Jake Yuzna
Jake Yuzna is an American film director, screenwriter, and curator. His debut feature Open was the first American film to win the Teddy Jury Prize and the Berlin Film Festival and in 2005 Yuzna become the youngest recipient of funding from the National Endowment for the Arts.
Although known mainly for his work in film, Yuzna has curated several retrospectives, exhibitions and special projects. In 2010, he founded the first cinema program at the Museum of Arts and Design in New York City. Between 2011 - 2013 he organized the first fellowship, publication and conference to argue nightlife as a form of contemporary art.
He has also curated the first American retrospectives of artists and filmmakers including Alejandro Jodorowsky, Sion Sono, Gregg Araki, Francois Sagat, and Quentin Crisp. In addition, Yuzna curated the first museum surveys of Metamodernsim, the New French Extremity, and the medium of VHS.
Yuzna is the son of poet Susan Yuzna and nephew to horror film director and producer Brian Yuzna.
Filmography
Awards and honors
- 2005: "Special Jury Award for Artistic Risktaking" from IFP
- 2010: "Teddy Jury Prize" for Open
- 2010: "Best Narrative Feature" for Open
- 2010: "Best Performance" for Morty Diamond in Open
- 2012: Creative Capital Award for Werewolves in the Mall of America
Curation
Year | Project |
2010 | Blood into Gold: The Cinematic Alchemy of Alejandro Jodorowsky |
2011 - 2013 | THE FUN Fellowship in the Social Practice of Nightlife |
2011 | Sion Sono: The New Poet |
2011 | François Sagat: The New Leading Man |
2012 | VHS |
2012 | Argento: Il Cinema Nel Sangue |
2012 | No Wave Cinema |
2013 | After the Museum |
2013 | It Is Crispin Hellion Glover |
2013 | Ladies and Gentlemen, Mr. Quentin Crisp |
2013 | Without Compromise: The Cinema of William Klein |
2013 | God Help Me: Gregg Araki |
2014 | NYC Makers: The 2014 MAD Biennial |
2014 | Life with Technology: The Cinema of Godfrey Reggio |
2015 | It's Hard to be Human: The Cinema of Roy Andersson |
2015 | The Director Must Not Be Credited: 20 Years of Dogme 95 |
2015 | The Unseen Cinema of HR Giger |
2015 | Andrei Tarkovsky, Sculpting in Time |