
Shutter Interface
<p>Paul Sharits was a pioneer experimental and Structural filmmaker whose work expanded the traditionally static viewing space of moving images. He began his studies as a painter, but later exploited the physical properties of film stock and the mechanical workings of the projector to create hallucinatory works that define the flicker film genre. After 1971 he produced single- and doublescreen 16mm works as well as immersive film installations, which he termed “locational” film pieces. Sharits challenged conventional ideas about film by creating pieces intended for gallery exhibition instead of cinematic venues: “People have not developed a way to reacting to seeing a film in the same way that they would react to, say, a [Mark] Rothko after all these years of abstract painting.”</p> <p>The four film projections of Shutter Interface combine to produce a mural-like installation of seven overlapping monochromatic rectangles. The rotating shutter system, which traditionally generates the illusion of cinematic motion, here turns the solid-color frames into an oscillating panoramic kaleidoscope. The films vary in length, creating new color combinations as they continually loop. Single black frames interspersed within each reel create a pulsing optical effect, which is amplified by synchronized high-frequency tones. Sharits’s use of the basic components of film—speed, color, light and darkness, and sound—effectively creates an assault on the nervous system, which reverberates through the body. His mentor, influential filmmaker Stan Brakhage, described the work as a “delicious healing fever cycle.”</p>
Catalogue
- Year
- 1975
- Dimensions
- Room dimension: approximately 20 × 45 feet
- Collection
- Art Institute of Chicago
- Artist
- Paul Sharits
Artist

Video
Paul Sharits was an American filmmaker and visual artist working primarily in expanded cinema and film installation. His practice centered on the materiality of film itself, using repetition, flicker, and fragmentation to create immersive, structuralist works that prioritized formal properties over narrative. Active from the 1960s through the 1990s, he developed techniques that positioned film as a phenomenological medium capable of producing direct perceptual and bodily experience. His work fundamentally challenged conventional cinema as a vehicle for representation.
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More by Paul Sharits
Spasmatic Pain I (Boulder Community Hospital)
1981 · Felt-tip pen on paper
Location VII: Episodic Generation
1978 · Ink, pencil, and crayon on graph paper
Oscillating Strips Mapped into Intersecting Frame 9
1973 · Felt-tip pen and pencil on graph paper
Oscillating Strips Mapped into Intersecting Frame 10
1973 · Felt-tip pen and pencil on graph paper
Oscillating Strips Mapped into Intersecting Frame 8
1973 · Felt-tip pen and pencil on graph paper
Vanishing (Time) Ring
1971 · Felt-tip pen on paper
Record
Verified by WattsOS- Artist
- Paul Sharits
- Year
- 1975
- Dimensions
- Room dimension: approximately 20 × 45 feet
- Watts ID
- WW-1975-108174
Source
- Collection
- Art Institute of Chicago
- Source
- aic
- Reference
- View at source
- Status
- verified





