
Directing
Born November 5, 1925 in Brookline, Massachusetts, USA
Robert Gardner was the Director of the Film Study Center at Harvard University from 1957 to 1997. He is known for his work in the field of non-fiction film. He is an internationally renowned filmmaker and author whose works have entered the permanent canon of non-fiction filmmaking. Some of his most prominent films include Dead Birds (1964), a lyric account of the Dugum Dani, a Stone Age society at one time living an isolated existence in the Highlands of the former Netherlands New Guinea (Gardner was the leader of the Peabody Museum-sponsored expedition to study the Dani in 1961-62); Rivers of Sand (1974), a social commentary on the Hamar people of southwestern Ethiopia; and Forest of Bliss (1985), a cinematic essay on the ancient city of Benares, India, which explores the ceremonies, rituals, and industries associated with death and regeneration.

Expedition Content

Still Journey On

Deus Ex Boltanski

Oh, What a Blow That Phantom Gave Me!
Self

Islam: Empire of Faith

Looking at Forest of Bliss
Himself

Pilot Notes: Journals Of A Solitary Aviator

Good to Pull (Bon a Tirer)

Sean Scully: Passenger

It Could Be Good, It Could Be Bad

Scully in Malaga

Sean Scully: Testigos AKA The Witnesses

Time Indefinite
Himself

Hauling Sharks

Forest of Bliss

Loving Krishna
Narrator

Serpent Mother
Narrator

Life Keeps on Passing

Supplicating Women

The Shepherds of Berneray

Q'eros: The Shape of Survival
Narrator

Healing

Altar of Fire

Rivers of Sand

Policeman

Anthem

Farmer

Lobsterman

Mark Tobey Abroad

Screening Room
Himself

Reality's Invisible
Self

The Nuer

Creatures of Pain

Salt

The Great Sail

Tide

The Photographer

People and Particles

Marathon

Dead Birds
Narrator

Flaherty and Film
Self - Host

The Old Lady AKA A Human Document

The Hunters

Mark Tobey

Fort Rupert
Narrator

Blunden Harbour