National Prize (1995)
Signature

Jonas Mekas (/ˈmkɑːs/;[1] Lithuanian: [ˈjonɐs ˈmækɐs]; December 24, 1922 – January 23, 2019) was a Lithuanian-American filmmaker, poet, and artist who has been called "the godfather of American avant-garde cinema".[2] Mekas's work has been exhibited in museums and at festivals worldwide.[3] Mekas was active in New York City, where he co-founded Anthology Film Archives, The Film-Makers' Cooperative, and the journal Film Culture. He was also the first film critic for The Village Voice.[4][5]

In the 1960s, Mekas launched anti-censorship campaigns in defense of the LGBTQ-themed films of Jean Genet and Jack Smith, garnering support from cultural figures including Jean-Paul Sartre, Simone de Beauvoir, Norman Mailer, and Susan Sontag. Mekas mentored and supported many prominent artists and filmmakers, including Ken Jacobs, Peter Bogdanovich, Chantal Akerman, Richard Foreman, John Waters, Barbara Rubin, Yoko Ono, and Martin Scorsese. He helped launch the writing careers of the critics Andrew Sarris, Amy Taubin, and J. Hoberman.

During World War II, Mekas edited and contributed to two far-right, collaborationist newspapers under the Nazi occupation of Lithuania, the significance of which has been debated by historians.[6][7][8][9]

His major films include The Brig (1964), Walden: Diaries Notes and Sketches (1968), and Reminiscences of a Journey to Lithuania (1972). His early poetry collection, Idylls of Semeniskiai (1948), is a celebrated work in his native Lithuania.

Early life

[edit]

Mekas was born in Semeniškiai, the son of Elzbieta (Jašinskaitė) and Povilas Mekas on December 24, 1922.[10][11] As a teenager, he attended the Biržai Gymnasium in Biržai, Lithuania.[12] From 1941 to 1942, living under Nazi occupation, he co-edited and published in the culture section of Naujosios Biržų žinios, founded by the far-right, anti-semitic[13] Lithuanian Activist Front.[14][15] From 1943 to 1944, he co-edited and published in the culture section of Panevėžio apygardos balsas, a weekly local newspaper published by the fascist[16] Lithuanian Nationalist Party [lt].[17][18]

In 1944, Mekas left Lithuania with his brother, Adolfas Mekas. They attempted to reach neutral Switzerland by means of Vienna, with fabricated student papers arranged by their uncle.[19] Their train was stopped in Germany, and they were both imprisoned in a labor camp in Elmshorn, a suburb of Hamburg, for eight months. The brothers escaped and hid on a farm near the Danish border for two months until the end of the war. After the war, Mekas lived in displaced persons' camps in Wiesbaden and Kassel. From 1946 to 1948, he studied philosophy at the University of Mainz.[4] By the end of 1949 his brother and he had both secured sponsorship through a job in Chicago and emigrated to the United States.[4] When they arrived, the two decided to settle in Williamsburg, Brooklyn. Two weeks after his arrival, he borrowed money to buy his first Bolex 16mm camera and began recording moments of his life.

He discovered avant-garde film at venues such as Amos Vogel's pioneering Cinema 16, and he began curating avant-garde film screenings at Gallery East on Avenue A and Houston Street and at the Film Forum series at Carl Fisher Auditorium on 57th Street.[20]

Career

[edit]

In 1954, Mekas and his brother Adolfas founded the journal Film Culture, and in 1958 he began writing his "Movie Journal" column for The Village Voice. In 1962, he co-founded The Film-Makers' Cooperative, and in 1964 the Filmmakers' Cinematheque, which eventually became Anthology Film Archives, one of the world's largest and most important repositories of avant-garde film. Along with Lionel Rogosin, he was part of the New American Cinema movement. He was a close collaborator with artists such as Marie Menken,[21] Andy Warhol,[22] Nico, Allen Ginsberg, Yoko Ono, John Lennon,[23] Salvador Dalí, and fellow Lithuanian George Maciunas.

After leaving The Voice over an editorial dispute, for a short time he wrote a column for The SoHo Weekly News.[24]

Mekas gave the film Heaven and Earth Magic its title in 1964/65.

In 1964, Mekas was arrested on obscenity charges for showing Flaming Creatures (1963) and Jean Genet's Un Chant d'Amour (1950). He launched a campaign against the censorship board, and for the next few years continued to exhibit films at the Filmmakers' Cinematheque, the Jewish Museum, and the Gallery of Modern Art. From 1964 to 1967, he organized the New American Cinema Expositions, which toured Europe and South America, and in 1966 joined the 80 Wooster Fluxhouse Coop.

Mekas in 1977

In 1970, Anthology Film Archives opened on 425 Lafayette Street as a film museum, screening space, and library, with Mekas as its director.[4] Mekas, along with Stan Brakhage, Ken Kelman, Peter Kubelka, James Broughton, and P. Adams Sitney, began the ambitious Essential Cinema project at Anthology Film Archives to establish a canon of important cinematic works. Mekas's legs appeared in John Lennon and Yoko Ono's experimental film Up Your Legs Forever (1971).[25]

As a filmmaker, Mekas's own output ranged from his early narrative film Guns of the Trees (1961) to "diary films" such as Walden (1969); Lost, Lost, Lost (1975), Reminiscences of a Journey to Lithuania (1972), Zefiro Torna (1992), and As I Was Moving Ahead Occasionally I Saw Brief Glimpses of Beauty (2000), which have been screened at festivals and museums around the world. Mekas' diary films offered a new perspective to the genre and portrayed the cinematic avant-garde scene of the 1960s.

Mekas expanded the scope of his practice with his later works of multi-monitor installations, sound immersion pieces and "frozen-film" prints. Together they offer a new experience of his classic films and a novel presentation of his more recent video work. His work has been exhibited at the 51st Venice Biennial, PS1 Contemporary Art Center, the Ludwig Museum, the Serpentine Gallery, the Jewish Museum, and the Jonas Mekas Visual Arts Center.

Mekas in 2011

In 2007, Mekas released one film every day on his website, a project he entitled "The 365 Day Project."[26] The online diary is still[when?] ongoing on Jonas Mekas's official website. It was celebrated in 2015 with a show titled "The Internet Saga" which was curated by Francesco Urbano Ragazzi at Palazzo Foscari Contarini on the occasion of the 56th Venice Biennale of Visual Arts.

Beginning in the 1970s, Mekas taught film courses at the New School for Social Research, MIT, Cooper Union, and New York University.

Additionally, Mekas was a writer and published his poems and prose in Lithuanian, French, German, and English. His work has been translated into English by the Lithuanian-American poet Vyt Bakaitis[4] in such collections as Daybooks: 1970-1972 (Portable Press at Yo-Yo Labs, 2003) and a bilingual anthology of modern Lithuanian verse, Gyvas atodūsis/Breathing Free, poems (Lietuvos, 2001). Mekas published many of his journals and diaries, including I Had Nowhere to Go: Diaries, 1944–1954 and Letters from Nowhere, as well as articles on film criticism, theory, and technique. In 2007, the Jonas Mekas Visual Arts Center was opened in Vilnius.

One of Mekas's last exhibitions, "Notes from Downtown," took place at James Fuentes Gallery on the Lower East Side in 2018.[27] Mekas's last work, Requiem, premiered posthumously at The Shed in New York City on November 1, 2019. The 84-minute video was commissioned by The Shed and Festspielhaus Baden-Baden. It screened in tandem with a performance of Verdi's Requiem, conducted by Teodor Currentzis and performed by the musicAeterna orchestra.[28]

In 2018, Ina Navazelskis, an oral historian at the National Institute for Holocaust Documentation, United States Holocaust Memorial Museum interviewed Mekas for their Jeff and Toby Herr Oral History Archive. There, he discussed his memories of World War II[29]

"Jonas Mekas: The Camera Was Always Running", the filmmaker's first retrospective in the United States, was organized by Guest Curator Kelly Taxter and on view at the Jewish Museum in the spring of 2022.[30]

German filmmaker Peter Sempel has made three films about Mekas' works and life, Jonas in the Desert (1991), Jonas at the Ocean (2004), and Jonas in the Jungle (2013).

Personal life

[edit]

Mekas married Hollis Melton in 1974. They had two children, a daughter, Oona, and a son, Sebastian.[31] His family is featured in Jonas's films, including Out-takes from the Life of a Happy Man and As I Was Moving Ahead Occasionally I Saw Brief Glimpses of Beauty.

Mekas died at his home in Brooklyn on January 23, 2019, at the age of 96.[32][33]

Mekas is the subject of a documentary, Fragments of Paradise, which premiered at the 2022 Venice Film Festival.[34] The film received the award for Best Documentary on Cinema at the Festival.[35]

Controversy over World War II activities

[edit]

Mekas long maintained that, while working for local newspapers, he also clandestinely-transcribed BBC broadcasts in support of the underground. In 2018, an article in the New York Review of Books by historian Michael Casper challenged Mekas's versions of his wartime activities. Casper claims that Mekas participated "in an underground movement in Biržai that supported the 1941 Nazi invasion of Soviet Lithuania" and worked for "two ultranationalist and Nazi propaganda newspapers, until he fled Lithuania in 1944."[36] Casper noted that Mekas's publications in these newspapers were not anti-Semitic.

At the time, art critic and historian Barry Schwabsky penned a letter to the editor criticizing Casper's essay. He and Casper had an exchange of letters in the New York Review of Books.[37] The United States Holocaust Memorial Museum's website biography of Mekas maintains that he participated in both the anti-Soviet and anti-Nazi undergrounds.[38] Following the 2022 exhibition at the Jewish Museum in New York, Casper published an article entitled "World War II Revisionism at the Jewish Museum" in Jewish Currents. There, he argued that the "art world at large remains deeply invested in the story of Mekas the anti-Nazi", thus perpetuating revisionism not only erasing his roles, but casting him as an anti-Nazi hero.[39]

In an article for the Jewish Telegraphic Agency on Casper's charges against the Jewish Museum, journalist Asaf Shalev also pointed out that two different memos were circulated among the museum employees to dismiss Casper's article.[40] Kelly Taxter, the guest curator of the exhibit, responded to Casper's historical research by saying that "the tone of these emails is often aggressive." This was based on emails shared by the Mekas family, which Shalev also had access to, although Shalev wrote that "Nothing on there looked to me like Casper was bullying Mekas or that Mekas get bullied."[41]

Sovietologist Robert van Voren voiced criticisms of Casper's articles. Saulius Sužiedėlis argued, "The review format of the articles allowed Casper to present judgements without the burden of buttressing his allegations with relevant sources and requisite detail. The resulting narrative turns Jonas Mekas's life as a young man into something that it was not."[42][43][44]

The film scholars J. Hoberman and B. Ruby Rich have shown support for Casper's findings.[45][46] An article in Film Quarterly, B. Ruby Rich stated that, upon Casper's article, "The wagons started circling immediately to protect a sacred figure of the avant-garde."[47] In 2023, both Casper and Sužiedėlis shared their research and perspectives on Mekas in separate interviews with Lithuanian journalist Karolis Vyšniauskas.[48][49]

Awards and honors

[edit]
Mekas on a 2022 stamp of Lithuania

Filmography

[edit]

Sources: [60] [61]

  • Guns of the Trees (1962) - 1 hour 15 minutes
  • Film Magazine of the Arts (1963) - 20 minutes
  • The Brig (1964) - 1 hour 8 minutes
  • Empire (1964) - 8 hours 5 minutes
  • Award Presentation to Andy Warhol (1964) - 12 minutes
  • Report from Millbrook (1964–65) - 12 minutes
  • Hare Krishna (1966) - 4 minutes
  • Notes on the Circus (1966) - 12 minutes
  • Cassis (1966) - 4 minutes
  • The Italian Notebook (1967) - 15 minutes
  • Time and Fortune Vietnam Newsreel (1968) - 4 minutes
  • Walden (Diaries, Notes, and Sketches) (1969) - 3 hours
  • Reminiscences of a Journey to Lithuania (1971–72) - 1 hour 22 minutes
  • Lost, Lost, Lost (1976) - 2 hours 58 minutes
  • In Between: 1964–8 (1978) - 52 minutes
  • Notes for Jerome (1978) - 45 minutes
  • Paradise Not Yet Lost (also known as Oona's Third Year) (1979) - 1 hour 36 minutes
  • Street Songs (1966/1983) - 10 minutes
  • Cups/Saucers/Dancers/Radio (1965/1983) - 23 minutes
  • Erik Hawkins: Excerpts from "Here and Now with Watchers"/Lucia Dlugoszewski Performs (1983) - 6 minutes
  • He Stands in a Desert Counting the Seconds of His Life (1969/1986) - 2 hours 30 minutes
  • A Walk (1990) - 58 minutes, video
  • Scenes from the Life of Andy Warhol (1990) - 35 minutes
  • Mob of Angels/The Baptism (1991) - 1 hour, video
  • Dr. Carl G. Jung or Lapis Philosophorum (1991) - 29 minutes
  • Quartet Number One (1991) - 8 minutes
  • Mob of Angels at St. Ann (1992) - 1 hour, video
  • Zefiro Torna or Scenes from the Life of George Maciunas (1992) - 34 minutes
  • The Education of Sebastian or Egypt Regained (1992) - 3 hours 48 minutes
  • He Travels. In Search of... (1994) - 2 hours
  • Imperfect 3-Image Films (1995) - 6 minutes
  • On My Way to Fujiyama I Met... (1995) - 25 minutes
  • Happy Birthday to John (1996) - 24 minutes
  • Memories of Frankenstein (1996) - 1 hour 35 minutes
  • Birth of a Nation (1997) - 1 hour 25 minutes
  • Scenes from Allen's Last Three Days on Earth as a Spirit (1997) - 1 hour 7 minutes
  • Letter from Nowhere – Laiskas is Niekur N.1 (1997) - 1 hour 15 minutes
  • Silence, Please (2000) - 6 minutes, video
  • Requiem for a Manual Typewriter (2000) - 19 minutes, video
  • Remedy for Melancholy (2000) - 20 minutes
  • Symphony of Joy (1997) - 1 hour 15 minutes
  • Song of Avignon (1998) - 5 minutes
  • Laboratorium (1999) - 1 hour 3 minutes
  • Autobiography of a Man Who Carried His Memory in His Eyes (2000) - 53 minutes
  • This Side of Paradise (1999) - 35 minutes
  • Notes on Andy's Factory (1999) - 1 hour 4 minutes
  • Mysteries (1966–2001) - 34 minutes
  • As I Was Moving Ahead Occasionally I Saw Brief Glimpses of Beauty (2000) - 4 hours 48 minutes
  • Ein Maerchen (2001) - 6 minutes, video
  • Letter to Penny Arcade (2001) - 14 minutes 33 seconds, video
  • Williamsburg, Brooklyn (1950–2003) - 15 minutes
  • Ar Buvo Karas? (2002) - 2 hours 28 minutes
  • Travel Songs 1967-1981 (2003) - 28 minutes
  • Father and Daughter (2005) - 4 minutes 30 seconds, video
  • Scenes from the Life of Hermann Nitsch (2005) - 58 minutes, film and video
  • First Forty (2006) - [durations vary]
  • 365 Day Project (2007) - [durations vary for each of the 365 short films]
  • WTC Haikus (2010) - 14 minutes
  • Sleepless Nights Stories (Premiere at the Berlinale 2011) - 1 hour 54 minutes
  • My Paris Movie (2011) - 2 hours 39 minutes
  • My Mars Bar Movie (2011) - 1 hour 27 minutes
  • Correspondences: José Luis Guerin and Jonas Mekas (2011) - 1 hour 40 minutes
  • Re: George Maciunas and Fluxus (2011) - 1 hour 27 minutes
  • Mont Ventoux (2011) - 3 minutes
  • Happy Easter Ride (2012) - 18 minutes
  • Reminiszenzen aus Deutschland (2012) - 25 minutes
  • Out-takes from the Life of a Happy Man (2012) - 1 hour 8 minutes
  • Requiem (2019) - 1 hour 24 minutes


References

[edit]
  1. ^ "Jim Jarmusch Interview: How Jonas Mekas Expanded the Possibilities of Film"
  2. ^ Needham, Alex (January 23, 2019). "Jonas Mekas, titan of underground filmmaking, dies aged 96". The Guardian. Retrieved April 2, 2019.
  3. ^ "Interview: Jonas Mekas by Modestas Mankus". Our Culture Mag. April 18, 2017.
  4. ^ a b c d e "Lectures on Avant-Garde Art, Films Planned During Artist's Visit". Iowa City Press-Citizen. Iowa City, IA. November 1, 1995. p. 21. Retrieved May 13, 2023 – via Newspapers.com. Open access icon
  5. ^ ""I'm Like the Last Leaf of A Big Tree": A Conversation with Jonas Mekas | Village Voice". September 21, 2017. Archived from the original on September 21, 2017. Retrieved September 18, 2022.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)
  6. ^ Casper, Michael. "I Was There | Michael Casper". The New York Review of Books 2022. ISSN 0028-7504. Retrieved July 20, 2022.
  7. ^ "World War II Revisionism at the Jewish Museum". Jewish Currents. Retrieved February 28, 2023.
  8. ^ Vyšniauskas, Karolis. "Correcting the Record: Michael Casper on Jonas Mekas | NARA". nara.lt. Retrieved February 28, 2023.
  9. ^ "Portrait of a Poet as a Young Man: Jonas Mekas in War and Exile - Journal #129". www.e-flux.com. Retrieved July 17, 2023.
  10. ^ Mekas' passport shows December 23, 1922, the date sometimes listed as his "official" date of birth; however, he was actually born on December 24, 1922, as he confirms in this video interview Archived April 4, 2009, at the Wayback Machine.
  11. ^ "Parodos - Maironio lietuvių literatūros muziejus". maironiomuziejus.lt.
  12. ^ "Mekas, Jonas | Encyclopedia.com". www.encyclopedia.com. Retrieved May 3, 2022.
  13. ^ Stasiulis, Stanislovas (February 2020). "The Holocaust in Lithuania: The Key Characteristics of Its History, and the Key Issues in Historiography and Cultural Memory". East European Politics and Societies and Cultures. 34 (1): 261–279. doi:10.1177/0888325419844820. S2CID 204480888.
  14. ^ Tapinas, Laimonas (1997). Žurnalistikos Enciklopedija (in Lithuanian). Vilnius: Pradai. p. 355.
  15. ^ "Jonas Mekas". www.vle.lt (in Lithuanian). Retrieved May 3, 2022.
  16. ^ Saulius, Sužiedėlis (2012). "Memories of Blood: Some Aspects of Lithuanian Responses to the Holocaust" (PDF). Jahrbuch für Antisemitismusforschung. 21: 214–236.
  17. ^ Tapinas, Laimonas (1997). Žurnalistikos Enciklopedija (in Lithuanian). Vilnius: Pradas. p. 373.
  18. ^ "Jonas Mekas". www.vle.lt (in Lithuanian). Retrieved May 3, 2022.
  19. ^ Mekas, Jonas (2017). I had nowhere to go. Leipzig. ISBN 978-3-95905-146-0. OCLC 982432242.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  20. ^ Brody, Richard (April 21, 2016). "Jonas Mekas, Champion of the "Poetic" Cinema". The New Yorker. Retrieved May 21, 2022.
  21. ^ "Jonas Mekas, I find a kindred spirit in Marie Menken, Web of Stories". Retrieved January 7, 2022.
  22. ^ "Jonas Mekas, Serpentine Gallery, London". The Independent. Archived from the original on June 14, 2022. Retrieved November 16, 2018.
  23. ^ "The private world of '60s legends". CNN Style. November 14, 2017. Retrieved November 16, 2018.
  24. ^ Taubin, Amy (March–April 2019). "A Pageant of Glimpses". Film Comment. 55 (2): 65. JSTOR 26747356.
  25. ^ Jonathan Cott (July 16, 2013). Days That I'll Remember: Spending Time With John Lennon & Yoko Ono. Omnibus Press. p. 74. ISBN 978-1-78323-048-8.
  26. ^ Short Films Coming Soon to an iPod Near You, All Things Considered, November 5, 2006. Producer Ben Shapiro reports on a plan by filmmaker Jonas Mekas to make short films available as a podcast.
  27. ^ Bloch, Mark (September 4, 2018). "Jonas Mekas: Notes from Downtown". The Brooklyn Rail.
  28. ^ Requiem - The Shed
  29. ^ "Oral history interview with Jonas Mekas - Collections Search - United States Holocaust Memorial Museum". collections.ushmm.org. Retrieved April 27, 2022.
  30. ^ Heinrich, Will (March 17, 2022). "The Avant-Garde Filmmaker Who Tried to Tell the Truth". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved December 19, 2022.
  31. ^ "Jonas Mekas Film and Videography". September 14, 2016. Retrieved February 12, 2017.
  32. ^ "Jonas Mekas, avant-garde filmmaker and iconic New Yorker, dies at 96". BrooklynVegan. January 23, 2019.
  33. ^ Weber, Bruce (January 23, 2019). "Jonas Mekas, 'Godfather' of American Avant-Garde Film, Is Dead at 96". The New York Times. Retrieved December 23, 2021.
  34. ^ "Fragments of Paradise - Our Films - Kunhardt Films". www.kunhardtfilms.com. Retrieved September 10, 2022.
  35. ^ Roxborough, Scott (September 10, 2022). "Sackler Documentary 'All the Beauty and the Bloodshed' Wins Venice 2022 Golden Lion for Best Film". The Hollywood Reporter. Retrieved September 11, 2022.
  36. ^ Casper, Michael. "I Was There | Michael Casper". The New York Review of Books 2022. ISSN 0028-7504. Retrieved April 26, 2022.
  37. ^ Casper, Michael; Schwabsky, Barry. "On Jonas Mekas: An Exchange | Barry Schwabsky". The New York Review of Books 2022. ISSN 0028-7504. Retrieved April 26, 2022.
  38. ^ "Oral history interview with Jonas Mekas - Collections Search - United States Holocaust Memorial Museum". collections.ushmm.org. Retrieved April 27, 2022.
  39. ^ "World War II Revisionism at the Jewish Museum". Jewish Currents. Retrieved April 22, 2022.
  40. ^ "Historian accuses NY's Jewish Museum of sanitizing filmmaker's World War II record in new exhibit". Jewish Telegraphic Agency. May 12, 2022. Retrieved May 13, 2022.
  41. ^ Shalev, Asaf (May 12, 2022). "Personal account".
  42. ^ "Portrait of a Poet as a Young Man: Jonas Mekas in War and Exile - Journal #129 September 2022 - e-flux". www.e-flux.com. Retrieved September 10, 2022.
  43. ^ Vyšniauskas, Karolis. "Ne tik pripažinti, bet prisipažinti. Apie Holokausto atmintį su Sauliumi Sužiedėliu | NARA". nara.lt (in Lithuanian). Retrieved July 17, 2022.
  44. ^ "Forgotten evil? Jonas Mekas and the trauma of the Holocaust – opinion". lrt.lt. May 2, 2021. Retrieved April 28, 2022.
  45. ^ "J. Hoberman – Why I cannot review Jonas Mekas's Conversations with Film-Makers". June 30, 2018. Retrieved July 20, 2022.
  46. ^ "A Deer in the Headlights". Film Quarterly. September 14, 2018. Retrieved July 20, 2022.
  47. ^ "A Deer in the Headlights". Film Quarterly. September 14, 2018. Retrieved September 18, 2022.
  48. ^ Vyšniauskas, Karolis. "Correcting the Record: Michael Casper on Jonas Mekas | NARA". nara.lt. Retrieved January 26, 2023.
  49. ^ Vyšniauskas, Karolis. "Ne tik pripažinti, bet prisipažinti. Apie Holokausto atmintį su Sauliumi Sužiedėliu | NARA". nara.lt (in Lithuanian). Retrieved October 31, 2023.
  50. ^ "John Simon Guggenheim Foundation | Jonas Mekas".
  51. ^ "San Francisco International Film Festival (1992)". IMDb. Retrieved December 19, 2022.
  52. ^ "Jonas Mekas: LIFE GOES ON…I KEEP SINGING – Art in America Guide". Retrieved December 19, 2022.
  53. ^ "1997 Preservation & Scholarship Award: Jonas Mekas". International Documentary Association. November 1, 1997. Retrieved December 19, 2022.
  54. ^ "REMINISCENCES OF A JOURNEY TO LITHUANIA | Cinematheque". www.cia.edu. Retrieved December 19, 2022.
  55. ^ "Jonas Mekas | Movie and Film Awards". AllMovie. Retrieved December 19, 2022.
  56. ^ "Reply to a parliamentary question" (PDF) (in German). p. 1879. Retrieved November 27, 2012.
  57. ^ "Guggenheim Museum Announces Winners For Rob Pruitt's 2010 Art Awards". The Guggenheim Museums and Foundation. Retrieved December 19, 2022.
  58. ^ Low, Stuart. "Prizes announced for cinema, photography". Democrat and Chronicle. Retrieved December 19, 2022.
  59. ^ "Jonas Mekas Receives The Order Of Arts And Letters". frenchculture.org. Retrieved December 19, 2022.
  60. ^ "Jonas Mekas". IMDb. Retrieved December 19, 2022.
  61. ^ "Jonas Mekas Filmography". Jonas Mekas Official Website. Retrieved November 17, 2023.

Further reading

[edit]
  • Hans-Jürgen Tast (Hrsg.) "As I Was Moving. Kunst und Leben" (Schellerten/Germany 2004) (z.m.a.K.), ISBN 3-88842-026-1.
  • Efren Cuevas, "The Immigrant Experience in Jonas Mekas's Diary Films: A Chronotopic Análisis of Lost, Lost, Lost", Biography, vol. 29, n. 1, winter 2006, pp. 55–73, [1].
  • Fashion Film Festival presents "The Internet Saga", [2]
  • Roslyn Bernstein & Shael Shapiro, Illegal Living: 80 Wooster Street and the Evolution of SoHo, www.illegalliving.com published by the Jonas Mekas Foundation.
  • Steven Watson, "Factory Made: Warhol and the Sixties" Pantheon Books, 2003
  • Michael Casper, "I Was There". New York Review of Books, June 7, 2018.[3]
  • Robert van Voran (May 2, 2021). "Forgotten evil? Jonas Mekas and the trauma of the Holocaust – opinion". lrt.lt. Retrieved April 28, 2022.
  • Inesa Brašiškè, Lukas Brasiskis, and Kelly Taxter, Jonas Mekas: The Camera Was Always Running. New York and New Haven: Jewish Museum and Yale University Press. 2022. ISBN 978-0-300-25307-8
  • Michael Casper, "World War II Revisionism at the Jewish Museum". Jewish Currents, April 21, 2022.[4]
  • Saulius Sužiedėlis, "Portrait of a Poet as a Young Man: Jonas Mekas in War and Exile". e-flux Journal, Issue #129, September 2022.[5]
  • Ivanov, Maksim. Jonas Mekas' Diary Films in: Lithuanian Cinema: Special Edition for Lithuanian Film Days in Poland 2015, Auksė Kancerevičiūtė [ed.]. Vilnius: Lithuanian Film Centre, 2015. ISBN 6099574409.
  • Jonas Mekas, A Dance with Fred Astaire. Brooklyn, NY: Anthology Editions. 2017. 464 pp. ISBN 978-1-944860-09-7 [6]
  • David E. James,To Free the Cinema: Jonas Mekas and the New York Underground. Princeton, New Jersey: Princeton University Press, 1992. ISBN 9780691023458
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