Jane Wodening

Jane Wodening is an American writer and the first wife of American filmmaker Stan Brakhage. The birth of their first child is the subject of the 1959 experimental short film Window Water Baby Moving. Married in 1957, Wodening was born Mary Jane Collom and is credited with creating scrapbooks for the Brakhage family during what is recognized as the filmmaker's most significant period of creation from the late 1950s to the mid 1960s. The couple separated in 1987.[1]

Life

Wodening grew up in a Chicago suburb, and moved to Fraser, Colorado, when she was eleven years old. After graduating highschool in Boulder, she dropped out of college and went to New York City. After meeting Stan Brakhage, the couple traveled around the country for several years before settling in Lump Gulch, where they had five children together. After separating from Brakhage, she again traversed the U.S. and settled in a cabin in Fourth of July Canyon, where she lived alone for ten years and authored seven collections of short stories.[2]

Window Water Baby Moving

Jane insisted that Brakhage be present at the birth of their daughter, Myrrenna; however, Brakhage felt he would faint if he weren't focused on filming the event.[3] The hospital initially gave permission for filming, but this was later reneged.[3] Instead, Brakhage transferred the birth to their home, hiring a nurse and some expensive emergency equipment.[3] Jane was originally "very, very shy" about being filmed, but eventually relented after Brakhage made "a big dramatic scene and said 'All right, let's forget it!'"[3] Most of the film was photographed by Brakhage himself, but Jane occasionally took the camera to capture her husband's reactions.[4]

Bibliography

works by Jane Wodening

• Wolf Dictionary - Sockwood Press, Nederland, CO 80466, 2016

• Brakhage’s Childhood - Granary Books, New York, NY 2016

• The Lady Orangutan and Other Stories - Sockwood Press, Nederland, CO 2014

• Living Up There - Foreword by Reed Bye - Baksun Books, Boulder, CO 2009

• Egypt and Me - Introduction by Jennifer Heath, design by Sarah Bell - Baksun Books, Boulder, CO 2012

• First Presence - Introduction by Merill Gilfillan - Baksun Books, Boulder, CO 2000

• Mountain Woman Tales - illustrated by Betsy Buck - Grackle Books, Nederland, CO 1994

second edition Mountain Woman Tales and Bird Journal, 1967 - Baksun Books, Boulder CO 2000

• Book of Gargoyles - preface by Lucia Berlin - Baksun Books, Boulder, CO 1999

• Moon Songs - situations press, New York, NY 1997

• The Inside Story - Baksun Books in collaboration with Rodent Press, Boulder, CO 1996

• From the Book of Legends - 100 copies made - Granary Books, New York, NY 1989

second edition, preface by Robert Creeley - Invisible Books, London, UK 1993

• Lump Gulch Tales - Grackle Books, Nederland, CO 1993

second edition - Baksun Books, Boulder, CO 1993

articles:

Rolling Stock

Working Papers

The Daily Planet

Whole Earth Magazine

Works & Conversations

Square One

anthologies:

Maya Deren and the American Avant-Garde

Sites of Insite

Primal Picnics

Uncontained

The Libraries of Thought and Imagination

Quotes

"The moon was a great chum when I was an adolescent. He looked like a freckle-faced boy and when he’d smile, it was going to be a nice day."[5]

References

  1. Deming, Richard (October 2006). "Collage, Collaboration, and Material Quotation: The Scrapbooks of Jane Wodening and Stan Brakhage, 1962-66, in the Beinecke Library". The Yale University Library Gazette. 81 (1/2): 27–41. JSTOR 40859520.
  2. Smith, Jeffrey. "Author's latest ties together lifetime of observations". MMAC Monthly. Retrieved 17 August 2015.
  3. 1 2 3 4 MacDonald, Scott (2005) A critical cinema: interviews with independent filmmakers, p64-66
  4. Barr, William R. (1999) "Brakhage: Artistic Development in Two Childbirth Films," Film quarterly: forty years, a selection, University of California Press, p536-541
  5. Whittaker, R. "A Conversation with Jane Wodening: Doors of Perception". Works & Conversations. Retrieved 17 August 2015.
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