Robert Breer

A Conversation with Helga Fanderl

Martin Klein, 2023
CONVERSATION
11.01.2023
EN

“I discovered filmmaking by chance. Through an early short film that I thought was successful, I found out what I could create without language, only with the language of a small silent Super 8 film. This was overwhelming. I filmed quite a lot, and I realized that my approach to the world was very visual, although language still matters to me: I studied languages and love foreign languages, I lived abroad, I love poetry. But it was something else to create purely visual films.”

Robert Gardner, 1976
CONVERSATION
20.09.2023
EN

I guess I still think of myself as a painter just using film. Film is very liberating for me, the idea that I could slide into art. Film is in motion, life is in motion. It seemed to me that if I could kind of sidle up to art by being in a fluid medium rather than having to declare “this is it for ever and ever”. It appealed to me in that way.

Jonas Mekas, 1965
ARTICLE
27.09.2023
EN

We look at Breer’s work and we begin to smile – lightly, a happy sort of smile, a happy feeling like when you see anything beautiful and perfect. It’s through an amazing control and economy of his materials that he achieves this; through the elimination of all the usual emotional, personal, biographical, sick material; by not giving in to temptations.

Jonas Mekas, 1969
ARTICLE
27.09.2023
EN

I am happy that Robert Breer got some recognition. I saw his new film, 69, and it’s so absolutely beautiful, so perfect, so like nothing else. Forms, geometry, lines, movements, light, very basic, very pure, very surprising, very subtle. Breer’s films do not get much public acclaim. His shows are not among the heavily attended. His films attract no noise. But they are among the best films made today anywhere. A new film by Robert Breer is an important event.

An Interview with Robert Breer

Scott MacDonald, 1989
CONVERSATION
27.09.2023
EN

Do you know the joke about the two explorers who get captured by the natives and tied to trees? The chief tells the first one, “You have two choices: death or ru-ru.” The explorer thinks a bit and says, “Well, ru-ru.” “Wise decision,” says the chief who unties him. Then the whole tribe beats him up and abuses him sexually and completely destroys him and throws him down dead in front of the other explorer. The chief asks the second explorer which he prefers, death or ru-ru? The second explorer is very shaken up by what he’s seen and finally says, “Death.” And the chief says, “Very wise decision – death it is – but first, a little ru-ru.” I love that joke. In my work there’s always a little ru-ru.