Andrew Noren was born 1943 in
Santa Fe, New Mexico and grew up in Southern California. He served in the
Army before briefly attending university. Noren moved to New York in the mid 1960s, where he worked as an editor at
ABC. Through his job, he was able to access a
Bolex 16 mm camera, with which he began making films. His first work,
A Change of Heart, was a narrative feature film inspired by
Jean-Luc Godard's
Breathless. After the film's premiere, Noren met
Jonas Mekas through a co-worker. He started working at
the Film-Makers' Cooperative, where he became connected to local avant-garde filmmakers. Noren began making more experimental works toying with different documentary approaches. For
Say Nothing, he recorded a single 30-minute shot in which he administers a
screen test. Inspired by the
Lumière brothers, his film
The New York Miseries was a collection of three-minute takes documenting his own life.
The Lighted Field, a silent, improvised and plotless parable/thesis featuring black and white
newsreel footage from where the filmmaker worked, was inducted into the
National Film Registry in 2023 for its cultural and historical importance. In 1972 Noren began working at the Sherman Grinberg Film Library as a researcher and licensing agent for archived stock footage and newsreels. After Sherman Grinberg went out of business in 1998, Noren founded the Research Source, a visual research and copyright clearance company. Noren died of lung cancer in 2015. ==Filmography==