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Gunvor Nelson Tribute, program 3: Light Years Expanding

Gunvor Nelson Tribute, program 3: Light Years Expanding

Gunvor Nelson, image courtesy of Filmform

The UCLA Film & Television Archive, Los Angeles Filmforum, the Academy Museum, and Rotations LA present

Gunvor Nelson Tribute, program 3: Light Years Expanding

Saturday March 28, 2026, 7:30 pm

At the UCLA Film & Television Archive at the Billy Wilder Theater, Hammer Museum, 10899 Wilshire Blvd., Los Angeles 90024

Full info: https://www.cinema.ucla.edu/events/gunvor-nelson-tribute-iii-light-years-expanding-2026-03-28/

Introduction by Steve Anker

 

Ticket Info: Free admission!

No advance reservations

Your seat will be assigned to you when you pick up your ticket at the box office

Seats are assigned on a first come, first served basis

The box office opens one hour before the event

A pioneer of personal cinema and feminist film who never shied away from challenges, Nelson's innovative films combine painting, collage, and sound experimentation, embodying humor, resistance, intimacy, and tactile sensation. Her early films frequently reflect the inner and outer qualities, thoughts, and voices of women in the 1960s and 70s; homes, daughters, and mothers are particularly important themes in her work. Moving from painting to still photography, from analog film to digital media, as each new medium collides with a multitude of everyday objects, her work delves deeper into the texture of life and the saturated past, uncovering an intuitive yet delicate sensibility that retreats from the real world into another, imaginatively reconstructed one. During her time teaching in San Francisco, Nelson inspired countless experimental filmmakers and artists. After returning to Sweden, she continued exploring and experimenting with new audio-visual languages, leaving us with a rich and unimaginable legacy. 

 

This retrospective will cover a range of Nelson's works, from her debut film, a feminist classic, “Schmeerguntz” (1966) (co-directed with Dorothy Wiley), to the late abstract video art “Snowdrift a.k.a. Snowstorm” (2001), with several other essential and influential masterpieces created in the years between.

 

The program trilogy will be co-presented by LA Filmforum, Rotations LA, the Academy Museum, and the UCLA Film & Television Archive.

 

Program 1 will be at Los Angeles Filmforum at 2220 Arts on March 22

https://www.lafilmforum.org/schedule/winter-2026/gunvor-nelson-tribute-program-1-red-shift/

 

Program 2 will be at the Academy Museum on Friday March 27.

https://www.academymuseum.org/calendar?start=2026-03-27&end=2026-03-28

 

(Curated by Cherlyn Hsing-Hsin Liu and Steve Anker)

 

About the Filmmaker

Gunvor Nelson (1931-2025), was one of the most highly acclaimed filmmakers in classic American avant-garde film. She grew up in Kristinehamn, Sweden, and studied at the University College of Arts, Crafts and Design in Stockholm, but moved to the US and California in 1953 to study art and art history. Nelson met her husband-to-be Robert Nelson when she was studying at the California School of Fine Arts (from 1961 onwards, the San Francisco Art Institute). Robert Nelson is one of the great humorists of the American avant-garde. The Nelsons were a vital part of the new film culture that evolved in the San Francisco area and they played a key role in one of America’s oldest and most respected film cooperatives, the Canyon Cinema.  Gunvor Nelson also influenced several generations of filmmakers in her role as a teacher, primarily at the San Francisco Art Institute (1970-1992).

 

Gunvor Nelson and Dorothy Wiley’s debut “Schmeerguntz” (1966) is a humorous and grotesque feminist classic in which the everyday reality of a young mother is contrasted with the ideal of the American woman.  An uncompromising filmmaker, Nelson has a unique voice in experimental cinema. She regards her own works as “personal films”, a recurring element of which is the connection with her own life and experiences. The early films are based around the experiences of a younger woman, culminating in “My Name Is Oona” (1969), an expressive portrait of her daughter, and “Moons Pool” (1973), an existentially expressive underwater journey which centers on her own body.

Nelson’s family and generational study “Red Shift” (1984), and her painfully sensitive portrayal of her dying mother in “Time Being” (1991) are regarded as the high points of her family and hometown productions.  Around this time (1983-1990) Nelson also made a total of five different collage films at Filmverkstan in Stockholm, works which give free rein to her own associations and her experimentation with animated images. These films are often regarded both as Nelson’s most demanding and most creative works.

Nelson moved back to Kristinehamn and Sweden in December 1992, a homecoming already hinted at in her rhythmically edited collage film Frame Line (1983). Having returned to Sweden she quickly moved on to digital video and was rediscovered in Swedish art circles, resulting in a number of awards and retrospectives both at home and abroad.

All screening in 16mm, TRT 81 min.

Light Years Expanding Credit Courtesy of Filmform smaller

Light Years Expanding, Courtesy of Filmform (Sweden)

Light Years Expanding

1988, 16mm, Color, sound, 25 min.

Light Years Expanding is a further elaboration of Light Years, Nelson’s journey into the Swedish landscape in which she is blending animation with live-action. Whereas movement was one of the prime characteristics of Light Years, Light Years Expanding revolves more around the image-work, thus foreshadowing her last and most complicated collage film Natural Features. – Professor John Sundholm, Stockholm University

Old Digs Credit Courtesy of Filmform copy

Old Digs, courtesy of Filmform (Sweden)

Old Digs

1993, 16mm, color, sound, 20 min.

"I was enormously impressed and bowled over by the beauty and artistry. It is one of the few films that I have ever seen that gave me the same feeling that I get when I see painting that I really respond to on a gut/heart level. The images are very powerful. The poetry and the subtlety of the content too. The editing/rhythms all seemed perfect. The sound track kept disappearing from consciousness (exactly right), but never stopped working with the pictures. Masterpiece" - Robert Nelson

Field Study 2 Credit Courtesy of Filmform copy

Field Study #2, courtesy of Filmform (Sweden)

Field Study #2

1988, 16mm, color, sound 8 min.

Field Study #2 develops further Nelson's painterly animation aesthetics. This time the imagery is not created by a recording camera after which they are reworked, but instead the images and sounds appear out of their own world. The soundtrack consists of animal sounds and a serious male voice reciting names of animals in Latin. It is a hilarious work that makes fun of the educational film and our expectations upon the film screen to constitute a window to an outer world. Field Study #2 urges one to look and listen while emphasizing the comic and absurd, the latter a trait that runs through so much of Gunvor Nelson's filmmaking and which was the impetus for her to start filming with Dorothy Wiley in the 60s. The film ends with a thank you to Dorothy Wiley. – Professor John Sundholm, Stockholm University

Natural Features Credit Courtesy of Filmform copy

Natural Features, courtesy of Filmform (Sweden)

Natural Features

1990, 16mm, color, sound, 28 min. 

“In NATURAL FEATURES Nelson mingles hundreds of still images with 3-D objects and “real” images photographed through glass layerings into a free-associative and playfully bizarre form of animation. Perhaps no film has more successfully blended an evident passion for painting with a sensitivity to filmmaking such as lush pigments alternate with and punctuate the different photographic layerings” – Steve Anker