Lloyd Williams (filmmaker)
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Lloyd Michael Williams is an American experimental filmmaker. He was born in 1940 in Brooklyn, NY and grew up on Long Island.[1]
He was one of the co-founders of The Film-Makers' Cooperative along with Jonas Mekas. William's works Line of Apogee (1967), Rainbow's Children (1975), Wipes (1963), the Creation (1965) and Opus#5 (1961) were shown at the Museum of Modern Art. The sound tracks for Line of Apogee and Two Images for a Computer Piece were created by Vladimir Ussachevsky (the "father of electronic music") at the Columbia-Princeton Electronic Music Lab. Two Images was shown at the Whitney Museum of Arts as a part of the Composers Showcase. The electronic music was by Ussachevsky and the interlude was a live drum solo.
References
- ^ "Biography of Lloyd M. Williams". Archived from the original on January 9, 2011. Retrieved March 6, 2010.
External links
- Official homepage
- Biography of Experimental Filmmaker Lloyd Michael Williams
- Lloyd Williams at IMDb
- The 16mm Experimental Films of Lloyd Michael Williams at archive.today (archived August 14, 2007)
Categories:
- Articles with short description
- Short description is different from Wikidata
- BLP articles lacking sources from March 2010
- All BLP articles lacking sources
- Webarchive template archiveis links
- 1940 births
- Living people
- Film directors from Brooklyn
- American experimental filmmakers
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- American film director, 1940s birth stubs