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[[Image:CliveHolden.jpg|thumb|right|250px|Clive Holden]]
[[Image:CliveHolden.jpg|thumb|right|250px|Clive Holden]]
'''Clive Holden''' is a [[Canada|Canadian]] [[multimedia]] artist and poet from [[Winnipeg]], [[Manitoba]]. His best-known project to date is the "film poem" series ''Trains of Winnipeg'', a series of 14 [[short film]]s featuring Holden's poetry with musical accompaniment by [[Christine Fellows]], [[John K. Samson]], [[Jason Tait]], Steve Bates and Emily Goodden. In it is included the haunting short, ''18,000 Dead In Gordon Head,''[http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0370240/] in which Owen recalls the shooting of a young girl in a small, [[British Columbia]] town. The '18,000' in the title refers to the average number of [[murders]] a [[television]] viewer has seen by the time they reach the age of sixteen years.
'''Clive Holden''' is a [[Canada|Canadian]] [[multimedia]] artist and poet from [[Winnipeg]], [[Manitoba]]. His best-known project to date is the "film poem" series ''Trains of Winnipeg'', a series of 14 [[short film]]s featuring Holden's poetry with musical accompaniment by [[Christine Fellows]], [[John K. Samson]], [[Jason Tait]], Steve Bates and Emily Goodden. In it is included the haunting short, ''[[18000 Dead In Gordon Head]],''[http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0370240/] in which Owen recalls the shooting of a young girl in a small, [[British Columbia]] town. The '18,000' in the title refers to the average number of [[murders]] a [[television]] viewer has seen by the time they reach the age of sixteen years.


==External links==
==External links==

Revision as of 03:50, 29 August 2006

Clive Holden

Clive Holden is a Canadian multimedia artist and poet from Winnipeg, Manitoba. His best-known project to date is the "film poem" series Trains of Winnipeg, a series of 14 short films featuring Holden's poetry with musical accompaniment by Christine Fellows, John K. Samson, Jason Tait, Steve Bates and Emily Goodden. In it is included the haunting short, 18000 Dead In Gordon Head,[1] in which Owen recalls the shooting of a young girl in a small, British Columbia town. The '18,000' in the title refers to the average number of murders a television viewer has seen by the time they reach the age of sixteen years.