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  1. Hairy Who & The Chicago Imagists is the first film to tell their wild, woolly, utterly irreverent story. Over forty interviews with the artists and a prominent group of critics, curators, collectors, and contemporary artists are featured, intertwined with a wealth of re-discovered archival footage and photographs.

    • 329 West 18th Street Chicago, IL, 60616 United States
    • info@pentimentiproductions.org
    • (312) 397-0386
  2. 26 set 2014 · Hairy Who & The Chicago Imagists: Directed by Leslie Buchbinder. With Roger Brown, Cheryl Lynn Bruce, Jeff Koons, Jim Nutt. Chicago-Style Modern Art with Everything! In the mid 1960s, the city of Chicago was an incubator for an iconoclastic group of young artists.

    • (14)
    • Documentary, Biography, History
    • Leslie Buchbinder
    • 2014-09-26
  3. 14 lug 2014 · Art in America. Hairy Who: Funky, Folky and Still Fresh. By Richard Vine. July 14, 2014 12:33pm. View Gallery 4 Images. Who doesn’t love the Hairy Who? That’s the implicit message of...

  4. 17 mag 2014 · The history and accomplishments of these various artists’ groups are the subjects of Leslie Buchbinder’s illuminating new documentary film, Hairy Who and the Chicago Imagists, the...

  5. Synopsis. Profiles the formation and development of The Hairy Who, aka the Chicago Imagists, a ragtag group of young artists nurtured by the School of the Art Institute of Chicago, whose irreverent lowbrow style gained media attention from the late sixties through the mid-eighties.

  6. Hairy Who and The Chicago Imagists is a lavishly-illustrated romp through Chicago's art history, and the first film to tell the Imagists' whole story. The Imagists' roller-coaster ride through art history is re-created in this film with a wealth of archival footage and photographs, and over forty interviews with the Imagists themselves, critics ...

  7. Film. Nancy S. Bishop. Do you remember your first look at the so-called Chicago Imagists in Chicago galleries in the ‘60s and ‘70s? Whether you were on your own or in a stroller pushed by your parents, you surely found the art of the “Hairy Who” to be eye-popping, colorful, vulgar and fun.