Monk in Pieces is a 2025 documentary film directed by Billy Shebar and co-written by Shebar and David C. Roberts. The film explores the life and work of composer and interdisciplinary artist Meredith Monk, charting her career from early critical resistance to later international recognition. Now in her seventh decade of creative work, Monk reflects on her artistic legacy and the future of her performance practice. The documentary includes interviews with artists such as David Byrne and Björk, who discuss MonkâÂÂs influence on their work.
The film premiered at the 75th Berlin International Film Festival on February 18, 2025, screening in the Panorama section. It was nominated for Best Documentary/Essay Film at the 39th Teddy Awards.
The film posits that Meredith Monk â composer, performer, and interdisciplinary artist â is one of the great artistic pioneers of the modern era, yet her profound cultural influence is largely unrecognized. Monk in Pieces takes the form of a mosaic, mirroring the structure of MonkâÂÂs own work as it explores her vocabulary of sound and imagery.
As a female artist in the male-dominated downtown arts scene of the 1960s and âÂÂ70s, Monk had to fight for recognition and resources. Many early reviews in the New York Times were unappreciative, some vicious: âÂÂA disgrace to the name of dancing,â wrote Clive Barnes, and âÂÂso earnestly strange in a talented little-girl way,â wrote John Rockwell. Yet as her celebrated contemporary, Philip Glass, says in an interview, "she, among all of us, was â and still is â the uniquely gifted one."
In the film's final chapters, Monk faces mortality and warily entrusts her opera, ATLAS, to opera director Yuval Sharon and singer Joanna Lynn-Jacobs for a new production at the Los Angeles Philharmonic. The ATLAS performance marks the first time in sixty years that Monk has not directed and performed in her own music theater works.
The film grew out of director Billy ShebarâÂÂs 30-year relationship with Monk and her work. In 1990, ShebarâÂÂs wife, Katie Geissinger, joined the cast of MonkâÂÂs ATLAS, and has performed in all of MonkâÂÂs major works since then.
Shebar developed the film with his former producing partner David Roberts. Production was funded by a major grant from the National Endowment for the Humanities. Additional support was provided by the Steven Spielberg-backed Jewish Story Partners.
From 2021 to 2024, Shebar filmed interviews with Monk, David Byrne, Björk and others; rehearsals for MonkâÂÂs latest work, IndraâÂÂs Net; and scenes from her daily life in the Tribeca loft where she has lived and worked since 1972. During that time, he also explored MonkâÂÂs extensive archive at the New York Public Library for the Performing Arts as well as her private archive.
The development and making of the film, in Shebar's words:
Monk in Pieces had its world premiere at the 75th Berlin International Film Festival on February 18, 2025 in the Panorama Section. It was nominated for Best Documentary/Essay Film at the 39th Teddy Awards.
The film had its international premiere at the Thessaloniki Documentary Festival in March 2025 in the Open Horizons section, and has since screened at international festivals including the 49th Hong Kong International Film Festival, IndieLisboa, Melbourne International Film Festival, and Doc'n Roll Festival in London, where it won the Jury Award for Documentary of the Year 2025. Monk in Pieces premiered in North America at Seattle International Film Festival, and also screened at DC/DOX and DOC NYC.
In June 2025, Zeitgeist Films and Kino Lorber acquired distribution rights to the film. Zeitgeist Films released Monk in Pieces in theaters in over 30 cities, beginning with the IFC Center in New York City on July 25, 2025 with Meredith Monk in person. Kino Lorber released the film digitally and on DVD and Blu-ray in the fall of 2025.
Reviews of the film were generally positive. Stephen Dalton, writing in The Film Verdict, called it âÂÂan engaging, relatable, very human story about an uncompromising female artist battling to keep her unique vision alive.â Filmmaker MagazineâÂÂs Lauren Wissot wrote that the film âÂÂdeftly reflects MonkâÂÂs own approach to her iconoclastic art, forcing us to listen with a different ear, to look closer not away.âÂÂ
Writing in Kino-Zeit, Andreas Köhnemann observed: âÂÂThe scenes in which Björk describes her intense feelings and amazement are among the numerous beautiful moments of Monk in Pieces.â Amber Wilkinson of Screen Daily described the film as a âÂÂrich tapestry of MonkâÂÂs music⦠soaring vocalisations that swoop and loop across her three-octave range.âÂÂ
The Moveable FestâÂÂs Stephen Saito called it âÂÂthe best celebration that could be offered for an artist who found so much in her own voice.âÂÂ
Writing for IndieWire, David Ehrlich said "It can be hard to pinpoint why, or even how, Billy ShebarâÂÂs Monk in Pieces is so much better and more involving than the average documentary about the life of an artistâ¦. [The film] transcends its format because itâÂÂs less the story of an artist than it is the story of artistry itself â of what it does, of why we need it, and of how it survives in the face of a world that loves discovery almost as much as it hates anything it hasnâÂÂt already heard or seen before."
Deadline Hollywood featured the film in its âÂÂFor the Love of Docsâ series of virtual screenings, writing that it âÂÂcaptures [Monk's] astonishing range of gifts.âÂÂ
Hyperallergic named Monk in Pieces one the âÂÂ10 Best Art Films of 2025,â calling it "a vibrant mosaic of her life and work that both honors her prolific output and celebrates her singular vision.âÂÂ