The Day

Michael Snow, Canadian artist, dies at 94

- By HARRISON SMITH

Michael Snow, an audacious and prolific painter, sculptor, photograph­er, musician and filmmaker known for his 1967 film “Wavelength,” an avant-garde landmark comprising a slow, deceptivel­y simple zoom across a New York City loft, died Jan. 5 at a hospital in Toronto. He was 94.

In a death notice published by the Toronto Globe and Mail, his family said that Snow died “after a brief respirator­y infection.” Snow made art that was both playful and cerebral, examining properties of light and color while often featuring pun-heavy titles and a sly, absurdist humor. He was widely considered one of Canada’s greatest artists, renowned for public installati­ons such as “Flight Stop” (1979) — a flock of 60 fiberglass geese, all modeled after the same bird, hanging at the Eaton Centre in Toronto — and for films that influenced directors as varied as Atom Egoyan, Peter Greenaway and Wim Wenders.

His films were more likely to be screened at museums than multiplexe­s, and they left some viewers angry and bewildered, wondering whether Snow was trolling the art world with pieces that lacked a narrative and seemed to drag on for hours. To his admirers, however, he was one of cinema’s great avant-garde artists and a leader of the 1960s “structural” movement that also included filmmakers Tony Conrad, Hollis Frampton and Paul Sharits.

While earlier experiment­al filmmakers used techniques like fast cutting and collage to flood the screen with images and ideas, the works of Snow and his fellow structural­ists were more pared-down, mirroring the rise of minimalism in the work of artists such as Donald Judd and Robert Ryman. His films were rigorously formal, often composed of static shots or steady, continual camera movements, as in “Wavelength,” in which the film’s structure was its content as much as anything else.

Filmed over the course of a single week, “Wavelength” is set at a Lower Manhattan apartment, where the camera begins by looking across a mostly empty loft. Over the course of 45 minutes, it zooms in to a tight close-up of the opposite wall, revealing a photograph of the sea that fills the screen. Along the way, a few other things happen too: Movers bring in a cabinet, two friends listen to the Beatles, an unknown man collapses on the floor, and a woman in a fur coat makes a phone call. “Could you come over right away,” she says, “I think there’s been a murder.” An electronic sound also rises in pitch for much of the film, while the color changes unpredicta­bly before fading to white.

Reviewing the film for Artforum, painter and film critic Manny Farber described “Wavelength” as “a pure, tough 45 minutes that may become the ‘Birth of a Nation’ in Undergroun­d films.” It was, he added, “probably the most rigorously composed movie in existence.”

Originally screened for a small gathering organized by critic and filmmaker Jonas Mekas, “Wavelength” gained a larger following after it won the grand prize at the 1968 Internatio­nal Experiment­al Film Competitio­n in Belgium. In 2001, it was ranked No. 85 in a Village Voice critics’ poll of the best films of the 20th century.

Film critic David Sterritt, a scholar of avant-garde cinema, called “Wavelength” Snow’s “enduring masterpiec­e.” In a phone interview, he noted that while the film defied easy interpreta­tion, it seemed to have a strong “spiritual dimension”: “It’s about this idea of transcendi­ng. The most dramatic thing that can happen in a human life happens — a person dies. But the camera continues on its way, on its appointed path, following its destiny without pausing, even though this monumental event has taken place.”

Snow experiment­ed further in films such as “,” also known as “Back and Forth” (1969), in which he continuall­y panned across the outside and then the inside of a building, taking viewers inside a college classroom as figures occasional­ly crept into view. For “La Région Centrale” (1971), he used a mechanized camera with preprogram­med movements to make a three-hour ode to the remote mountains of northern Quebec.

“I make up the rules of a game, then I attempt to play it,” he once said, describing his artistic process. “If I seem to be losing, I change the rules.”

Some of his works were more free-spirited, like a four-hour 1974 film that the Harvard Film Archive likened to “the remake of a Jacques Tati film scripted by Ludwig Wittgenste­in.” Its full title: “Rameau’s Nephew by Diderot (Thanx to Dennis Young) by Wilma Schoen.” In 2002, he directed “Corpus Callosum,” a surreal, partly animated film named for a region of the brain that connects the two hemisphere­s of the brain.

Michael James Aleck Snow was born in Toronto on Dec. 10, 1928. He became fascinated with art as a boy, when he was introduced to the work of Pablo Picasso by a Life magazine article, and studied painting and sculpture at the Ontario College of Art, now known as OCAD University.

Snow later worked for an advertisin­g agency, hitchhiked across Europe and performed in jazz bands, playing piano and trumpet by night and painting by day. He ventured into filmmaking in the mid1950s, after director George Dunning, who later made the animated Beatles movie “Yellow Submarine,” saw some of his paintings and invited Snow to join his Toronto production company.

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