Matthew Buckingham
Matthew Buckingham is an American filmmaker and multimedia artist.
He is a full-time faculty member at Columbia University and is the chair of the visual arts department.
Life and work
Buckingham studied at the Art Institute of Chicago, the University of Iowa, Bard College, and the Whitney Museum's Independent Study Program.Utilizing photography, film, video, audio, writing, and drawing his work questions the role that social memory plays in contemporary life. By examining ways that the past appears in the present, Buckingham also scrutinizes the power and effects of historical representation. His projects work with space, real and imaginary, to create physical and social contexts where viewers are encouraged to question received ideas—often the things that are most familiar. His works have investigated the Indigenous past and present in the Hudson River Valley; the ‘creative destruction’ of the city of St. Louis; the inception of the first English dictionary and the effects of radical Mary Wollstonecraft’s thoughts in our own time.
He is also a full-time faculty member at Columbia University and is the chair of the visual arts department.
Publications
- Canal Street Canal
- Everything I Need
- False Future
- Improbable Horse
- A Man of the Crowd
- Messages from the Unseen
- Narratives
- One Side of Broadway
- Play the Story
- Sandra of the Tulip House or How to Live in a Free State
- The Six Grandfathers from the Cretaceous Period to the Present
- The Spirit and the Letter
- Subcutaneous
- ''Amos Fortune Road''
Exhibitions
In the fall of 2019, Buckingham was included in the group exhibition "Ancient History of the Distant Future" at the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts. Buckingham exhibited a work entitled, “The Six Grandfathers, Paha Sapa, in the Year 502,002 C.E.,” a digital print showing an eroded Mount Rushmore and a timeline of the mountain back to 66,000,000 B.C.E.