Lilli Carré
Lilli Carré (born 1983) is an American interdisciplinary artist currently based in Los Angeles, working in experimental animation, ceramics, print, and textile.[1] She is co-director of the Eyeworks Festival of Experimental Animation and is represented by contemporary art gallery Western Exhibitions.[2] She currently teaches in the Experimental Animation department at the California Institute of the Arts.[3] In 2024, she received a Guggenheim Fellowship for work in film and video.[4][5] Early life and educationCarré was born and grew up in Los Angeles.[6] Her mother is a graphic designer and her father, who died when Carré was a teenager, was a designer and forensic animator.[6][7] She has said that a "major activity throughout my childhood was when my parents would roll out a big sheet of butcher paper on the apartment floor, and my sister and I would amuse ourselves quietly for hours by drawing images and stories all over it".[8] Carré transferred to an arts high school in her senior year and then left Los Angeles, initially to study sound at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago (SAIC) and become a sound artist, but she became interested in creative writing, film, and printmaking.[6][7][9] While studying she also worked in the Joan Flasch Artists' Book Collection.[9] As part of her creative writing classes she read various short story writers and cites Jorge Luis Borges and Julio Cortázar as having inspired her very much.[9] She received her BFA from SAIC in 2006 and settled in Chicago where she currently lives and works.[10] She received her MFA from Northwestern University in 2016.[5] Carré worked part-time at the Facets Multi-Media film library for several years, an experience she has said influenced her filmmaking.[6] Experimental animationCarré has created numerous experimental animation films and looping videos using hand drawn animation, paper cut-out, and CG animation. Her films have shown in festivals throughout the US and abroad, including the Sundance Film Festival, International Film Festival Rotterdam, Annecy, 25FPS, the European Media Arts Festival, New Chitose Animation Festival, and the Ann Arbor Film Festival.[11][12][13] She has been co-director of the Eyeworks Festival of Experimental Animation since 2010. The Festival is a curated screening series focusing on experimental animation. Festival programs showcase outstanding experimental animation of all sorts, and include classic films and contemporary works.[14] Notable festival guests include, David Oreilly, Martin Arnold, Takeshi Murata, Naoyuki Tsuji, Janie Geiser, and Barry Doupé. She cites as a favorite project a recent collaboration with Laura Harrison on Overheard in the Underworld, a video installation for 150 Media Stream in Chicago, based on a book-length poem The Descent of Alette by Alice Notely.[5][15] She currently teaches in the Experimental Animation department at the California Institute of the Arts.[16] Drawing and sculptureCarré has been represented by Chicago contemporary art gallery Western Exhibitions since 2012.[17] Solo exhibitions of her drawing, animation, and sculpture have shown at the Museum of Contemporary Art Chicago, Western Exhibitions, and the Columbus Museum of Art.[18] She was an artist in residence at the Bemis Center for Contemporary Art in 2020.[19] She participated in the Ukrainian Institute of Modern Art's Ten x Ten 2013, which "investigates the relationship between color and sound...exploring the underlying concepts of synesthesia".[20] In 2013, she produced an "entirely new body of work in animation, sculpture, and drawing" for her first solo show at the Museum of Contemporary Art, Chicago.[21] ComicsCarré has created comics and illustrations for The New Yorker, The New York Times, and Best American Comics, and published several books of comics with Fantagraphics.[22] Her books of comics include Tippy and the Night Parade (2014), Heads or Tails (2012), Nine Ways to Disappear (2009), The Lagoon (2008),[23] and Tales of Woodsman Pete (2006). An excerpt from The Lagoon was chosen to be included in The Best American Comics 2010 [24] and "The Carnival" was nominated for Outstanding Story at the 2009 Ignatz Awards.[25] Carré's film How She Slept at Night screened at the 2007 Sundance Film Festival.[26] She provided the illustrations in Andrew Sean Greer's 2017 novel Less,[27] which received the Pulitzer Prize for Fiction.[28] Films
Books
Anthologies
References
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