Search results
Roger Beebe is a filmmaker whose work since 2006 consists primarily of multiple projector performances and essayistic videos that explore the world of found images and the "found" landscapes of late capitalism.
Roger Beebe has been working in the Art Department at The Ohio State University since 2014 and was previously a professor of Film and Media Studies at the University of Florida.
Learn more about Roger Beebe . Read the artist bio and gain a deeper understanding with MutualArt's artist profile.
Sep 22, 2022 · Detail view of Roger Beebe’s “Last Light of a Dying Star,” Beeler Gallery, Columbus College of Art & Design, 2022
- Artist Statement
- While at Headlands
- Selected Works
I work in a lot of different media and modes—from 16mm to cell phone video, and from expanded cinema performance to screen-recorded “desktop cinema”—and with a range of approaches, from material investigations of the medium (or mediums) to experimental documentaries and essayistic video. My subject matter is equally diverse, although I’ve made a nu...
As I start the residency, I’m likely to still be finishing work on the sound with frequent collaborator Cody Hennesy on my film Amazonia, which looks at the cities where Amazon.com had their original distribution centers as a way of thinking about how the virtual economy transforms the real world. I then plan devote the bulk of my attentions to a l...
Everything Old is New Again, 2018; 16mm film loop; 0:10 min.; © Roger Beebe A Metaphor for the End of Just About Everything, 2016; HD cell phone video; 3:00 min.; © Roger Beebe Congratulations (One Step at a Time), 2014; looping HD video; 62:00 min.; © Roger Beebe Beginnings, 2009/2011; digital audio; 5:00 min.; © Roger Beebe S A V E, 2006; 16mm fi...
Roger Beebe is ubiquitous in the experimental filmmaking world—as a filmmaker he has presented a hundred-and-fifty or so solo screenings, and he regularly tours with up to eight projectors.
Jul 16, 2022 · Roger Beebe is a filmmaker whose work since 2006 consists primarily of multiple-projector performances and essayistic videos that explore the world of found images and the "found" landscapes of late capitalism.