Miranda July
Photo: Elizabeth Weinberg
Miranda July
Miranda July is a filmmaker, artist, and writer. Her videos, performances, and web-based projects have been presented at sites such as the Museum of Modern Art, the Guggenheim Museum, and in two Whitney Biennials. July wrote, directed, and starred in “Me and You and Everyone We Know” (2005), which won a Special Jury Prize at the Sundance Film Festival and four prizes at the Cannes Film Festival, including the Caméra d’Or. “Me and You and Everyone We Know” has been released as a BluRay/DVD by the Criterion Collection. In 2011, she wrote, directed, and starred in her sophomore feature “The Future.” She also co-starred in Josephine Decker’s “Madeline’s Madeline” (2018). In 2019, July directed the Sleater-Kinney video for “Hurry On Home.” July’s feature film “Kajillionaire”, produced by Plan B and Annapurna and starring Evan Rachel Wood, Richard Jenkins, Debra Winger, and Gina Rodriguez, was theatrically released in late 2020 to favorable reviews. In 2021, she narrated the documentary “Fire of Love,” directed by Sara Dosa.
Her fiction has appeared in The Paris Review, Harper’s, and The New Yorker; her collection of stories “No One Belongs Here More Than You” (Scribner, 2007) won the Frank O’Connor International Short Story Award and has been published in twenty countries. She wrote a collection of essays and photographs titled “It Chooses You” (McSweeney’s, 2011). Her novel “The First Bad Man” became an immediate bestseller and was named one of the New York Times 100 Notable Books of 2015. Her book “Miranda July” (Prestel, 2020) is a complete retrospective of all her work to date, narrated by more than eighty friends and collaborators. Her new novel, “All Fours” (Riverhead, 2024), is a New York Times bestseller and was described as “Beyond-dazzling” in a star review from Booklist.In 2000, July created the seminal participatory website “Learning to Love You More” with artist Harrell Fletcher, a companion book was published in 2007 (Prestel); the work is now in the collection of the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art. She designed “Eleven Heavy Things,” an interactive sculpture garden, for the 2009 Venice Biennale; it was also presented in Union Square in New York (2010) and by MOCA in Los Angeles (2011). Her email-based artwork “We Think Alone” (commissioned by Magasin 3, Stockholm) launched in July 2013 with nearly 100 thousand subscribers and continued through November 2013. Other participatory artworks include “New Society” (a performance), “Somebody” (a messaging app created with Miu Miu), and an interfaith charity shop in Selfridges department store in London, presented by Artangel. In late 2019, she collaborated with Margaret Qualley on a performance art piece that took place on Instagram over multiple posts. In 2020, she collaborated with Jay Benedicto to create “Services,” a limited-edition book sculpture. Her first solo museum exhibition titled “Miranda July: New Society” presented by Fondazione Prada, is at the Milan Osservatorio from March 7, 2024, to October 14, 2024. The show spans three decades of her work, from the early 1990s until the present.Raised in Berkeley, California, July lives in Los Angeles.
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