Robert Carlton Breer (September 30, 1926 – August 11, 2011) was an American experimental filmmaker, painter, and sculptor."A founding member of the American avant-garde," Breer was best known for his films, which combine abstract and representational painting, hand-drawn rotoscoping, original 16mm and 8mm film footage, photographs, and other materials.
I was having trouble with a concept, a very rigid notion about painting that I was interested in, that I was involved with, and that was the school of Mondrian.
[...] The notion that everything had to be reduced to the bare minimum, put in its place and kept there.
It seemed to me overly rigid since I could, at least once a week, arrive at a new 'absolute.' I had a feeling there was something there that suggested change as being a kind of absolute.
So that's how I got into film.
Breer also taught at Cooper Union in New York from 1971 to 2001.Breer died on August 11, 2011 at his home in Tucson.Scholarly publications on Breer's work and interviews with the artist can be found in Robert Breer, A Critical Cinema 2: Interviews with Independent Filmmakers by Scott MacDonald, An Introduction to the American Underground Film by Sheldon Renan, Animation in the Cinema by Ralph Stephenson, and Film Culture magazine.Breer won the 1987 Maya Deren Independent Film and Video Artists' Award, presented by the American Film Institute.His film "Eyewash" was included in Treasures IV: American Avant-Garde Film 1947-1986.Robert Breer (and currently his estate) has been represented by gb agency, a contemporary art gallery based in Paris, since 2001.