Guy Borremans
Guy Borremans (July 11, 1934 - December 29, 2012) was a Belgian-Canadian cinematographer and photographer.[1] He was most noted for his work on Clément Perron's film Day After Day (Jour après jour), for which he won the Canadian Film Award for Best Black-and-White Cinematography at the 15th Canadian Film Awards in 1963.[2]
Born and raised in Dinant, Belgium, Borremans moved to Canada with his family in 1951.[1] Strongly influenced by surrealism, he was closely associated with the Les Automatistes arts movement.[1] As a cinematographer, he was associated primarily with documentary films, with other credits including Wealth of a Nation (1964), a production for the US Information Agency directed by William Greaves, À St-Henri le cinq septembre, Golden Gloves, Manouane River Lumberjacks (Bûcherons de la Manouane) and 24 heures ou plus.
He was married to actress Luce Guilbeault.[1] Following her death in 1991, he remarried to Mary Kostman.
He died on December 29, 2012, in Trois-Rivières.[1] In 2016 Ariel Borremans, his son with Guilbeault, published the book Ma mère dans l'oeil de mon père, a collection of his photographs of Guilbeault throughout their marriage.[3]
References
- ^ a b c d e Jean-François Nadeau, "Décès du photographe Guy Borremans". Le Devoir, January 2, 2013.
- ^ Maria Topalovich, And the Genie Goes To...: Celebrating 50 Years of the Canadian Film Awards. Stoddart Publishing, 2000. ISBN 0-7737-3238-1. pp. 61-63.
- ^ Aubert, Antoine (October 27, 2016). "Luce Guilbeault: le bel hommage d'un fils à sa mère" [Luce Guilbeault: the beautiful homage of a son to his mother]. canoe.ca (in French). Quebecor.
External links
- Guy Borremans at IMDb
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1963–1978
- Donald Wilder and Guy Borremans (1963)
- Stan Brede and John Spotton (1964)
- Francis Chapman, Christopher Chapman and Jean-Claude Labrecque (1965)
- Jean-Claude Labrecque and Georges Dufaux (1966)
- Gilles Gascon and Grahame Woods (1967)
- Georges Dufaux and Bernard Gosselin (1968)
- Réo Grégoire and Tony Ianzelo (1969)
- Bernard Chentrier (1970)
- Michel Brault (1971)
- Michel Brault (1972)
- Donald Wilder (1973)
- no award (1974)
- Paul Van der Linden (1975)
- Richard Leiterman (1976)
- Pierre Mignot (1977)
- Miklós Lente (1978)
1980–2011
- John Coquillon (1980)
- Michel Brault (1981)
- Richard Leiterman (1982)
- Michel Brault (1983)
- Pierre Mignot (1984)
- Pierre Mignot (1985)
- François Protat (1986)
- Pierre Mignot (1987)
- Guy Dufaux (1988)
- Peter Suschitzky (1989)
- Guy Dufaux (1990)
- Peter James (1991)
- Peter Suschitzky (1992)
- Alain Dostie (1993)
- Paul Sarossy (1994)
- Thomas Burstyn (1995)
- Peter Suschitzky (1996)
- Paul Sarossy (1997)
- Alain Dostie (1998)
- Paul Sarossy (1999)
- André Turpin (2000)
- Pierre Gill (2001)
- Paul Sarossy (2002)
- Allen Smith (2003)
- Paul Sarossy (2004)
- Giles Nuttgens (2005)
- Pierre Gill (2006)
- Peter Suschitzky (2007)
- Gregory Middleton (2008)
- Pierre Gill (2009)
- André Turpin (2010)
- Jean-François Lord (2011)
2012–present
- Nicolas Bolduc (2012)
- Nicolas Bolduc (2013)
- André Turpin (2014)
- Yves Bélanger (2015)
- André Turpin (2016)
- Nicolas Bolduc (2017)
- Sara Mishara (2018)
- Norm Li (2019)
- Maya Bankovic (2020)
- Sara Mishara (2021)
- Sara Mishara (2022)
- Jared Raab (2023)
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