Mary Ellen Bute
A pioneer of visual music and electronic art, Mary Ellen Bute directed along with her husband Ted Nemeth over a dozen short abstract animations between the 1930s to the 1950s. Set to classical music by the likes of Bach, Saint-Saens or Shostakovich, and filled with colorful forms, elegant design and sprightly, dance-like-rhythms, Bute's filmmaking is at once formally rigorous and energetically high-spirited, like a marriage of high modernism and Merrie Melodies. In the late 1940s, Lewis Jacobs observed that Bute's films were "composed upon mathematical formulae depicting in ever-changing lights and shadows, growing lines and forms, deepening colors and tones, the tumbling, racing impressions evoked by the musical accompaniment." Bute herself wrote that she sought to "bring to the eyes a combination of visual forms unfolding along with the thematic development and rhythmic cadences of music." (Ed Halter)
Known for her pioneering early abstract films (some of which were screened regularly at Radio City Music Hall, New York in the 1930s), Bute made a series of Visual Music films which she called "Seeing Sound."
Crew
Movie
Tarantella
Director
1940
Movie
Spook Sport
Director
1940
Movie
Parabola
Director
1937
Synchromy No. 2
Director
1935
Movie
Escape (Synchronomy No. 4)
Director
1937
Movie
Abstronic
Director
1952
Dada
Director
1936
Movie
Rhythm in Light
Director
1934
Movie
Passages from James Joyce's Finnegans Wake
Director
1967
Movie
Color Rhapsodie
Director
1948
Movie
New Sensations in Sound by RCA Victor
Director
1956
Movie
Polka Graph
Director
1947