Bob was one of the most inspiring and influential people I have ever known.
I was in the last classes he taught at UWMilwaukee before retiring, and I saw 
him 
over the years here and there in the bay area.
I programmed his films, and enjoyed hanging out with him.
He was truly one of a kind.
A great artist, and a great person.
Always kind, and always willing to talk and give advice, about film or life.
RIP Bob, you are missed.
Godspeed.





Kristie Reinders, B.F.A.

Director of Cinematography, Electric Visions

Curator and Head Projectionist, Electric Mural Project

The Mission, San Francisco, CA



'A first class technician should work best under pressure.' 

- - - Issac Asimov 

From: z...@sonic.net
Date: Tue, 10 Jan 2012 17:53:28 -0800
To: fiddy...@yahoo.com; frameworks@jonasmekasfilms.com
Subject: Re: [Frameworks] Robert Nelson


That is sad. I am so sad to hear of this.  What a loss. He was certainly an 
inspiration and an enormous presence in the scene back when I first got into 
film mid 60s in the Bay Area. I was there when these films came out, he would 
be at the screenings....oh the memories.Myron Ort
On Jan 10, 2012, at 5:27 PM, Mark Toscano wrote:Can't really express at all how 
very sad I am to report that Robert Nelson has died.  He was 81.  He had been 
diagnosed with terminal cancer about a year ago, and had decided to not receive 
treatment, to go out in his own way, as he could only do, as Chick Strand had 
decided to do before him.   All things considered, Bob was doing pretty well 
all year, actually.  He had moments, sometimes days, of fatigue and feeling 
kind of lousy, but had plenty of good days too.  I last spoke to him about a 
week ago and we talked about meeting up soon.  He sounded great, and was as 
sharp as ever.  So when I got the call from Wiley today, the news was a bit of 
a shock to me, as Bob had still seemed so vital and alive a week before.   He 
hadn’t been taking any medication or treatment beyond the herbal kind, and had 
continued to live on his own in the mountains in the small house he built in 
gorgeous Mendocino County.  An inimitably homespun and offhand philosopher, he 
would say things to me like, “what the hell, I’ve had a good run.”  I made him 
some CDs to check out a few months ago, and after he’d listened to and enjoyed 
them a few times he unexpectedly sent them back, saying “they were really good, 
I just don’t want to accumulate any more shit.”   Bob has easily been one of 
the most important people in my life, a massive source of influence, 
inspiration, support, friendship, and good company for the past ten years.  His 
films are still huge for me. and will be til I die.     I sought him out in 
2001 when I worked at Canyon Cinema.  I had seen Bleu Shut and Hot Leatherette, 
and they had both knocked me out, especially Bleu Shut.  At the time, my friend 
Martha was a preservationist at the Academy Film Archive in L.A., and she and I 
concocted a proposal for Bob and the Academy to start getting his filmography 
preserved, film by film.  After he answered my initial letter, Bob and I had 
exchanged a few more letters (he was a great letter-writer) without yet 
meeting.  One day without warning, he just strolled into the Canyon office on 
Third.  Dominic hadn’t seen him in a few years at least, and said, almost in 
shock, “…Well hi, Bob!”  Bob and I met, had lunch and talked about the 
archiving thing, and a deal was hatched.  He was still very skeptical about the 
value of his work and his own desire for people to even see the films, but a 
project at the Academy was worked out, and Martha preserved The Off-Handed Jape 
and Deep Westurn right away, with Bob still not really wanting the films to see 
the light of day.  I took over when I was hired to replace her in ’03, when she 
left to work in Tanzania, and have worked on a bunch of ‘em since then.     
Over the years, a certain visceral block about his films, a desire to destroy 
many of them or at least keep them withdrawn from view, loosened and relented, 
in some cases title by title.  I worked on him to do screenings, and though he 
wouldn’t initially appear in person, he approved the occasional showing of 
individual films starting in late 2003.  In 2004, with Craig Baldwin’s help, we 
were able to do a 3-day retrospective at Other Cinema, with Bob in person, 
which marked a big change in his attitude about the work.  The voluminous 
positive feedback from audiences I was able to pass on encouraged him more and 
more to lighten up about it all.  He started making appearances, including some 
brilliant ones at Oberhausen, Vienna, and elsewhere.  He even started working 
on several new films (left uncompleted) in 2007 or so, one of which was a 
collaboration we discussed at length, and which I hope I can actually complete 
now.   I was always thrilled to pass word along to him about how much one or 
more of his films had influenced someone I’d met, because by the 1990s, he had 
gotten really apathetic about a lot of them.  But the interest in his films 
over the past ten years was something he really enjoyed, and he came around to 
re-embracing many of his own films.  (Some of them remained to him 
nausea-inducing failures, though.  Mention What Do You Talk About? or The 
Beard, and he would groan.)  He was thrilled his work still resonated with 
people, or just made them laugh.  Sometimes younger filmmakers would track him 
down and send him their work, and he always looked at it with a fresh, critical 
gaze, responding with his genuine and thoughtful reactions, which sometimes led 
to extended correspondences.   I always found him incredibly open, curious, 
wise, attentive, interested.  He was just so fucking great to hang out with.  
How many people over 30 (let alone 80)  still approach life, conversation, 
questions, EVERYTHING, with a completely open, curious mind, capable of 
considering and reconsidering, changing, reorienting…?  Even in screening Q&As, 
when asked a question about Bleu Shut or Blondino that he’d probably been asked 
dozens of times before, he would seriously consider the question and try to 
give a unique, thoughtful answer.  He was so full of consideration and wisdom, 
always gave me (and others) great advice.     So many filmmakers are filmmakers 
in some way or other because of Bob (among them Peter Hutton, Fred Worden, 
Chris Langdon, Curt McDowell, Mike Henderson, numerous others).  Peter once 
told me that when he saw Bob’s films for the first time, his reaction was 
“wait, you can make movies like that?”, and started making films himself.  
David Wilson (of Museum of Jurassic Technology fame) was deeply inspired by The 
Awful Backlash, and wasn’t the only one to have that reaction.  Bob named the 
classic film Near the Big Chakra, with his gift for evocative titles.  Bob 
could also be burtally honest about someone’s work, because he felt a friend 
was due that honesty and respect, even if it cost him a few friendships.  Bob 
was the person I was most nervous and yet most eager to show my own films, and 
his positive, thoughtful reactions meant something immeasurable to me, as did 
the criticism of one film of mine he thought was a stinker.   When an artist 
dies, the inevitable retrospectives follow.  But that’s OK.  Bob was happy to 
have his work rediscovered, and thrilled that anybody still found it 
entertaining, funny, enlightening, whatever.  I already miss him deeply, but am 
excited that his films (and his spirit, a very palpable, inextricable part of 
them) are, and will continue to be, very much with us.   If anyone would like 
to send any thoughts, reminiscences, testimonials, etc. about Bob or his work 
to me, I’d be happy to share them with his family and friends.
I'm posting this text up at my blog too, with some photos of Bob and images 
from his films:http://preservationinsanity.blogspot.com/ 

All the best,
Mark Toscano
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