Brandon Wilson
Historia
Brandon Wilson (b. 1982) is an artist and filmmaker whose work pursues new ways of seeing through a variety of approaches, eschewing a single stylistic voice. Much of his work places the human in a de-centered position and includes themes of interconnection, temporality, light, dark, the transcendent, the subconscious, disappointment and death. He lives in the woods of northwest Oregon and has been making films since 2014.
Director
A rhythm of light as the earth leans back toward darkness.
Director
A convulsing stream of psychic indigestion. Personal and collective memory recall.
Sound
A rumination on ancestry, transformation and loss. Elemental forces and the universal web of interconnection. Dedicated to the memory of the filmmaker's grandmother Marilyn.
Director
A rumination on ancestry, transformation and loss. Elemental forces and the universal web of interconnection. Dedicated to the memory of the filmmaker's grandmother Marilyn.
Music
Using only nature and his immediate surroundings, filmmaker Brandon Wilson creates an experimental documentary that ignites the imagination of wandering in nature, and creates a loving portrait to the woods he calls home. Over the course of a year, Wilson set out to document— and accentuate—his surroundings through camera filters, angles, repetition, and audio. The end result is a hypnotic journey through the hidden wonders and beauties of the Northwest forests, in vivid colors and immaculate black-and-whites.
Sound
Using only nature and his immediate surroundings, filmmaker Brandon Wilson creates an experimental documentary that ignites the imagination of wandering in nature, and creates a loving portrait to the woods he calls home. Over the course of a year, Wilson set out to document— and accentuate—his surroundings through camera filters, angles, repetition, and audio. The end result is a hypnotic journey through the hidden wonders and beauties of the Northwest forests, in vivid colors and immaculate black-and-whites.
Director
Using only nature and his immediate surroundings, filmmaker Brandon Wilson creates an experimental documentary that ignites the imagination of wandering in nature, and creates a loving portrait to the woods he calls home. Over the course of a year, Wilson set out to document— and accentuate—his surroundings through camera filters, angles, repetition, and audio. The end result is a hypnotic journey through the hidden wonders and beauties of the Northwest forests, in vivid colors and immaculate black-and-whites.
Sound
A ghost wakes up and looks for his lost electronica albums in this short film with an explicit narrative.
Sound
A moonlit waterfall emerges from darkness. Its downward plunge slowly seeps at the edge of perceptibility. This dim time-slowed world evolves in a gradual but relentless metamorphosis of intangible landscapes and forms. Water to dust, dust to fire, fire to the unknown. All back into darkness.
Director
A fractured wandering through layered space.
Director
A moonlit waterfall emerges from darkness. Its downward plunge slowly seeps at the edge of perceptibility. This dim time-slowed world evolves in a gradual but relentless metamorphosis of intangible landscapes and forms. Water to dust, dust to fire, fire to the unknown. All back into darkness.
Director
A ghost wakes up and looks for his lost electronica albums in this short film with an explicit narrative.
Director
A juxtaposition of spaces and textures. Outside and inside merging.
Sound
A ghost is born in the forest.
Director
Aches and desires on the surface of the mind. Memories in fragments underneath. A woman laments to her mother about her wish to escape what she has come to perceive as a plodding and banal life, full of irritating events and characters. "One Little Tiny" travels through her mind into collaged and mirrored layers of memory and the present, through realms perhaps unknown or forgotten.
Director
A ghost is born in the forest.
Director
Bits of color and unstable associations swirling around in a dream soup.
Sound by Delia Derbyshire and Barry Bermange.