
Michel Auder
Biography
Michel Auder’s films, which span in length from five minutes to multiple hours, are all edited from the thousands of hours of footage the artist has casually shot throughout his life. Early on, Auder made a habit of carrying portable video-recording equipment on a daily basis, and so amassed a biographical reel that frequently captured his fellow artists in the New York art scene, including such personalities as Cindy Sherman, Larry Rivers, and, most famously, Alice Neel. Auder did not consider his practice to be factually driven, however: “It was not in any way a documentary, not to be related as truth. This work reflects my own feelings.” Auder’s approach to filming was largely inspired by Andy Warhol’s screen tests, and the experimental films of exponents of the French New Wave like Jean-Luc Godard.
Movie Appearances

Home Movie : Marrakech
1968

Fictional Art Film
as Director
2019
Apocalypse Later - Hudson
2003
Bitte Danke
1999
My Last Bag of Heroin (For Real)
1993
Chronicles: Morocco
1972
Homeo
as Self
1967
Chromo sud
1968

Birth of a Nation
as Self
1997

The Feature
2008

Fun and Games for Everyone
1969

Langlois
as Self
1970

The Stone Age
1970