Videos
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3 minutes, 21 seconds, two-channel HD video, 2014
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3 minutes, 3 seconds, HD video, 2013
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2 minutes, 44 seconds, HD video, 2012
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2 minutes, 56 seconds, video, 2009
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5 minutes, 15 seconds, two-channel video, 2009
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4 minutes, video, 2007 When Bryan Zanisnik was 13-years-old he shot over eight hours of home movies with his grandmother. Zanisnik would dress her up in camouflage outfits, and along with his mother and father, ask them to act out violent and absurd scenarios in their suburban New Jersey home. Entirely forgotten for over a decade, Zanisnik re-found this footage 14 years later when he was in graduate school at Hunter College. He saw this found footage as an archive of his youth and his relationship to his now deceased grandmother. Zanisnik intervened with the footage as little as possible, editing the videos as he imagined his 13-year-old self would have wanted them to be presented.
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2 minutes, 31 seconds, video, 2007 When Bryan Zanisnik was 13-years-old he shot over eight hours of home movies with his grandmother. Zanisnik would dress her up in camouflage outfits, and along with his mother and father, ask them to act out violent and absurd scenarios in their suburban New Jersey home. Entirely forgotten for over a decade, Zanisnik re-found this footage 14 years later when he was in graduate school at Hunter College. He saw this found footage as an archive of his youth and his relationship to his now deceased grandmother. Zanisnik intervened with the footage as little as possible, editing the videos as he imagined his 13-year-old self would have wanted them to be presented.
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7 minutes, 6 seconds, video, 2006 When Bryan Zanisnik was 13-years-old he shot over eight hours of home movies with his grandmother. Zanisnik would dress her up in camouflage outfits, and along with his mother and father, ask them to act out violent and absurd scenarios in their suburban New Jersey home. Entirely forgotten for over a decade, Zanisnik re-found this footage 14 years later when he was in graduate school at Hunter College. He saw this found footage as an archive of his youth and his relationship to his now deceased grandmother. Zanisnik intervened with the footage as little as possible, editing the videos as he imagined his 13-year-old self would have wanted them to be presented.
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6 minutes, 21 seconds, video, 2006 When Bryan Zanisnik was 13-years-old he shot over eight hours of home movies with his grandmother. Zanisnik would dress her up in camouflage outfits, and along with his mother and father, ask them to act out violent and absurd scenarios in their suburban New Jersey home. Entirely forgotten for over a decade, Zanisnik re-found this footage 14 years later when he was in graduate school at Hunter College. He saw this found footage as an archive of his youth and his relationship to his now deceased grandmother. Zanisnik intervened with the footage as little as possible, editing the videos as he imagined his 13-year-old self would have wanted them to be presented.