Stefan Roloff

Last updated

Stefan Roloff (born 1955 [1] Berlin) is a German-American painter, video artist, filmmaker, and pioneer of digital video and photography, living and working in New York and Berlin. Roloff's documentary, The Red Orchestra, a portrait of his late father, Helmut Roloff, an anti-Nazi resistance fighter, was nominated for Best Foreign Film 2005 by the US Women Critics Circle. [2]

Contents

Life

Stefan Roloff was born in West Berlin in 1953 and moved to New York in 1981.

In 1984 the New York Institute of Technology invited Roloff to experiment on prototypes of digital video and imaging computers. He produced "Big Fire", a blend of painting with digital media which was shown in 1986 at the Bronx Museum of the Arts. [3] Also at NYIT, he developed "Moving Painting", a process in which a painting is set in motion by filming each stage that it passes through during its creation. In his film and video projects Roloff collaborated with musicians Suicide, Martin Rev, [4] and Andrew Cyrille, [5] and with Peter Gabriel, with whom he produced FACE, a prototype for his video Sledgehammer, as well as the video ZAAR, for the album Passion. [6] [7] In 1989, for his pioneering digital works, Roloff received a Fellowship from the New York Foundation for the Arts. [8]

He has since produced and directed numerous videos and two documentary films. Each film is accompanied by an art installation, providing a three-dimensional space which the viewers can enter for a direct experience of the subject matter. From 1989 to 1999, he worked on his first documentary film “Seeds”. Traveling through remote areas of West Virginia, he followed the story of a 22- year old woman who committed suicide in 1981 in an isolation cell at the State Prison for Women. The film was combined with an installation, “Pence Springs Resort”, a life-size three-dimensional photographic rendering of the isolation cell which the viewers could physically enter. It was shown at Threadwaxing Space in New York in 1995. [9]

In 1997 he began to work on his second documentary film The Red Orchestra, [10] a portrait of his late father, Helmut Roloff, a resistance fighter against the Nazis. It was nominated for best foreign film 2005 by the US Women Critics Circle. For this film, Stefan Roloff received a 2002 New York City Media Arts grant from the Jerome Foundation. [11] He also wrote a book in German, Die Rote Kapelle, published by Ullstein in 2002. In 2015, through an initiative by Stefan Roloff, Gustin Reichbach and Ellen Meyers, The Red Orchestra was incorporated into the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum's permanent exhibition. Roloff's source interviews with members of the Red Orchestra are accessible on the HMM's database. [12]

In 2017, Roloff had a 229 meter-long installation at the East-Side Gallery in Berlin facing the Spree. It combined in large-format still images from film he had made of the GDR border regime at various of the Berlin Wall in 1984, with silhouetted portraits video of contemporary GDR witnesses. Viewers could access their testimony through smartphone links. [13] Roloff's related video installation "Life in the Death Zone" is permanently installed at Villa Schöningen. [14]

Selected exhibitions

Video Compilations

Selected Catalogues, Publications

Grants, Awards

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Wolf Vostell</span> German painter and sculptor

Wolf Vostell was a German painter and sculptor, considered one of the early adopters of video art and installation art and pioneer of Happenings and Fluxus. Techniques such as blurring and Dé-coll/age are characteristic of his work, as is embedding objects in concrete and the use of television sets in his works. Wolf Vostell was married to the Spanish writer Mercedes Vostell and has two sons, David Vostell and Rafael Vostell.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Mildred Harnack</span> American-German literary historian and anti-Nazi resistance operative (1902–1943)

Mildred Elizabeth Harnack was an American literary historian, translator, and member of the German resistance against the Nazi regime. After marrying Arvid Harnack, she moved to Germany in 1929, where she began her career as an academic. Mildred Harnack spent a year at the University of Jena and the University of Giessen working on her doctoral thesis. At Giessen, she witnessed the beginnings of Nazism. Mildred Harnack became an assistant lecturer in English and American literature at the University of Berlin in 1931.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Maria Terwiel</span>

Maria "Mimi" Terwiel was a German resistance fighter against the Nazi regime. She was active in a group in Berlin that wrote and distributed anti-Nazi and anti-war appeals. As part of what they conceived as a broader action against a collection of anti-fascist resistance groups in Germany and occupied Europe that the Abwehr called the Red Orchestra, in September 1942 the Gestapo arrested Terwiel along with her fiancée Helmut Himpel. Among the leaflets and pamphlets they had copied and distributed for the group were the July and August 1941 sermons of Clemens August Graf von Galen which denounced the regime's Aktion T4 programme of involuntary euthanasia.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Helmut Roloff</span>

Helmut Roloff was a German pianist, recording artist, teacher and resistance fighter against the Nazi regime. In September 1942 Roloff was arrested in Berlin in the roundup of an anti-Nazi resistance group allegedly at the centre of a wider European espionage network identified by the Abwehr under the cryptonym the Red Orchestra. Covered by comrades who persuaded their interrogators that his contact with the group had been unwitting, he was spared execution and released. In post-war West Berlin, Roloff taught at the Academy of Music. After serving as the school's director, he retired in 1978.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Julian Rosefeldt</span> German artist and filmmaker (born 1965)

Julian Rosefeldt is a German artist and film-maker. Rosefeldt's work consists primarily of elaborate, visually opulent film and video installations, often shown as panoramic multi-channel projections. His installations range in style from documentary to theatrical narrative.

Shezad Dawood is an artist born and based in London.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Rainer Fetting</span> German painter and sculptor

Rainer Fetting is a German painter and sculptor.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Villa Schöningen</span> Museum in Germany

Villa Schöningen is a historic residence in the city of Potsdam, Germany, located at Berliner Straße 86 at the corner with Swan Avenue just west of the Glienicke Bridge, which leads to Berlin.

Sabine Haubitz and Stefanie Zoche were two German artists who worked together as Haubitz + Zoche from 1998 to 2014. Their partnership ended with the death of Haubitz from an accident in March 2014.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Bettina Pousttchi</span> German artist

Bettina Pousttchi is a German artist of German-Iranian descent. She currently lives in Berlin. She has worked in photography, sculpture, video and site-specific installation.

Elmar Hess is a German artist.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Stephan Huber</span> German sculptor and object artist

Stephan Huber is a German sculptor and object artist.

Xenia Hausner is an Austrian painter and stage designer.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Marc Brandenburg</span> German artist

Marc Brandenburg is a German artist.

Almagul Menlibayeva is a Kazakhstani artist and curator who splits her time between Kazakhstan and Germany. Her art's main themes revolve around social and ecological issues in Central Asia.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Wiebke Siem</span>

Wiebke Siem is a German mixed media artist of German and Polish heritage, winner of the prestigious Goslarer Kaiserring in 2014 as "one of the most innovative and original artists who has never compromised in their art and whose sculptures have a tremendous aura and presence because they mix the familiar and the unfamiliar, the known and the unknown".

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Horst Heilmann</span>

Horst Heilmann was a German resistance fighter against the Nazi regime. He was a member of the anti-fascist resistance group that formed around Harro Schulze-Boysen in 1940. Later, the people of the group along with many others were bundled together and called the Red Orchestra by the Abwehr. Heilmann was a student and a wireless operator who worked at the Referat 12 that was in the Inspectorate 7/VI.

Christoph Girardet is a German filmmaker and artist. He lives and works in Hanover.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Herbert Engelsing</span>

Herbert Enke Wilhelm Engelsing was a right-wing German Catholic lawyer in Berlin and resistance fighter against the Nazi regime. When the Nazi regime began, Engelsing found himself unable to work in law. Instead he found work in the German film industry, becoming a very successful film director and producer with Tobis Film. In 1938, Engelsing and his wife Ingeborg became close friends with Libertas and Harro Schulze-Boysen who were part of a resistance organisation against the Nazis. Engelsing maintained a high profile in the film business and low profile in the resistance, but made his mark by introducing many new people into the organisation, brokering deals and providing secure locations for meetings. The couple survived the war and moved to the United States in 1947. Engelsing did not receive permanent residency due to false accusations of being the head of a Soviet sleeper cell.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Wolfgang Ganter</span> German visual artist

Wolfgang Ganter is a German photographer and visual artist based in Berlin. He uses bacterial cultures, chemical process, dyes and time to transform the photos of renown artworks, which are then fixed and photographed in detail. His work is also included in permanent collections such as the Museum der Moderne Salzburg, Kunsthalle Mannheim, Futurium, Karolinska Institute and the Städtische Museen Heilbronn.

References

  1. Roloff, Stefan (2002). Die Rote Kapelle. Munich: Ullstein. pp. blurb. ISBN   9783550075438.
  2. "Roloff, Stefan | DEFA Film Library". ecommerce.umass.edu. Retrieved 2021-08-08.
  3. Cancel, Luis R. (1987). The Artist and the Computer (PDF).
  4. Rev, Martin (1984–2010). "R&R". When 6 is 9 Productions.
  5. "Big Fire".
  6. Gabriel, Peter (1993). "All About Us". World Cat. OCLC   050710599.
  7. "Good Morning America". Archived from the original on 2021-12-15.
  8. "Artists' Fellowships" (PDF). 2003-07-06.
  9. Pence Springs Resort. 1995. OCLC   40884996.
  10. Martel, Ned (March 2, 2005). "Fighting the Dangerous Fight Under the Nazis". The New York Times.
  11. "New York City Film and Video Grant". 2002.
  12. "Holocaust Memorial".
  13. Hoenen, Anja (2017-08-13). "Stefan Roloff. BEYOND THE WALL". Bild-Akademie (in German). Retrieved 2021-08-08.
  14. "Leben im Todesstreifen" (in German).
  15. pierogi2000.com at the Wayback Machine (archived 2009-07-25)