Charlotte Colbert

Charlotte Colbert is a Franco-British producer and a moving image and multi-media artist.

Charlotte Colbert
NationalityFrench-British
Alma materLondon Film School
Known forMultimedia

Art

Photography

Colbert's work has been likened to that of Toomer, Breton and Dali[1] and described as an “exploration into the human mind”.[2]

Her solo show A Day At Home was described by The Huffington Post as "a surreal meditation on domesticity and self-destruction".[3]

Colbert has been exhibited internationally, including Hong Kong Basel, Istanbul Art Fair, and Photo-London.

Multi-Media Sculpture

Colbert's multi-media sculptures are made of layered TV screens encased in rusty metal. The "Benefit Supervisor Sleeping" is a 170 kg video installation, 21st-century reinterpretation of Lucian Freud's famous painting of Sue Tilley. It is described as inverting the male gaze and "re-frame Sue Tilley, the subject of Freud's Benefit Supervisor series, from objectified to objectifier.[4]

Film

Colbert studied at the London Film School.[5] She is the co-author of feature film Leave to Remain about underage asylum seekers in Britain[6] with a score by Mercury Prize-winning band Alt-J.[7] It won awards at the BUFF Film Festival[8] and the Bergamo International Film Festival.[9]

In 2016, she wrote and directed "The Silent Man", described in ID as "the most surreal shorts you'll ever see"[10] with Simon Amstell and Sophie Kennedy-Clark. She made two animated shorts The Girl With Liquid Eyes[11] with Maryam d'Abo and "The Man With the Stolen Heart" with Bill Nighy.

She has been announced as producer on Dali Land, a biopic on artist Salvador Dali with Ben Kingsley and Lesley Manville as the leads.[12]

Publishing

Colbert was one of the publishers of The Artists Colouring Book of ABCs done in support of the Kids Company,[13] featuring works by Grayson Perry, Alex Katz, and Tracey Emin.

See also

References

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