Ant Farm
A San Francisco-based collective of artists and architects working from 1968 to 1978, Ant Farm’s activity was distinctly interdisciplinary—combining architecture, performance, media, happenings, sculpture, and graphic design. With works that functioned as art, social critique, and pop anthropology, Ant Farm tore into the cultural fabric of post-World War II, Vietnam-era America and became one of the first groups to address television’s pervasive presence in everyday life. As graphic artists, Ant Farm contributed to numerous underground publications, including Radical Software, and designed Michael Shamberg’s Guerrilla Television (1971).
Ant Farm members included Chip Lord, Doug Michels, Hudson Marquez, and Curtis Schreier.
Available Titles by Ant Farm
Title | Year | Runtime | Collection |
---|---|---|---|
Ant Farm Video | 2003 | 02:07:00 | Compilations, Single Artist Compilations |
Cadillac Ranch/Media Burn | 1975 | 00:37:00 | Early Video Art, Single Titles |
The Eternal Frame | 1976 | 00:24:16 | Early Video Art, Single Titles |