Cheryl Dunn

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Cheryl Dunn is a documentary filmmaker and photographer[1] who was born in New Jersey, USA.[2]

Career and work[]

Dunn graduated from Rutgers University with a BFA in art history. After moving to New York City in the mid 1980s, she spent a large part of her career documenting city streets and the people who strive to leave their mark there: graffiti writers, artists, skaters, boxers, bikers, protesters, and assorted characters. In the late 1990s she began to focus on filmmaking, creating classic films about artists of her generation who have influenced the realities of urban life through their own work.

Her films have played at numerous film festivals including, Tribeca, Edinburgh, Rotterdam, Hotdocs, Los Angeles, Havana, and on PBS.

Dunn's work has been exhibited in various galleries and museums including The Tate Modern in London, Deitch Projects in New York, and the "Art in the Streets "exhibition at the .

She was one of the subjects in the documentary, book, and traveling museum exhibition Beautiful Losers.

She has had three books of her photographs published: Bicycle Gangs of New York, and Some Kinda Vocation, and Festivals are Good.

Her documentary film Everybody Street (2013) about photographers who have used New York City streets as a major subject in their work, world-premiered at Hot Docs Canadian International Documentary Festival in Toronto in spring 2013. The film includes photographers Bruce Davidson, Jill Freedman, Joel Meyerowitz, Bruce Gilden, Mary Ellen Mark, Jamel Shabazz, Ricky Powell, Martha Cooper, Elliot Erwitt, Rebecca Lepkoff, Boogie, Clayton Patterson, Jeff Mermelstein with Max Kozloff and Luc Sante.[3]

Filmography[]

  • Pro Abortion by Susan Cienciolo (shot and directed segment). Shown at Rotterdam International Film Festival 2-1997; Edinburgh Film Festival 9-1996.[4]
  • Sped. Shown at Moving Pictures. Dagkrant – 26th International Film Festival Rotterdam 1997; Raygun screening Los Angeles, CA Feb 18, 1997; Edinburgh International Film Fest Scotland 8-1999, 8–2001.[4]
  • Adventure Divas, Havana Film Festival 12-1999[4]
  • Backworlds for Words. Shown at Edinburgh International Film Festival, Scotland 8-1999; , London 11-1999; . Iowa City, IA, 2000.[4]
  • Peace Consideration Community. Shown at Mirror ball Endinberg International Film Fest & Pre-feature presentations throughout the UK 1999; Warchild Benefit for the Yugoslavian refugee Program, 1999.[4]
  • Come Mute (10 min.) for the film Beautiful Losers. Shown at Res Screenings. Los Angeles, CA. 2005; 2004; Los Angeles Film Festival 2004.[4]
  • Bicycle Gangs of NY (2005). Shown at Garden State Film Festival, cell phones and train stations throughout the Republic of China, and Taiwan. March 2006; Tribeca Film Festival New York, NY. 2005; Darklight Film Festival, Dublin, Ireland. 2005; Raindance Film Festival, London, England. 2005; Palm Springs International Festival of Short Films, Palm Springs, CA. 2005; Bicycle Film Festival, San Francisco, CA, 2005.[4]
  • Creative Life Store, Yerba Buena Center for the Arts, San Francisco, CA; included in package for the book, Some Kind of Vocation (2007)[4]
  • Everybody Street. Shown at Seaport Museum of New York, NY. September 14, 2010 – October 2010;[1] FORMAT International Photography Festival, Derby, United Kingdom, April 2, 2011; Tate Modern London, July 2011; HotDocs, , 2013;[3] T-Mobile New Horizons Film Festival, Wroclaw, Poland, July 24 – August 3, 2013; Raindance Film Festival, London, September 25 – October 4, 2013;[2] FOAM Unseen Festival, Amsterdam, September 27, 2013; Atlanta Celebrates Photography, Atlanta, October 2, 2013; Independent Photography Festival, Melbourne, November 4, 2013; Raindance International Film Festival, Berlin, November 20, 2013; Nitehawk Cinema, New York, November 2013; Cinefamily, Los Angeles, December 2 & 7, 2013; Miami Street Photography Festival, Miami, December 6, 2013; Miami Beach Cinematheque, Miami, December 6 & 11–12, 2013; ARTEFIERA at Cineteca Bologna, Bologna, Italy, January 24, 2014; Los Angeles Center of Photography (LACP), Los Angeles, January 31, 2014; ICA, London, February 7, 2014;[5] Gene Siskel Theater, Chicago, February 8–13, 2014; FilmBar, Phoenix, February 13, 2014; Rialto Theater, Amsterdam, February 19, 2014; Hollywood Theatre Portland, February 19, 2014; The Hepworth Wakefield, Wakefield, UK, February 2014; Bloor Hot Docs Cinema, Toronto, February 2014; Salem Film Festival, Salem, March 6–13, 2014; Kentucky Museum of Art & Culture, Louisville, March 13, 2014; EPOS International Art Film Festival, Tel Aviv, March 19–29, 2014; Utah Museum of Fine Arts, Salt Lake City, March 26, 2014.

Solo Exhibitions[]

  • 2009 - "Spit and Peanut Shells - American Pictures", Country Club, Cincinnati, Ohio[6]
  • 2011 - "Uncanny", Galleria Patricia Armocida, Milano, Italy[7]

Books[]

  • Bicycle Gangs of New York. New York, NY: Distributed Art Publishers, 2005. ASIN B0063M65LW
  • Some Kinda Vocation. Brooklyn, NY: Picturebox, Iconoclast, 2007.ISBN 0978972228 ASIN B00A17Q0NI
  • Festivals are Good. New York, NY: Damiani, 2015. ISBN 8862084668

References[]

  1. ^ Jump up to: a b Romig, Rollo (September 3, 2010). "A First Look at "Everybody Street"". The New Yorker. Retrieved April 17, 2015.
  2. ^ Jump up to: a b Christiansen, Hanne. "Cheryl Dunn: Everybody Street". Dazed. Retrieved April 17, 2015.
  3. ^ Jump up to: a b "Everybody Street: Photo Booth". The New Yorker. August 1, 2011. Retrieved February 10, 2012.
  4. ^ Jump up to: a b c d e f g h "Cheryl Dunn Exhibitions". Retrieved February 23, 2012.
  5. ^ Dunn, Cheryl. "Everybody Street: Cheryl Dunn". Huck. No. 41. Retrieved April 17, 2015.
  6. ^ "Cheryl Dunn "Spit and Peanut Shells - American Pictures" Exhibition". HypeBeast. Retrieved September 9, 2020.
  7. ^ "CHERYL DUNN, ALESSANDRO ZUEK SIMONETTI, Uncanny". Galleria Patricia Armocida. Retrieved September 9, 2020.

External links[]

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