Vera_Neubauer

Vera Neubauer

Vera Neubauer

Czech film director, editor and animator


Vera Neubauer is a Czech born British experimental filmmaker, animator, feminist activist and educator. She is known for her jarring, provocative and anti establishment approach. Her life's work spans genres, from cinematic short film to television series for children.[1] Neubauer has received two BAFTA Cymru awards.[2][3]

Quick Facts Born, Alma mater ...

Early life

Vera Neubauer was born to Dr. Helene and Dr. Karl Neubauer in Prague. In December 1965, several years before the Soviet invasion of Czechoslovakia, Neubauer fled the totalitarian regime with her parents and siblings. Arriving in Vienna, Neubauer gained refugee status and traveled on to Düsseldorf. Here she studied Print-making at the State Academy of Fine Arts Stuttgart[4] under professor Gunter Bohmer.

In 1968 Neubauer journeyed to London. She continued to study printmaking at the Royal College of Art and in 1970 switched departments to study film-making.[5] She struggled to survive and squatted in central Brixton. During this period she worked in a local Brixton Youth Centre and taught print-making at Isleworth Polytechnic.

Career

Neubauer's experiences of life as a refugee and the loss of her family, often inform her works. As do her personal takes on the themes of birth, death, abuse, femininity, myth and existence.[6][7]

In the UK Neubauer became one of founding members of the film collective 'Spectre' that included Stephen Dwoskin, Phil Mulloy, Simon Hartog, Anna Ambrose, Michael Whyte, John Ellis, Keith Griffiths, and Thaddeus O'Sullivan.

Neubauer's collected works are distributed by the BFI,[8] LUX[9] and New York based The Film-Makers' Cooperative.

Neubauer is known for her work in multiple moving image disciplines and for her nuanced feminist stance.[10] She has won multiple awards for her work including two BAFTA Cymru Awards.[11]

Animation

She is a key figure in the History of British animation and is linked to the Second Wave of British Animation (1979–1996). Neubauer has been active as a filmmaker, animator and instigator of social reform for five decades.

Vera Neubauer's films are the terrorist branch of the art form, the Red Brigade of the animated film.[12] (Animating the Unconscious: Desire, Sexuality and Animation by Leslie Felperin)

Her first animated series after graduation was 'Pip and Betssie' that was commissioned for three years by the Germany television station Bayerischer Rundfunk.[13]

Neubauer's oeuvre of animated works is often considered experimental and ‘cutting edge’.

Vera Neubauer is one of Britain’s most innovative and provocative animators. Her highly idiosyncratic style uses an array of techniques, combining animated sequences with documentary and live action drama, provoking and entertaining in equal measure. (British Animation Awards)[14]

She is frequently cited for her ability to combine her personal stories of pain, loss and rebirth, underpinned by a wider societal commentary. Her canon of work mixes various techniques such as 2D drawing with photography, scratching into film emulation, cut out collage and giving character to found objects.

Live action

Neubauer's works often center around, and are created within her own neighborhood. Many of her films are short and meditative. Neubauer often uses the camera, much as a painter would use a brush, to create broad poetic strokes.

Neubauer's first drama film “Don’t be Afraid” made in 1990 starred a young Nick Moran[15] in the lead. It was based on the life of a squatting white couple who gave birth to a mixed race baby. The film gave an insight into issues facing young urban youth, both political and personal, whilst confronting audience's expectations and prejudices.

Her narrative and experimental films make use of guerrilla production techniques and are often socially critical and focus on social issues, poverty, women's rights, abuse and the homelessness.

Education

Neubauer taught for nearly 30 years at Royal College of Art, Central Saint Martins and Goldsmiths College.

In literature / film

Neubauer is the subject of Maria Anna Tappeiner's 2012 45 minute documentary for 3sat 'Das Ganze Leben im Trickfilm' ('An Entire Life in Animation').[16]

Retrospectives

Filmography

More information Year, Film ...

References

  1. bafta.org, "Vera Neubauer BAFTA Cymru Animation Winner 2002", British Academy Film And Television Awards, 2002 (Retrieved 12 Aug 2020)
  2. bafta.org, "Vera Neubauer BAFTA Cymru Short Film Winner 2002", British Academy Film And Television Awards, 2002 (Retrieved 12 Aug 2020)
  3. Google Books "British Film Culture in the 1970s by Sue Harper, Justin Smith", Published by Wallflower, 2013 (Retrieved 02 July 2020)
  4. Google Books "Animating the Unconscious Desire, Sexuality and Animation - Vera Neubauer's Wheel of Life Interview", Published by Wallflower Press, 2012 (Retrieved 02 July 2020)
  5. bfi.org.uk, "Vera Neubauer Filmography", British Film institute, 02 July 2020 (Retrieved 02 July 2020)
  6. lux.org.uk, "Selected Works by Vera Neubauer", LUX, 02 July 2020 (Retrieved 02 July 2020)
  7. Google Books "Women in Film An International Guide by Susannah Radstone", 1991 (Retrieved 02 July 2020)
  8. homemcr.org, "Clare Kitson interview with Vera Neubauer", Home MCR, 08 Nov 2008 (Retrieved 02 July 2020)
  9. onlinefilm.org, "'Pip and Betssie' by Vera Neubauer", On Line Film, 02 July 2020 (Retrieved 02 July 2020)
  10. peliculas.itematika.com, "Nick Moran Biography in Spanish Language", Peliculas Itematika, (Retrieved 02 July 2020)

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