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| image = Mary_Magsamen_and_Stephan_Hillerbrand.jpg
| image = Mary_Magsamen_and_Stephan_Hillerbrand.jpg
| birth_place = [[Denver]], [[Colorado]], [[United States|USA]] and [[Durham]], [[North Carolina]], [[United States|USA]]
| birth_place = [[Denver]], [[Colorado]], [[United States|USA]] and [[Durham]], [[North Carolina]], [[United States|USA]]
| nationality = [[People of the United States|American]] and [[German]]
| nationality = [[People of the United States|American]] and [[Germany|German]]
| children = {{ubl|Madeleine (b. 2002)|Emmett (b. 2006)}}
| children = {{ubl|Madeleine (b. 2002)|Emmett (b. 2006)}}
| field = {{ubl|[[Video Art]]|[[Photography]]|[[Installation Art]]}}
| field = {{ubl|[[Video Art]]|[[Photography]]|[[Installation Art]]}}

Revision as of 13:58, 2 June 2016

Hillerbrand+Magsamen
File:Mary Magsamen and Stephan Hillerbrand.jpg
Born
NationalityAmerican and German
EducationCranbrook Academy of Art, Bloomfield Hills, Michigan
Children
  • Madeleine (b. 2002)
  • Emmett (b. 2006)
AwardsFulbright Fellowship, Austin Film Society, Houston Arts Alliance
Websitehillerbrandmagsamen.com

Hillerbrand+Magsamen is the collaborative artistic team of Mary Magsamen and Stephan Hillerbrand who live and work in Houston, Texas.

Background

Mary Magsamen and Stephan Hillerbrand met at Cranbrook Academy of Art, in Bloomfield Hills, Michigan, where each of them earned a Masters of Fine Arts degree in Sculpture (1994). Prior to meeting Mary Magsamen earned a Bachelor of Fine Arts Degree in Sculpture from University of Denver, Denver, Colorado (1991) and Stephan Hillerbrand earned a Bachelor of Fine Arts Degree in Sculpture from Southern Methodist University, Dallas, Texas (1989); a Masters of Arts degree from the Academy of Fine Arts in Munich (Akademie der Bildenden Künste München), Munich, Germany (1992).

Mary Magsamen is currently the curator of Media and Film at the Aurora Picture Show.[1] Stephan Hillerbrand is currently an Associate Professor and Honors College Fellow in the School of Art at The University of Houston.

Bio

The artistic team of Hillerbrand+Magsamen have presented their videos in international film and media festivals including SCOPE Basel, WAND V Stuttgarter Filmwinter, Taiwan International Video Art Exhibition, New York Underground Film Festival, Ann Arbor Film Festival, Brooklyn Underground Film Festival, LA Freewaves New Media Art Festival and Currents Media Festival. Their cinematic based installations have been seen in the Everson Museum of Art.[2] Cardiff International Festival of Photography by Ffotogallery, the Hudson River Museum, the Center for Photography at Woodstock,[3] Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, Blue Sky Gallery[4] and Houston Center for Photography.

Their work has been cited in publications such as The New York Times,[5][6] Glasstire,[7] The Houston Press,[8][9][10] Culture Map[11] and television[12]

Magsamen+Hillerbrand have lectured internationally about their work including, TEDxHouston (2015) [13] the Society for Photographic Education (2013, 2012, 2006[14]); the College Art Association (2009, 2007, 2006); the University Film and Video Association (2006); and the Foundations in Art, Theory and Education (2007, 2005).

Awards

  • Cinespace, Houston Cinema Arts Festival (2015) 1st Place Winner, juried by Richard Linklater.[15]
  • The Sustainable Art Foundation (2015)[16]
  • Santa Fe Art Institute Residency (2014)
  • The Lawndale Art Center Residency in Houston, Texas (2010)[17]
  • Texas Filmmakers’ Production Fund grant (2010)[18]
  • Houston Arts Alliance, Individual Artists Grant (2009)
  • Carol Crow Fellowship from the Houston Center for Photography in Houston, TX (2008)[19]
  • Fuse Box Collaboration Series, Refraction Arts (2008)
  • Fulbright Junior Scholar Fellowship (2006)
  • Ohio Arts Council, Individual Creativity Award in Media Installation (2005)
  • Experimental Television Center Residencies in Owego, NY (2003 and 2005)
  • Lower Manhattan Cultural Council at the Woolworth Building in New York, NY (2004)
  • MacDowell Colony Fellow in Peterborough, NH (2001)

Notable Work

  • 'Higher Ground[20][21]' is an interdisciplinary work consisting of video, sculpture and photography commissioned by the Houston Airport System and the City of Houston. In the spirit of George Méliès landmark illusionistic film, “A Trip to the Moon,” the artists with their children embark on an adventure to construct and fly a rocket ship to the moon by taking apart their Houston, Texas suburban home.
  • 'Whole[22]' is a single channel video that embarks on an epic adventure, this family creates new levels of interaction, communication and exploration by breaking and cutting holes into their actual home to make a habitrail-like environment where they go nowhere fast.
  • 'House/hold[23]' a series of 20 Archival Pigement Prints, 20"x28", Edition 1/3. The House/hold photograph series are portraits of our family that playfully capture slices of our daily life with surreal viewpoints and dark humor inspired by actual events from bath time to laundry.
  • 'DIY Love[24]' Seat is a playful single channel video that reinterprets our family and its identity. In this dark comedy a woman takes the family couch and cuts out a section with a chainsaw.

Bibliography

Madeline Schwartzman, See Yourself Sensing: Redefining Human Perception, Black Dog Publishing, June 28, 2011.ISBN 1907317295

References

  1. ^ http://aurorapictureshow.org/pages/staff_103.asp
  2. ^ Katherine Rushworth. "Could 'Higher Ground' couple be the coolest parents in the world?". syracuse.com.
  3. ^ "Hillerbrand + Magsamen: FAMILY PORTRAIT". cpw.org. Center for Photography at Woodstock.
  4. ^ "Hillerbrand+Magsamen". bluesky.org. Blue Sky Gallery.
  5. ^ MacDonald, Kerri. "Rethinking the Family Portrait". Lens. The New York Times.
  6. ^ Micheal, Hoinski (March 21, 2013). "Texas Monthly". The New York Times.
  7. ^ Beth Secor (24 Jan 2012). "eState Sale". Glasstire. Glasstire.com.
  8. ^ Suise, Tommaney (March 4, 2016). "Houston Artists' Cinematic Trip to Outer Space Yields Merch...and It's for Sale". Houston Press.
  9. ^ Tommaney, Sussie (April 4, 2016). "See What's Next for the Houston Family That Tore Apart Its Home to Build a Rocket". Houston Press.
  10. ^ Kelly Klaasmeyer. "REAL ESTATE". Houston Press. Houston Press.
  11. ^ Nancy Wozny. "What's the scariest thing in the world for an artist? Exploring something new". Culture Map. Culture Map Houston.
  12. ^ Doug Miller (November 12, 2015). "Festival features flicks with real NASA footage". KHOU 11 News. Retrieved 1 December 2015.
  13. ^ "TEDxHouston V - 2015: Speaker List". TED.
  14. ^ "2013 Conference Program" (PDF). spenational.org. Society for Photographic Education.
  15. ^ http://houstoncinemaartsfestival.org/program-schedule/cinespace-general-information/cinespace-2015-winners
  16. ^ "Spring 2015 awards". Sustainable Arts Foundation.
  17. ^ "ARTIST STUDIO PROGRAM: Past Studio Artists". Lawndale Arts Center.
  18. ^ "Texas Filmakers Production Fund". www.austinfilm.org.
  19. ^ "Carol Crow Fellowship: Past Fellowships". HCP Online.
  20. ^ Tarra Gaines. "Astronauts and a movie star propel the first CineSpace Awards into the stratosphere". Culturemap Houston.
  21. ^ Melinda Johnson (May 14, 2015). "Family of artists to bring spaceship project to Everson Museum".
  22. ^ Pamela Patton (August 27, 2012). "There's No Place Like Home". KCAD.
  23. ^ Nancy Wozny (August 1, 2011). "Greek drama gone wild: Houston arts groups get ancient, reimagine classical themes". Culturemap Houston.
  24. ^ Brooklyn Film Festival. "2012 Brooklyn Film Festival". Brooklyn Film Festival. Brooklyn Film Festival. Retrieved 1 December 2015.