Christopher Felver is a photographer and filmmaker. His work has been
exhibited internationally—with solo photographic exhibitions—at the Arco
d’ Alibert, Rome (1987); the Art Institute for the Permian Basin,
Odessa, Texas (1987); Torino Fotografia Biennale Internazionale, Italy
(1989); Centre Georges Pompidou, Paris (1994); Roosevelt Study Center,
Middelburg, Netherlands (1998); Fahey/Klein Gallery, Los Angeles (2002);
the Maine Photographic Workshop (2002); Robert Berman Gallery, Los
Angeles (2007); and other galleries and museums. His works have also
appeared in major group exhibitions, including The Beats: Legacy &
Celebration, New York University (1994) and Beatific Soul: Jack
Kerouac On The Road, New York Public Library (2007).
He participated in the 53rd Venice International Film Festival, and
screened films in festivals and museums around the globe, including
presentations at the Library of Congress (2006), the Pan African Film
Festival, Los Angeles (2006), Lincoln Center, New York (2005), the Mill
Valley Film Festival (1996, 2002), Santa Fe Film Festival (2001, 2005),
Northwest West Film Festival, Portland Art Museum (2001), Walker Museum
of Art, Minneapolis (2000), Hirshhorn Museum, Washington D.C. (2000),
KQED San Francisco (1984, 1999), and WGBH Boston (1984).
The National Gallery of Art in Washington D.C., New York Public
Library, and the Museum of Fine Art in Boston have presented
retrospectives of his films: Cecil Taylor: All the Notes
(2005), Donald Judd’s Marfa Texas (1998), The Coney Island
of Lawrence Ferlinghetti (1996), Tony Cragg: In Celebration of
Sculpture (1993), John Cage Talks About Cows (1991), Taken by the Romans (1990),
West Coast: “Beat & Beyond”
(1984), and California Clay in the Rockies (1983).
Christopher Felver’s books are
Beat (Last Gasp, 2007) an
intimate memoir of image, text, and reminiscence; The Late Great
Allen Ginsberg (Thunder’s Mouth Press, 2002); The Importance of
Being (Arena Editions, 2001), 400 portraits of eminent figures in
American arts, letters, music, and politics; Ferlinghetti Portrait
(Gibbs Smith Publisher, 1998); Angels, Anarchists & Gods
(Louisiana State University Press, 1996), featuring the American
avant-garde; The Poet Exposed (Alfred Van der Marck Editions,
1986), a monograph of contemporary American poets; and Seven Days in
Nicaragua Libre (City Lights Books, 1984), co-authored with
Lawrence Ferlinghetti, based on a week together in Nicaragua with
Minister of Culture Ernesto Cardenal.
His work is collected by numerous libraries and museums, including
Stanford University Special Collections; Bancroft Library at University
of California, Berkeley; The New York Public Library; Donnell Media
Center; San Francisco Public Library; University of California Santa
Cruz, Special Collections; University of Buffalo, Poetry/ Rare Books
Collection; University of North Carolina Special Collections; San Diego
State University; University of Delaware Special Collections; UCLA
Special Collections; and University of New Mexico Special Collections,
among others.
Christopher Felver appears as a guest lecturer at universities and
art centers. His photographs are represented and distributed worldwide
by Corbis. In 1997, he received the Best Art Documentary Awards at the
Cinema Arts Centre International Independent Film Festival, Huntington,
New York. From 1987 to 1989, Mr. Felver was a Visiting Artist at the
American Academy in Rome.
www.ChrisFelver.com