Institutional Memory: The Early Films of Frederick Wiseman
Legendary documentarian Frederick Wiseman passed away, aged 96, in February 2026. The filmmaker leaves behind him a monumental body of work: a collection of dozens of films made over the course of more than 50 years; films which serve as a cornerstone in the history of non-fiction cinema and an expansive chronicle of modern American life itself.
This short season showcases three early works from the filmmaker; a period when Wiseman explored the inner workings of public, private and commercial institutions. This fascination with the systems, structures and powers that organise daily human life would go on to become one of the defining themes of Wiseman’s wide-ranging filmography.
Clearly on show here is Wiseman’s distinctive filmmaking style – hugely influential, often imitated, but unmistakably the filmmaker's own. Wiseman’s cinema is one of deceptive simplicity. Presented without voiceover or interviews, his films are skilfully-crafted illusions of mere “observation.” Despite this, they are innately dramatic. And what’s more: the sense of an organising intelligence behind the stories – exacting and penetrative, compassionate and empathetic – is never far away.