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Jan Andrews independent film collection, 1984-2010

Overview of the Collection

Creator
Andrews, Jan (Filmmaker)
Title
Jan Andrews independent film collection
Dates
1984-2010 (inclusive)
Quantity
7 16mm film
4 dvd
Collection Number
A0760
Summary
The Jan Andrews independent film collection (1984-2010) consists of experimental and documentary films by the Utah filmmaker Jan Andrews. Andrews holds of Master of Fine Arts degree in film and a Master of Arts in Anthropology from the University of Utah. This collection is part of the Utah Independent Film Archive (UIFA). This collection is digitized and can be requested through our Special Collections contact form.
Repository
University of Utah Libraries, Special Collections
Special Collections, J. Willard Marriott Library
University of Utah
295 South 1500 East
Salt Lake City, UT
84112-0860

Telephone: 8015818863
special@library.utah.edu
Access Restrictions

Audio-visual materials can be fragile and require specialized equipment to play back. For this reason, access to audio-visual materials is provided through digital copies, and it might take longer to provide access to items that are not yet digitized. Access to parts of this collection may be restricted under provisions of state or federal law, condition of the material, or by donor.

Languages
English
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Biographical Note

Jan Andrews grew up in Alpine, Utah, and studied anthropology and epidemology at the University of Utah, before transitioning into film. After returning from Egypt, where she was doing research for her PhD, she decided to pursue a career in filmmaking. She now holds an M.A. in Anthropology and an M.F.A. in Film Studies. Andrews is a creator of experimental films and documentaries. Her films were screened all over the world, such as the Sundance Film Festival, Venice Film Festival, Sydney Film Festival, and many others, and they have won awards including Best of Show, Director's Choice, and are in the collection of Anthology Film Archives in NYC. Andrews also served as a member of the Board of Trustees at Salt Lake Art Center (presently Utah Museum of Contemporary Art), a member of the Board of Directors for Utah Film Center, and collaborated on creative projects with the Utah Symphony.

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Content Description

The Jan Andrews independent film collection (1984-2010) consists of seven 16mm and four DVDs experimental and documentary films by Utah filmmaker Jan Andrews. Includes films related to anthropology, mental health, Native Americans, and other themes. This collection is part of the Utah Independent Film Archive (UIFA).

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Use of the Collection

Preferred Citation

Collection Name, Collection Number, Item Number. Special Collections, J. Willard Marriott Library, The University of Utah.

Restrictions on Use

The library does not claim to control copyright for all materials in the collection. An individual depicted in a reproduction has privacy rights as outlined in Title 45 CFR, part 46 (Protection of Human Subjects). For further information, please review the J. Willard Marriott Library's Use Agreement and Reproduction Request forms.

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Administrative Information

Arrangement

Material is arranged alphabetically by format.

Processing Note

Processed by Jimi Jones in 2004 and Danielle Rausch in 2025.

Acquisition Information

Donated by Jan Andrews in 2003-2012.

Related Materials

Forms part of the Utah Independent Film Archive (UIFA).

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Detailed Description of the Collection

  • Description: Anasazi

    16mm (photographic film size)
    00:06:46, color, sound

    This experimental documentary is a meditation on the vandalism of Anasazi sites and artifacts in Southern Utah.

    Screenings and awards:

    Finalist, Anthropos '87 Film Festival Los Angeles

    Finalist, San Francisco Film Festival, Golden Gate

    Finalist, Utah Short Film & Video Festival,

    Women One World Film Festival, New York

    Canyonlands Film Festival

    International Student Film Festival

    Learning Channel: Focus on Native American series

    Dates: 1986
    Container: Reel 1
  • Description: Cold Moon at the Center of the World

    16mm (photographic film size)
    00:19:54, color, sound

    This documentary about the 1955 termination of Utah's Southern Paiute Tribe both as a tribe and as a recipient of benefits from all federal programs. After a struggle to survive, the group fought successfully for restoration as a tribe and to federal monies in 1980. This is a film about those events and their effect upon the tribe.

    Screenings and awards:

    Margaret Mead Film Festival, New York

    Native American Film Festival (traveling festival)

    Canyonlands Film Festival

    Community Access Television (Utah, Ohio, Pennsylvania)

    Funded in part. by a grant from the Utah Humanities Council.

    Dates: 1991
    Container: Reel 2
  • Description: Exiles: Between Two Worlds

    16mm (photographic film size)
    00:24:21, black and white, sound

    A short documentary about necessary lifestyle adjustments when a group of people is transplanted from one culture to another. Andrews uses scenes of Asian families in Utah as they perform various rituals, from marriage and death ceremonies to organized classes that help children maintain an understanding of their parent's traditions and language to a farming commune to religious celebrations. Exiles was made over a two-year period with support from the Utah Endowment for the Humanities, the Utah Media Arts Center, and the University of Utah.

    Dates: 1988
    Container: Reel 3
  • Description: Geography of the Imagination

    16mm (photographic film size)
    00:15:27, black and white, sound

    This experimental film is a meditation on the influence of landscape, literature, painting, poetry, music and film on the filmmaker's life.

    Screenings and awards:

    Ann Arbor Film Festival, Honorable Mention

    Utah Film & Video Festival: Best of Show

    Black Maria Film Festival, Director's Citation

    Sundance Film Festival, Park City, Utah

    San Francisco International Film Festival

    Oberhausen Short Film Festival, Oberhausen, Germany

    Athens International Film Festival, Athens, Ohio

    Mix '94, New York Experimental Film Festival

    Brazil '94 Film Festival (5 cities)

    NY Expo of Short Film and Video

    Montreal, Quebec, Canada, Image et Nation Festival

    Florida Film Festival, Miami

    Central Florida Film Festival, Orlando

    Sydney Film Festival, Sydney, Australia

    Boston Experimental Film Festival

    Funded by a grant from the Western States Regional Media Arts Fellowship (with the National Endowment of the Arts and the American Film Institute).

    Dates: 1993
    Container: Reel 4
  • Description: In Suspect Terrain

    16mm (photographic film size)
    00:14:18, black and white, sound

    This experimental documentary is a meditation on amnesia and schizophrenia which explores the injured brain and how it reacts to memory and loss of memory.

    Screenings and awards:

    Utah Short Film & Video Festival: Best Experimental Film

    Sundance Screenwriter's Lab

    Canyonlands Film Feseival

    Dance on Film Festival, New York

    Festival of Films on Disabilities

    Dates: 1996
    Container: Reel 5
  • Description: Lysistrata: A Mystery in the Making

    16mm (photographic film size)
    00:30:15, color, sound

    This experimental documentary based on Aristophanes' Ancient Greek play Lysistrata explores the relationships between men and women and war and peace over the past 2,500 years. Filmed with an all woman cast and crew.

    Screenings and awards:

    Women Make Movies, New York City

    Experimental Film Festival, New York City

    Festival of Experimental Films, London, Great Britain

    Canyonlands Film Festival

    Oberhausen Film Festival, Germany

    Funded in part by a grant from the American Film Institute and the National Endowment for the Arts.

    Dates: 1990
    Container: Reel 6
  • Description: Seduction

    16mm (photographic film size)
    00:08:16, black and white, sound

    This experimental documentary presents a cross/cultural view of women and adornment.

    Screenings and awards:

    Special Merit, Utah Short Film & Video Festival

    Artists in Residence Gallery, New York City

    Films Charas, New York City

    Canyonlands Film Festival

    New York Experimental Film Festival

    This film was produced at the University of Utah.

    Dates: 1987
    Container: Reel 7
  • Description: Joseph Brodsky: In the Prison of Latitudes

    DVD
    01:01:01, color, sound

    "This documentary portrait explores the passionate spirit of Joseph Brodsky who defied all barriers to become one of the most interesting contemporary Russian poets of the 20th century. Interviews with scholars and friends of Brodsky trace his experience as the last Russian writer arrested by the KGB. He underwent a Kafkaesque trial and was exiled to Siberia. In 1972 he was exiled from his homeland and in 1987 won the Nobel Prize for Literature. Recordings of Brodsky reading his poems are the background of visual motifs and themes that have defined Brodsky as a resident of three "water cities": Leningrad, New York and Venice. His stance on poetry was heroic. He defended formal poetry rather than the free verse then popular in America. Every winter he traveled to Venice, a city that reminded him of his beloved St. Petersburg, and here he wrote the book called Watermark (Quay of the Incurables). He died in New York City in 1996 but was re-buried in Venice on the island of St. Michele. Co-production: Shibui Productions SLC and Studio AC Venezia Italy."

    Dates: 2010
    Container: Disc 8
  • Description: Journey to Peace Mountain: Temple Har Shalom, Park City, Utah

    DVD
    1:15:13, color, sound

    "Twenty Years ago, five Jewish families in Park City organized to begin a Jewish congragation and Hebrew school. The congregation grew and they hired a permanent Rabbi and began plans for building a Synagogue. This film is the story of that journey and the resulting building that now stands as a monument to persistence and desire."

    Dates: 2011
    Container: Disc 9
  • Description: Struck By Lightning

    DVD
    00:49:56, color, sound

    This documentary explores the physical and cultural effects of lightning strikes and electrocution:

    Lightning contributes annually to more death and injury that any other weather related phenomenon. Interestingly, 70% of victims survive the strike. Gretel Ehrlich explored the metaphors of electricity after surviving a lightning strike in her book A Match to the Heart. In language that surpasses the mere experience of being struck, she takes us into the strange world of weather and electrical phenomenon, dreams, exploration of the body under siege, cross cultural views of lightning and the philosophy of Tibetan Buddhism.

    Gretel's story provides the "heart and soul" of this film. However, the film also explores how the dynamics of lightning and the conservation of electrical energy mediate her experience and the roll it plays, for good and ill, in all of our lives. For example, lightning caused the chemicals and compounds of the primordial soup to synthesize into amino acids, the basic building blocks of all organic life, and begin life on earth. It brings nitrogen rich rain, and causes fire which naturally "manages" the forests of the earth. Electricity is the force that runs our bodies and can be as beneficent as the electrical charge between God and Adam's fingers on the Sistine Chapel ceiling or it can send the body into seizure and early death. Electricity, tamed, gives us light and, in the form of medical implements, can diagnose and, in some cases, cure disease. The film also looks at the Dr. Frankenstein aspect of electricity, a creature charged to life by electrical currents roaming freely across the landscape. Electricity is also used to control or change behavior (electroshock treatment, aversion therapy) or to end life in the form of electrocutions.

    Dates: 2002
    Container: Disc 10
  • Description: Who Owns the Past?

    DVD
    00:31:24, color, sound

    "The Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act (NAGPRA) was enacted on November 16, 1990, to address the rights of lineal descendants, Indian tribes, and Native Hawaiian organizations to Native American cultural items, including human remains, funerary objects, sacred objects, and objects of cultural patrimony. In Utah, the Act has been applied as written but with the involvement of the Native Tribes some considerations have been made for the continuing study of the burial objects, including human remains, before they are reburied. In interviews with Native Americans and Archeologists, the complex issue of who owns the past is explored."

    Dates: 2000
    Container: Disc 11

Names and SubjectsReturn to Top

Subject Terms

  • Artists--Utah
  • Independent filmmakers
  • Native Americans

Geographical Names

  • Utah

Form or Genre Terms

  • Experimental films
  • Moving images
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