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'''Ken McMullen''' (b. 31 August 1948, [[Manchester]]) is an award-winning {{reference needed|date=December 2012}} [[film director]] and [[artist]] living currently in [[London]]. McMullen's films are grounded in [[philosophy]], history, [[psychoanalysis]] and [[literature]]. McMullen's exhibition ''Signatures of the Invisible'' brought together artists and scientists working at [[CERN]], the European [[particle physics]] facility near [[Geneva]]. His other work includes filming conversations with physicists at [[Stanford Linear Accelerator Centre]], which he describes as "making a diary of the transition in human culture" because he believes physics is arriving at another shifting point.His latest work ''Arrows of Time'' is a radical new form of cinema consisting of 40 interchangeable elements that deal with literature, [[philosophy]], and contemporary physics, premiered at the [[San Francisco Museum of Modern Art|Museum of Modern Art]] in [[San Francisco]] in April 2007.
'''Ken McMullen''' (b. 31 August 1948, [[Manchester]]) is an award-winning {{reference needed|date=December 2012} film director and since 2012 Anniversary Professor of Film Studies at Kingston University, London. McMullen's films are grounded in [[philosophy]], history, [[psychoanalysis]] and [[literature]]. McMullen's exhibition ''Signatures of the Invisible'' brought together artists and scientists working at [[CERN]], the European [[particle physics]] facility near [[Geneva]]. His other work includes filming conversations with physicists at [[Stanford Linear Accelerator Centre]], which he describes as "making a diary of the transition in human culture" because he believes physics is arriving at another shifting point.His latest work ''Arrows of Time'' is a radical new form of cinema consisting of 40 interchangeable elements that deal with literature, [[philosophy]], and contemporary physics, premiered at the [[San Francisco Museum of Modern Art|Museum of Modern Art]] in [[San Francisco]] in April 2007.


During the late nineties and early two thousands McMullen also lectured and took tutor groups and what was then 'The London College of Printing and Distributive Trades' - now the [[London College of Communication]]. Attached to the department of Film and Television studies at the college's Back Hill facility, McMullen was popular with students.
During the late nineties and early two thousands McMullen also lectured and took tutor groups and what was then 'The London College of Printing and Distributive Trades' - now the [[London College of Communication]]. Attached to the department of Film and Television studies at the college's Back Hill facility, McMullen was popular with students.

Revision as of 23:51, 8 May 2014

Ken McMullen (b. 31 August 1948, Manchester) is an award-winning {{reference needed|date=December 2012} film director and since 2012 Anniversary Professor of Film Studies at Kingston University, London. McMullen's films are grounded in philosophy, history, psychoanalysis and literature. McMullen's exhibition Signatures of the Invisible brought together artists and scientists working at CERN, the European particle physics facility near Geneva. His other work includes filming conversations with physicists at Stanford Linear Accelerator Centre, which he describes as "making a diary of the transition in human culture" because he believes physics is arriving at another shifting point.His latest work Arrows of Time is a radical new form of cinema consisting of 40 interchangeable elements that deal with literature, philosophy, and contemporary physics, premiered at the Museum of Modern Art in San Francisco in April 2007.

During the late nineties and early two thousands McMullen also lectured and took tutor groups and what was then 'The London College of Printing and Distributive Trades' - now the London College of Communication. Attached to the department of Film and Television studies at the college's Back Hill facility, McMullen was popular with students.

Selected filmography

References

  1. ^ "Festival de Cannes: 1871". festival-cannes.com. Retrieved 2009-08-07.

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