Mission

The Film-Makers' Cooperative/New American Cinema Group (NACG) was founded in 1961 for the distribution of avant-garde film.

The FMC/NACG is the first artist-run organization devoted to the dissemination of moving image art. Artists and estates maintain creative control of their works as we are a non-contractual, non-exclusive, membership based, non-profit group.

The FMC/NACG is a research center for film scholars and media makers and a digitzation and preservation center for all formats of moving image art. Our collection is accessible via our screening room and digital streaming. We also foster the production of new art work via sponsorships and residencies.

The FMC/NACG's extensive archive is readily accessible to international art and cultural institutions who value the collection as a vital resource. Intrinsic to our policy of non-exclusivity is our mission to provide visibility for works of art from all cultural, gender, and ethnic backgrounds.

Activities

The FMC/NACG distributes, archives, and promotes non-commercial artists' cinema and maintains a film and paper archive accessible to researchers to promote the collection through a searchable web catalogue and screenings.

We have published Sarah Markgraf’s book I Was a Flawed Modernist on filmmaker Paul Sharits. With MIAP, we received a NFPF grant to preserve Stan Vanderbeek’s early pioneering computer graphics.

The FMC/NACG uses the digital streaming service FANDOR for online distribution of select works in our collection. We participate in panel discussions at media festivals and universities in the U.S. and abroad.

The FMC/NACG also conducts an annual public screening of new works in our collection called “New Year, New Work”. We have developed various programs with exhibition venues, such as The Victoria and Albert Museum, Fondazione Prada, Centre Pompidou, Anthology Film Archives, Howl!, MoMA, and MoMI. Furthermore, we offer affordable media workshops.

The FMC/NACG is partially funded through support from the New York Council of the Arts.

History

The New American Cinema Group, Inc. (NACG) was founded on July 14, 1961, as a membership cooperation by a group of 22 New York artists, including Jonas Mekas, Shirley Clarke, Ken and Flo Jacobs, Andy Warhol, and Jack Smith. The Film-Makers’ Cooperative is a division of the NACG and continues to be its operational name.

For the first two decades, the NACG operated as a for-profit membership distribution center.

In 1981, under the leadership of Marjorie Keller, the NACG expanded its mission to include educational, artistic, and literary activities (e.g. film screenings, workshops, seminars, book publications). In addition to analog film, the NACG now also distributed video and digital media.

The FMC/NACG's Board of Directors, including Larry Gottheim, Vincent Grenier, Dave Gearey, Paul Arthur, and MM Serra, hosted a Benefit Art Auction at The Gallery THREE ZERO with over 102 art works. This benefit began yearly art auctions to fund preservation projects and other expenses.

Executive Director MM Serra was finally granted non-profit status for the NACG. With this new standing, the NACG began archiving and preserving older film and video work for the benefit of future prosperity.

In the 2000s, Board members began an effort to expand our digital collection. Former Board c/o President Gregg Biermann introduced the NACG’s ongoing effort to digitize the vast collection, consisting of more than 5,000 films by over 1,000 media makers.

Among the artists in the collection are Maya Deren, Marie Menken, Jonas Mekas, Michael Snow, Carolee Schneemann, Peggy Ahwesh, Stan Brakhage, and Ken and Flo Jacobs.

Read the original history written by one of our founders, Jonas Mekas.

On January 31st, 2023, the Film-Makers’ Cooperative/New American Cinema Group announced that MM Serra would be transitioning from her role as Executive Director after over thirty years of dedicated service to the organization. For thirty years, MM Serra brought life to the Film-Makers’ Cooperative. She oversaw the Cooperative’s certification as a nonprofit organization in 1993 and brought it into the digital age, working tirelessly to highlight the legacies of historically overlooked filmmakers.

Serra was instrumental in the restoration of countless films, including the works of Edward Owens, Maya Deren, Storm De Hirsch, Cathy Cook, and multiple collaborations with the Stan VanDerBeek Estate. She successfully guided the Cooperative through four relocations and countless changes over the years. Without MM Serra, the Film-Makers’ Cooperative would not exist as it does today.

***

On May 26th, 2023, the Film-Makers’ Cooperative announced the organization’s new Executive Director, Dr. Tom Day.

Tom joins The Coop from the academic sector, having spent the last six years teaching and researching in the fields of art history and film studies at The University of Edinburgh and The Courtauld Institute of Art, University of London. While at The Courtauld, Tom helped to run The Centre for American Art, a field-leading scholarly center, where he programmed lectures, symposia, workshops, screenings, and artists’ events.

As part of Tom’s strategic plan for The Coop, he will aim revive the scholar-in-residence program to encourage and support academic research into the collection. Tom will also seek to implement focused education and programming initiatives with the ultimate aim of funding a teaching fellowship and a set of curatorial fellowships at The Coop that will support pedagogical programmes and a roster of screenings and publications. An expansion of community-oriented workshops for artists and filmmakers will also be a key priority. One of the central ambitions of Tom’s tenure will be to further assist The Coop in the preservation, digitization, and storage of its world-leading collection of experimental film and video artworks through a rigorous grant-getting program, as well as through collaborations with institutional partners within and beyond New York City.

Charles S. Cohen

"I WAS IN A POSITION TO HELP, AND I THOUGHT THAT I SHOULD. THEY ARE A WONDERFUL GROUP DOING IMPORTANT WORK, AND THERE IS NO OTHER PLACE TO GO AND SEE THIS KIND OF THING. THEY NEEDED A STORAGE SPACE FOR THEIR ARCHIVES, AND THIS MEETS THEIR NEEDS.”

The Film-Makers’ Cooperative/New American Cinema Group is very grateful to our benefactor, Charles S. Cohen, whose generous support allows us to thrive in New York City. Our on-location screening room has been named in his honor.

Board of Directors

Emily Singer

President

is a multi-disciplinary artist and entrepreneur living in New York City, with both a Business Degree from Parsons The New School for Design and a Masters in Urban Policy from the New School. In 2015, Emily became the programming and development director for 8ball radio, and is the host of The Gentle Scoundrel Show, a music program dedicated to sub-underground and experimental music from around the world. In January 2021, Emily began producing, alongside MM Serra, Tales and Visions of The Community with MM Serra.

Julia Curl

Vice-President

is a Ph.D. student at Princeton University in the Department of Art & Archaeology, where she specializes in 20th century avant-garde film and photography. She received a B.F.A. in photography from Parsons School of Design and a B.A. in literary studies from Eugene Lang College of Liberal Arts at The New School. Curl is the 2023-2024 McCrindle intern in Photography at the Princeton University Art Museum. She regularly curates screenings at the Film-Makers' Cooperative and venues around the New York City area, including at William Burroughs’ former apartment, The Bunker, in collaboration with the John Giorno Foundation. She writes art criticism and book reviews for Hyperallergic.

Gregg Biermann

Often working with footage from Hollywood classics like The Wizard of Oz (1939), Rear Window (1954), North by Northwest (1959), and others, Biermann’s work takes advantage of the possibilities of digital cinema to advance rigorous compositional strategies. His recent The Age of Animals (2014) is an unsettling and dizzying lament on the end of animal life of planet Earth. "In Biermann’s work, as in contemporary life, our landmarks are constantly shifting, forcing us to find new ways of locating ourselves in a spatial and temporal situation that is ever slipping beyond our mind’s grasp" (Jaimie Baron). Gregg Biermann is Co-President of the New American Cinema Group/Film-Makers' Cooperative in New York, and is a Professor of Cinema Studies at Bergen Community College in New Jersey. He has also taught film history and analysis at NYU Tisch School of the Arts.

Elizabeth Dee

Elizabeth Dee is Co-Founder and CEO of Independent Art Fair. From 2020 to 2022, she was the Founding Director of The John Giorno Foundation in New York. After two decades of dedication to gallery practice and collaborating with artists, she regularly lectures on the future of the art market and is an adjunct professor of art at New York University. Previously, Dee was a gallerist in New York for twenty years, represneting a global roster of artists, such as John Girono, Adrian Piper, and Ryan Trecartin, among others, and co-produced ten movies with Trecartin. She has organized more than 250 exhibitions with artists and foundations. She also was a curatorial advisor to the Kramlich Colleciton in San Francisco, the world's largest private collection of video art of the 20th century. Elizabeth has been profiled in many international publications, including the New York Times, the Wall Street Journal, and Vogue.

Eduardo Darino

(Uruguayan born) has made animation for over 60 years, is a Fullbright Fellow, has an MFA from New York University in Film, has teached at Pratt Institute the past 26 years, and created The Library of Special Effects, plus hundreds of ID Logos for Broadcast International Networks, in addition to hundreds of television programs. He was included in ISMO, LA Film Forum, and has screened work at the New York Film Forum, MNAV Montevideo, Munal, and Reina Sofia Spain. Darino has also lectured at computergraphics-animation.conferenceseries, ORT University, and many other venues.

L u m i a

(818) 514 - 4601

KJ Rothweiler

Raised in and outside of Philadelphia and currently based in New York City, KJ Rothweiler is a filmmaker, musician, producer, podcaster, and co-founder of Simone Films. Salamander Days (co-written and co-directed by Rebekah Sherman-Myntti) is KJ's first feature film. He has released six albums of ambient music on record labels around the world. KJ is also one half of the podcast duo The Ion Pack, recently profiled in the New York Times. He holds a BA in film, poetry, and music from Sarah Lawrence College and a Master’s degree in Media Studies from The New School.

Cody Simons

Cody Simons was born in Paris and raised in NYC. Currently, he works as an event producer in New York City. Over the last 12 years, he’s paired production work with creative endeavors. This includes partnering with SNS, Performa, Sustain-Release, 8 Ball Community, MoMA PS1, Guggenheim Museum, and Atlantic Records. He holds a B.A. in Music Business from Loyola University. 

In the last two years, he’s become involved with the Film-Makers’ Cooperative. This includes event set-up, learning about the archive, and marketing the screenings. In 2023, his short film, featuring footage of Laurie Anderson working in her studio, appeared in their 10th Annual New Year/New Work Film Festival. This involvement increased his desire to learn about film, the importance of film preservation and has been an inspiration on his own filmmaking practice.

Board of Advisors

Kat Bauer

Kat works within the photochemical arts, particularly 16mm film, expanding its material potential into performance, photography, and sculpture. Her films address themes of decay and eroticism, both in their subjects and in the hand-processing techniques she uses to create her images. Katherine received a BA from Bard College, where she majored in Film and Electronic Arts, and an MFA from NYU in Studio Art. She has taught at NYU and workshops at Bard College, amongst other institutions. Her work has been shown in a variety of venues and galleries. Recently, she has performed or shown work at The Knitting Factory, Anthology Film Archives, Millennium Film Workshop, Microscope Gallery, The Knockdown Center, Museum of the Moving Image of Queens, NY, and The Pompidou Center in Paris. She is represented by Microscope Gallery, and her films are available for rent from The Film-Makers' Cooperative in New York City.

cherry brice jr.

is a Brooklyn-born, Port-au-Prince-raised, and Harvard-educated writer, pornographer, and filmmaker, whose work has screened from Berlin, to Mexico City, to Port-au-Prince. cherry is the host, curator, and creator of CineSymposia—a radical film screening series and installation piece at Anthology Film Archives—and Ace of Shade—a regularly-sold-out monthly comedy show at New York City’s Duplex Cabaret Theatre. cherry is co-leader emeritus of the North Brooklyn chapter of Filmshop—a nonprofit collective of independent filmmakers. In addition to the above, cherry's work has been supported, presented, and distributed by institutions including The New York Foundation for the Arts, The Millennium Film Workshop, The New York Times, and The Film-Makers' Cooperative—on whose board cherry currently serves.

Peter Cramer

born in 1957, is a filmmaker and multimedia artist based in New York. He has been creating work since the 1980s, collaborating with Jack Waters, examining gentrification, fighting against AIDS, and working to cultivate collaborative spaces.

Jeffrey Deitch

is a dealer in modern and contemporary art and an art advisor to private and institutional art collectors. He is also an art writer and exhibition organizer. Prior to opening his own art advisory firm in 1988, Mr. Deitch was a Vice-President of Citibank, where he spent nine years developing and managing the bank’s art advisory and art finance businesses.

Bradley Eros

is an artist, experimental filmmaker, mediamystic, maverick curator, sound collage, photographer, expanded cinema, performance, writer and poet, nomadic teacher, and private investigator—initiating, exhibiting, and curating at a multitude of ephemeral spaces and long-lasting venues, from micro-cinemas and storefronts to galleries and museums.

His work includes intimate collaborations with Aline Mare (Erotic Psyche), Jeanne Liotta (Mediamystics), the Alchemical Theatre, Circle X, and kinoSonik., as well as intense research with Jeanne Liotta on the films of Joseph Cornell. He has created dozens of ‘zines, posters, soundtracks, unique artist’s books, and film performances in the unfixed universe of ephemeral cinema.

 

Philip Glass

is an American composer. One of the highest profile composers writing “classical” music today, he is often said to be one of the most influential musicians of the late 20th century. Beyond his operas, symphonies, and compositions, Glass has had a long-standing interest in the “mating of sound and vision.” He has collaborated with numerous artists and film-makers, writing music for experimental theater and for Academy Award-winning motion pictures.

Josh Guilford

is Assistant Professor of English in Film and Media Studies at Amherst College. His research focuses on histories and theories of experimental cinema, with an emphasis on the postwar American avant-garde. Essays of his have appeared in such publications as Alternative Projections: Experimental Film in Los Angeles, 1945-1980 (John Libbey, 2015); The Global Sixties in Sound and Vision: Media, Counterculture, Revolt (Palgrave Macmillan, 2014); and the online journals Flow and World Records (forthcoming 2020). Since 2009, he has pursued curating as a manifestation of research, as well as a mode of cultural production. Film and video programs that he has curated or compiled have screened at venues such as Anthology Film Archives, Microscope Gallery, Balagan, University of Toronto, Magic Lantern Cinema, Le Petit Versailles, A.P.E. Gallery, and Pacific Film Archive. In 2019, he co-curated, with Toby Lee, an event series on world-making and documentary media produced in conjunction with World Records journal, with events occurring at UnionDocs: Center for Documentary Art and the Hagop Kevorkian Center for Near Eastern Studies. He also makes films, working on 16mm. His short film, Rock Roll (2015), screened at such venues as Ann Arbor Film Festival, Light Field, Onion City Film and Video Festival, and A Good Night's Sleep. His dual-projection film, Circumambulations (2018), co-created with Andrew Ranville, has screened at Microscope Gallery, Lausanne Underground Film and Music Festival, Revolutions Per Minute Festival, and the Film-Makers' Cooperative. He serves as an editor of Millennium Film Journal and a member of the International Advisory Committee for Archive/Counter-Archive.

Ed Halter

is a founder and director of Light Industry, a venue for film and electronic art in Brooklyn, New York. His writing has appeared in Artforum, The Believer, Bookforum, Cinema Scope, frieze, Little Joe, Mousse, Rhizome, Triple Canopy, Village Voice, and elsewhere. His book From Sun Tzu to Xbox: War and Video Games was published in 2006; his current project is a critical history of contemporary experimental cinema in America. Honors include a Creative Capital | Warhol Foundation Arts Writers Grant (2009).

From 1995 to 2005, Halter programmed and oversaw the New York Underground Film Festival, and he has curated screenings and exhibitions at Artists Space, BAM, the Flaherty Film Seminar, ICA London, Museum of Modern Art, New Museum, PARTICIPANT INC., and Tate Modern, as well as the cinema for Greater New York 2010 at MoMA PS1 and the film and video program for the 2012 Whitney Biennial.

James Hansen

James Hansen (he/they) is an Assistant Professor of Art History at Alfred University (NYSCC). He is the founder and curator of the Light Matter Film Festival, an annual showcase dedicated to experimental film and media art. His writing has appeared in Afterimage, The Brooklyn RailCléoFilmmaker MagazineJump CutMillennium Film JournalThe Women Film Pioneers Project, among others.

Jim Hubbard

is an experimental filmmaker and the founder and president of MIX: the New York Lesbian and Gay Experimental Film/Video Festival. Under the auspices of the Estate Project for Artists with AIDS, he created the Royal S. Marks AIDS Activist Video Collection at the New York Public Library. He coordinates the ACT UP Oral History Project, funded by the Ford Foundation and by grants from the Gesso Foundation, the Gill Foundation, the Jessie Smith Noyes Foundation, and the Phil Zwickler Memorial & Charitable Trust. The project is a collection of interviews with surviving members of the AIDS Coalition to Unleash Power.

Ken and Flo Jacobs

are both artists. Florance is a painter and collaborator with Ken, who has been making avant-garde films since the mid-1950s. Ken is the director of Tom, Tom, The Piper’s Son (1969, USA), and Star Spangled to Death (2004, USA), a nearly seven-hour film consisting largely of found footage.

Melissa Lyde

lives and works in Brooklyn, New York. She is the founder of Alfreda's Cinema, a bi-monthly film series at The Metrograph. Alfreda’s Cinema screens arthouse films that tell Black/POC stories, films that resonate the richness and culture of our history with depth and love, our dynamics, our shapes, and our colors.

Sebastian Mekas

is the estate of Jonas Mekas, Lithuanian-American filmmaker, poet, and artist who has been called "the godfather of American avant-garde cinema" on many occasions. His work has been exhibited in museums and at festivals worldwide.

Sebastian is a cinematographer and actor, known for Jonas in the Jungle (2013), Notes on an American Film Director at Work (2008) and Belladonna (1989). 

Bill Morrison

is a New York-based filmmaker and artist, best known for his experimental collage film Decasia (2002). He is a member of Ridge Theater and the founder of Hypnotic Pictures. He attended Reed College from 1983-1985, and graduated from Cooper Union School of Art in 1989.

Devon Narine-Singh

is an experimental filmmaker, curator, and scholar based in NY. Narine-Singh's areas of interest include found materials and explorations of addiction and recovery in mass media. Narine-Singh is currently working on several projects and articles, and their films have screened internationally at venues such as Microscope Gallery, UltraCinema, The New School, and The Trinidad and Tobago Film Festival. He has presented at NYU Cinema Studies, and curated screenings at The Film-Makers' Cooperative and Maysles Cinema.

Lynne Sachs

Lynne Sachs makes films, installations, performances, and web projects that explore the intricate relationship between personal observations and broader historical experiences by weaving together poetry, collage, painting, politics, and layered sound design. Strongly committed to a dialogue between cinematic theory and practice, she searches for a rigorous play between image and sound, pushing the visual and aural textures in her work with every new project.  Between 1994 and 2006, she produced five essay films that took her to Vietnam, Bosnia, Israel, Italy, and Germany — sites affected by international war – where she looked at the space between a community’s collective memory and her own subjective perceptions.

Recently, after 25 years of making experimental documentaries, Sachs learned something that turned her filmmaking upside down. While working on Your Day is My Night (2013) in NYC’s Chinatown, she realized that her subjects were performing for the camera rather than revealing something completely candid about their lives. The process of recording guaranteed that some aspect of the project would be artificial. This moved Sachs toward a new type of filmmaking — she invited her subjects to become her collaborators — to work with her to make the film about their lives.  This new way of “working with reality” has inspired Sachs to present Your Day is My Night (2013) as well as Every Fold Matters (2016) as live film performances in alternative venues around New York City, including homeless shelters, labor union headquarters, and laundromats, as well as small, non-commercial theaters. In 2017, she completed her newest experimental documentary, Tip of My Tongue, which was supported by a Guggenheim Fellowship in the Creative Arts and premiered as the closing night film in the Museum of Modern Art’s Documentary Fortnight.

Sachs has made over 25 films. Her work has screened at the New York Film Festival, the Sundance Film Festival, and Toronto’s Images Festival, amongst others. They have also been exhibited at the Museum of Modern Art, the Whitney, Walker Art Center, Wexner Center for the Arts, and other venues nationally and internationally. The Buenos Aires International Festival of Independent Cinema, Festival International Nuevo Cine in Havana and the China Women’s Film Festival have all presented retrospectives of Sachs’ films.

Since 2006, Sachs has collaborated with her partner, filmmaker Mark Street, in a series of playful, mixed-media performances called “The XY Chromosome Project”. Lynne holds an MFA in Film from the San Francisco Art Institute, an MA in Cinema from San Francisco State University, and a BA in History from Brown University. She has taught at New York University, Princeton, Hunter College, The New School, and the University of California, Berkeley.
www.lynnesachs.com

Joel Schlemowitz

Joel Schlemowitz is an experimental filmmaker based in Brooklyn who works with 16mm film, shadowplay, magic lanterns, and stereographic media. He is the author of Experimental Filmmaking and the Motion Picture Camera: An Introductory Guide for Artists and Filmmakers (Focal Press/Routledge). His first feature film, 78rpm, is an experimental documentary about the gramophone. His short works have been shown at the Ann Arbor Film Festival, New York Film Festival, and Tribeca Film Festival and have received awards from the Chicago Underground Film Festival, The Dallas Video Festival, and elsewhere. Shows of installation artworks include Anthology Film Archives, Images Film Festival, and Microscope Gallery. He teaches experimental filmmaking at The New School, and was Resident Film Programmer and Arcane Media Specialist at the Morbid Anatomy Museum.

David Schwartz

is an independent film programmer. He is currently a Curator-at-large at Museum of the Moving Image, where he was Chief Curator for many years. In 2018, he received a Career Achievement Award from the New York Film Critics Circle for his tenure at MoMI. Among the many programs of experimental cinema that he curated there are: Films That Tell Time: A Ken Jacobs Retrospective; Serene Intensity: The Films of Ernie Gehr; The Art of Vision: A Stan Brakhage Retrospective; Visions of New York; and Independent America: New Film, 1978-1988. He also founded the festival First Look, the Museum’s annual showcase for innovative cinema from around the world. David has taught cinema studies at Purchase College and New York University. He is the editor of the book David Cronenberg: Interviews. He programs film at venues including the Cinema Arts Centre (Huntington, New York), the Quad Cinema (Manhattan), and the Emelin Theatre (Mamaroneck, New York). He recently was programmer and manager of the Paris Theater in Manhattan, helping Netflix to reopen the legendary arthouse cinema.

Jack Waters

has, with his partner Peter Cramer, created works in video, film, performance, and visual art since 1984. As co-director of Abc No Rio, he and his colleagues perpetuated an aesthetic of raw, spontaneous eclecticism that greatly influenced the arts, contemporary to the period of the '80s. He co-curated, with Leslie Lowe, the Naked Eye Cinema, a primary venue for women and LGBTQ+ media artists. A founding contributing writer to NYC Gay City News, Waters’ articles have appeared in many other publications. He was Assistant Professor of Video at Hampshire College from 2001–2004.

Robert Withers

is an author and film/videomaker who has created innovative and award-winning works since the 1970s. His 16 MILLIMETER EARRINGS was a ground-breaking interpretation of the performance piece by Meredith Monk. Withers's work has been distributed internationally, and is with the Film-Makers' Coop in New York and Collectif Jeune Cinema in Paris. While still active in so-called "experimental" film, his recent work has explored surrealist narrative genres, text-based film, lyrical documentary, and music video. He works out of New York City and Staatsburg, New York. In the 1980s and 1990s, Withers directed the New York Expo of Short Film & Video, a 40-year-old international festival of independent shorts.

Facilities

Charles S. Cohen Screening Room

The FMC/NACG is in an expansive, 2,000 square foot space that includes a climate-controlled archive, a study center library, and the Charles S. Cohen Screening Room (open by appointment). Newly installed and improved windows, sprinkler and alarm systems, lighting systems, carpeting, wheelchair accessible bathrooms, and new theater seating thanks to our benefactor Charles S. Cohen, provide the perfect atmosphere for researching experimental filmmaking. Our 30-seat, wheelchair accessible screening room is available to rent by appointment for researchers, educational institutions, and general audiences, and includes access to 16mm, Super-8mm, 8mm, BluRay, DVD, VHS, and digital projection equipment.

Click here for some photos of the facilities.

Facility rentals

Charles S. Cohen Screening Room: rental price range from $35 to $50 per hour. To schedule a screening, a visit, or for further information, email info@film-makerscoop.com or call (212) 267-5665.

 

 

Founders & Founding Goals

As stated in the Certificate of Incorporation from July 1961:

Our goals are:

  • To encourage the development of a new cinema which reflects the highest ethical and aesthetic standards.
  • To combat all forms of film censorship and licensing and all forms of interference in the making of motion pictures.
  • To initiate and promote the development of methods of film financing, distribution, and exhibiting.

Shirley Clarke

Born October 2, 1919, in New York, Shirley Brimberg Clarke danced into the world of art in her teens, studying with such innovative choreographers as Martha Graham, Hanya Holm, and Doris Humphrey. She remains a pivotal pioneer of avant-garde film.

Robert Breer

Breer was best known for his abstract films and animation. His mechanical cinema works, flip books, rotoscopes, and representational paintings were the foundation for NYC avant-garde animation.

Peter Kubelka

Kubelka was an Austrian experimental filmmaker, architect, musician, curator, and lecturer. His films are primarily short experiments in linking seemingly disparate sound and images. He is best known for his 1966 avant-garde classic Unsere Afrikareise (Our Trip to Africa).

Kenneth Jacobs

Ken Jacobs has been working ceaselessly and boundlessly in film, video, and moving image performance for over fifty years.

Edmund A. Emshwiller

Ed Emshwiller was one of the first video artists. He is renowned for his multimedia performances, and experiments combining computer animation with live-action and 3-D computer-generated videos.

Staff

TOM DAY
Executive Director

Email: tom@film-makerscoop.com.

Tom joins The Coop from the academic sector, having spent the last six years teaching and researching in the fields of art history and film studies at The University of Edinburgh and The Courtauld Institute of Art, University of London. While at The Courtauld, Tom helped to run The Centre for American Art, a field-leading scholarly center, where he programmed lectures, symposia, workshops, screenings, and artists’ events.

Tom completed a PhD in 2019 at The University of Edinburgh with a dissertation on the relationship between Pop art and experimental film since the 1950s. Parts of this work have been revised and are to be published by Edinburgh University Press in a forthcoming anthology Tom has edited with Glyn Davis entitled Pop Cinema. He is also expanding a further part of this research into a book provisionally titled TV Generation: Art and the Political Imaginary of Television on the Lower East Side. Tom has several other in-print and forthcoming publications on experimental film, television and the history New York’s avant-garde Downtown scene of the 1960– 1990s.

ROBERT SCHNEIDER
Film Distribution Manager

Email: robert@film-makerscoop.com.

SHELDON HENDERSON
Digital Media Archivist

Email: sheldon@film-makerscoop.com.

Sheldon's media responsibilities include color correction, digital finishing and distribution of digitized 4k film scans, as well as other formats.

MATT McKINZIE
Social Media Manager

Email: matt@film-makerscoop.com.

Matt McKinzie (he/him) is a writer, filmmaker, curator, and performer. He graduated from Emerson College in 2021 with a B.A. in Visual and Media Arts and a Minor in Gender Studies. His work has screened at Wicked Queer: Boston's LGBTQ+ Film Festival, Film Diary NYC, 8 Ball TV, Millennium Film Workshop, and the Film-Makers' Cooperative, among other venues. Matt handles all public-facing aspects of the Coop, including social media outreach and website management. He has also worked on archival projects and curated programs of film and video art for the Coop.