Ted Lyman
"First Surface" - Video still - Ted Lyman 1996
Work: "Testament of the Rabbit" "First Surface" "Flat Earth" "Fla.Me."
When: 1pm Tuesday April 1 2003
Where: HCC Campus Theater
Ted Lyman began making films in the early Seventies when he was
inspired by the work of the American Avant-Garde. Through his
ensuing career he has maintained a belief in the power if the
extraordinary syntax of the moving image exposed and explored by that
movement.
The overall strategy of his filmmaking is to use that
syntax in ways that are legible and illuminating to the general
viewer. "Skycap" (1972), "Alleydog" (1974), "Scotland with No Clothes"
(1977), "Mansacts" (1980), "Fla.Me", (1982), "Testament of the Rabbit"
(1989), "First Surface" (1996), and "Flat Earth" (work in progress) are
among his productions.
While each of these works is different in
content and appearance, they all are founded on a sense of place,
interaction with nature, and a commitment to expression by visual,
non-narrative, means.
Lyman's films have been shown in national
and international venues, have won several best of festival awards,
and have been broadcast by PBS and the Learning Channel. He has
received grants from the National Endowment for the Arts Regional
Program, and from the Vermont and Ohio Councils on the Arts as well
as production funding from the Independent Television Service.
Lyman lives in Northern New England with his wife, Virginia Clarke, a
veterinarian and activist, and enjoys visits from his grown children,
Andrew and Lindsay. He is chair of the Art Department at the
University of Vermont where he also teaches media theory and
production.