Joanna Hogg’s Exhibition

Filmmaker Joanna Hogg’s third feature, Exhibition, will screen for two weeks exclusively at the Film Society of Lincoln Center beginning June 20. The release will be accompanied by one-week runs of Hogg’s first two films, Archipelago and Unrelated, the following week, the Film Society announced on Friday.

Hogg’s latest, Exhibition, is structured as a cinematic mosaic of interlocking sights, sounds, exchanges, happenings great and small, everyday advances, and retreats. It is a portrait of two people in a state of change in a house that effectively becomes a third character, and an agent in that change. The film premiered last fall at the 51st New York Film Festival. Hogg will attend opening weekend.

London-based filmmaker Joanna Hogg was selected as one of two Emerging Artists at the 51st New York Film Festival, introducing her to American audiences as “a bold, dynamic new artist.” Hogg began her career as a photographer, before going on to study at the National Film and Television School.

After 10 years directing television dramas she made her feature debut with Unrelated (2007). It won numerous awards, including the FIPRESCI prize at the London Film Festival, the Guardian First Film Award, and “Most Promising Newcomer” at the Evening Standard British Film Awards. Her second film, Archipelago (2010), received a Special Commendation at the London Film Festival for their Best Film award. In 2011 she co-founded the collective A Nos Amours, dedicated to programming overlooked, underexposed, or especially potent cinema.


Liam Gillick in Joanna Hogg’s “Exhibition”