Bill Traylor: Chasing Ghosts

No Longer Available

 
Ticket Prices
General Public:$12.00 (+ $2 online fee)
Members:$9.00 (no online fee)
Film Info
Program:New Releases
Virtual Cinema
Tags:Documentary
Arts
History
Black Perspectives
Release Year:2018
Runtime:76 min
Country/Region:USA
Language:English
Website:Official Website
Print Source:Kino Lorber
Trailer:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jkdi1o7VrLU
Cast/Crew
Director:Jeffrey Wolf
Executive Producer:Sam Pollard
Producer:Jeffrey Wolf
Daphne McWilliams
Fred Barron
Jeany Nisenholz-Wolf
Cinematographer:Henry Adebonojo
Screenwriter:Fred Barron
Editor:Keith Reamer

Description

NOW SHOWING IN MSP FILM'S VIRTUAL CINEMA

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Reserve your ticket and start watching on Friday, June 11. You will have 48 hours to complete once you begin watching.


About the Film

This illuminating documentary explores the life of a unique American artist, a man with a remarkable and unlikely biography. Bill Traylor was born into slavery in 1853 on a cotton plantation in rural Alabama. After the Civil War, Traylor continued to farm the land as a sharecropper until the late 1920s. Aging and alone, he moved to Montgomery and worked odd jobs in the thriving segregated black neighborhood. A decade later, in his late 80s, Traylor became homeless and started to draw and paint, both memories from plantation days and scenes of a radically changing urban culture.

Having witnessed profound social and political change during a life spanning slavery, Reconstruction, Jim Crow segregation, and the Great Migration, Traylor devised his own visual language to translate an oral culture into something original, powerful, and culturally rooted. He made well over a thousand drawings and paintings between 1939-1942. This colorful, strikingly modernist work eventually led him to be recognized as one of America’s greatest self-taught artists and the subject of a Smithsonian retrospective.

Using historical and cultural context, Bill Traylor: Chasing Ghosts brings the spirit and mystery of Traylor’s incomparable art to life. Making dramatic and surprising use of tap dance and evocative period music, the film balances archival photographs and footage, insightful perspectives from his descendents, and Traylor’s striking drawings and paintings to reveal one of America’s most prominent artists to a wide audience.


Press

"Critic’s Pick! A sincere, nourishing account of the artist. Wolf makes excellent use of photo and film archives, laying out the territory that fed Traylor’s vision." —Glenn Kenny, The New York Times

"Introduces to a wider audience one of the most important American artists of the 20th century, whose life traversed slavery, Reconstruction, Jim Crow segregation, the Great Migration and each’s accompanying tumultuous social and political upheaval." —Lisa Wong Macabasco, The Guardian


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