MoMA PS1
MoMA's Affiliation with MoMA PS1
Visiting MoMA PS1
Isabelle Huppert
October 17–November 23, 2005
Intense, lithe, and passionate, Isabelle Huppert is one of cinema's greatest actresses. A beguiling shape-shifter, she inhabits her characters, providing them with a dense, distinctive biography and a memorable presence. Her ability to make silences revelatory is astonishing. Born into a middle-class French family in 1955, Huppert studied drama and Russian, and appeared on stage in her early teens. She made her first film in 1971, and thirty-four years and approximately seventy films later, she has worked not only with an illustrious group of French filmmakers, including Claude Chabrol (with whom she is now shooting her sixth film) and Jean-Luc Godard, but also many of Europe's most celebrated directors—Michael Haneke, Marta Meszaros, and Andrzej Wajda, to name a few. American filmmakers have long been fascinated by Huppert, and after appearing in Otto Preminger's Rosebud (1974), she was offered the female lead in Michael Cimino's epic Western Heaven's Gate (1980). This twenty-five film retrospective, which opens with the American premiere of her most recent film, Gabrielle (2005), celebrates the remarkable career of an actress constantly at work on screen and stage (she will be performing at BAM in Sarah Kane's 4:48 Psychose, October 19–30).
Organized by Laurence Kardish, Senior Curator, Department of Film and Media. Special thanks to the Cultural Services of the French Embassy for its generous support, and to Empire Pictures, Kino International, and New Yorker Films for October's program. An exhibition of portraits of Huppert taken by noted photographers will open at P.S.1 Contemporary Art Center on October 23.