From his photo-text canvases in the 1960s to his video works in the 1970s to his installations in the 1980s, John Baldessari’s (b.1931) varied work has been seminal in the field of conceptual art. Integrating semiology and mass media imagery, he employed such strategies as appropriation, deconstruction, decontextualization, sequentiality, and text/image juxtaposition. With an ironic wit, Baldessari's work considers the gathering, sorting, and reorganizing of information. “Something that is part of my personality is seeing the world slightly askew. It’s a perceptual stance. The real world is absurd sometimes, so I don’t make a conscious attempt, but because I come at it in a certain way, it seems really strange,” Baldessari says in this interview with Nancy Bowen. A historical interview originally recorded in 1979 and re-edited in 2003 with support from the Lyn Blumenthal Memorial Fund.

Is the Man Who Is Tall Happy?
2013
6.9/10

Looking for Richard
1996
6.8/10

The Irishman: In Conversation
2019
7.5/10

Love, Antosha
2019
7.4/10

Side by Side
2012
7.2/10

Back in Time
2015
6.5/10

Django & Django: Sergio Corbucci Unchained
2021
7.0/10

Filmworker
2018
7.1/10

Naqoyqatsi
2002
6.1/10

It Might Get Loud
2008
7.2/10

LA Originals
2020
7.0/10

Being Eddie
2025
7.0/10

Stan Lee
2023
7.1/10

De Palma
2016
7.0/10

Adele One Night Only
2021
7.8/10

John Candy: I Like Me
2025
7.9/10

Stutz
2022
7.5/10

Struggle: The Life and Lost Art of Szukalski
2018
7.5/10

Fuck
2006
6.4/10

X-Rated 2: The Greatest Adult Stars of All-Time
2016
6.7/10

Their Loss
2021
0/10