Standish Lawder
An image from Corridor, one of the productions that also features Standish Lawder.
Standish Lawder

Standish Lawder

January 1, 1936 — Connecticut, USA

Born in Connecticut in 1936, Lawder attended Williams College and the National Autonomous University of Mexico as an undergraduate, and studied at the Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich. While at the University of Munich, he became a test subject for a neurologist researching phosphenes at around 1960. During these experiments, he was injected with measured amounts of LSD, mescaline and psilocybin, and "spent a whole day in the clinic". In this, he became an early subject of psychedelics. Afterwards, he received his Doctor of Philosophy as an art historian at Yale University. His thesis, which was later published as The Cubist Cinema, examines the correlation between the history of film and its impact on modern art, described as a holistic overview by Anthony Reveaux inFilm Quarterly. His body of work is purported to span over 25 films and his literary works encapsulates several essays on experimental film. His first endeavors with experimental films started in his basement during a sabbatical of his in the late 1960s and early 1970s.

Necrology

Necrology

1970

Color Film

Color Film

1971

Corridor

1970

Runaway

1969

Cinema16: American Short Films

Cinema16: American Short Films

2006

Roadfilm

Roadfilm

1970

Construction Job

1969

Sunday In Southbury

1972