Ian Wiblin and Anthea Kennedy have been making films together since 2000. Their three feature-length experimental documentaries variously concerned with history, place and memory, Stella Polare (2006), The View from Our House (2013) and Four Parts of a Folding Screen (2018), were all premiered at IFF Rotterdam, where Kennedy also received a Hubert Bals Award. Since 2010 they have been making work, informed by archival documents and inherited memories, based around events impacting one family, that of one of the film-makers, during the Nazi era in Berlin. These films foreground the contemporary city in ways that connect the past to experience of the present. In addition to these longer works, Kennedy and Wiblin have made a number of short films and installation pieces.
Ian Wiblin studied graphic design, photography and film-making at the London College of Printing. He obtained a PhD from the Royal College of Art in London. In addition to his film work, he has exhibited work internationally as a photographer over many years, exhibiting internationally, most recently at the Sprengel Museum Hanover.
Ian Wiblin's personal profile at the University of South Wales
- 2025 - Alarm Notes | 123 min | documentary
- 2025 - Sound of a Shadow | 2.5 min | experimental
- 2024 - Fenster | 5.5 min | documentary
- 2021 - Yr 0 (V2) | 4.5 min | experimental
- 2021 - Nassau | 1 min | documentary
- 2018 - Four Parts of a Folding Screen | 83 min | documentary
- 2013 - The View from Our House | 76 min | documentary
- 2011 - Video Eye | 1 min | experimental
- 2009 - For Children | two screen looped installation
- 2008 - Face of an Angel | 6 min | experimental
- 2006 - Stella Polare | 76 min | documentary
- 2002 - Bag of a Thousand Pockets | 8 min | documentary
- 2001 - Elegy | 3 min | experimental
