Essential Deren
Author : Maya Deren
Publisher : McPherson & Company
Page : 261 pages
File Size : 29,85 MB
Release : 2005-01
Category : Performing Arts
ISBN : 9780929701653
Author : Maya Deren
Publisher : McPherson & Company
Page : 261 pages
File Size : 29,85 MB
Release : 2005-01
Category : Performing Arts
ISBN : 9780929701653
Author : Maya Deren
Publisher :
Page : 70 pages
File Size : 29,40 MB
Release : 1972
Category : Art
ISBN :
Author : Sarah Keller
Publisher : Columbia University Press
Page : 297 pages
File Size : 34,56 MB
Release : 2014-12-09
Category : Performing Arts
ISBN : 0231538472
Maya Deren (1917–1961) was a Russian-born American filmmaker, theorist, poet, and photographer working at the forefront of the American avant-garde in the 1940s and 1950s. Influenced by Jean Cocteau and Marcel Duchamp, she is best known for her seminal film Meshes of the Afternoon (1943), a dream-like experiment with time and symbol, looped narrative and provocative imagery, setting the stage for the twentieth-century's groundbreaking aesthetic movements and films. Maya Deren assesses both the filmmaker's completed work and her numerous unfinished projects, arguing Deren's overarching aesthetic is founded on principles of incompletion, contingency, and openness. Combining the contrasting approaches of documentary, experimental, and creative film, Deren created a wholly original experience for film audiences that disrupted the subjectivity of cinema, its standards of continuity, and its dubious facility with promoting categories of realism. This critical retrospective reflects on the development of Deren's career and the productive tensions she initiated that continue to energize film.
Author : Bill Nichols
Publisher : Univ of California Press
Page : 356 pages
File Size : 46,5 MB
Release : 2001-10-31
Category : Literary Collections
ISBN : 9780520227323
Regarded as one of the founders of the postwar American independent cinema, Maya Deren was a poet, photographer, ethnographer and filmaker. These essays examine Deren's writings, films, and legacy from a variety of perspectives.
Author : Lauren Rabinovitz
Publisher : University of Illinois Press
Page : 276 pages
File Size : 36,4 MB
Release : 2003
Category : Experimental films
ISBN : 9780252071249
In detailing the relationship of three women filmmakers' lives and films to the changing institutions of the post-World War II era, Lauren Rabinovitz has created the first feminist social history of the North American avant-garde cinema. At a time when there were few women directors in commercial films, the postwar avant-garde movement offered an opportunity. Rabinovitz argues that avant-garde cinema, open to women because of its marginal status in the art world, included women as filmmakers, organizers, and critics. Focusing on Maya Deren, Shirley Clarke, and Joyce Wieland, Rabinovitz illustrates how women used bold physical images to enhance their work and how each provided entrée to her subversive art while remaining culturally acceptable. She combines archival materials with her own interviews to show how the women's labor and films, even their identities as women filmmakers, were produced, disseminated, and understood. With a new preface and an updated bibliography, Points of Resistance simultaneously demonstrates the avant-garde's importance as an organizational network for women filmmakers and the processes by which women remained marginal figures within that network.
Author : Maya Deren
Publisher : Documentext
Page : 350 pages
File Size : 17,65 MB
Release : 1953
Category : History
ISBN : 9780914232636
This is the classic, intimate study, movingly written with the special insight of direct encounter, which was first published in 1953 by the fledgling Thames & Hudson firm in a series edited by Joseph Campbell. Maya Deren's Divine Horsemen is recognized throughout the world as a primary source book on the culture and spirituality of Haitian Voudoun. The work includes all the original photographs and illustrations, glossary, appendices and index. It includes the original Campbell foreword along with the foreword Campbell added to a later edition.
Author : Christophe Philippe
Publisher : Blue Snake Books
Page : 116 pages
File Size : 18,83 MB
Release : 2006
Category : Self-Help
ISBN : 9781583941683
"In this book, the author explains and demonstrates the swift and powerful self-defense and fighting skills of this martial art originally developed for the Israel Defense Forces by Imi Sde-Or (Lichtenfeld)"--Provided by publisher.
Author : Jonathan Romney
Publisher :
Page : 264 pages
File Size : 19,3 MB
Release : 1997
Category : Literary Criticism & Collections
ISBN :
The nineties have been a turbulent and changing period for cinema. The film critic author created this collection of writings on film, from art house to multiplex, and featuring his take on prominent directors.--Adapted from book jacket.
Author : Stan Brakhage
Publisher : Documentext
Page : 0 pages
File Size : 39,11 MB
Release : 2018-05
Category : Motion pictures
ISBN : 9781620540275
Throughout a career spanning half a century, Stan Brakhage--the foremost experimental filmmaker in America, and perhaps the world--wrote controversial essays on the art of film and its intersections with poetry, music, dance, and painting. Published in small circulation literary and arts journals, they were gathered later into such books as Metaphors on Vision and Film at Wit's End. Beginning in 1989, and for a decade thereafter, Brakhage wrote the essays in Telling Time as an occasional column for Musicworks, a Toronto quarterly. Ostensibly about the relation of film to music, they soon enlarged to explore primary concerns beyond film, including Brakhage's aesthetic theories based on the phenomenology of human cognition. In these essays he is as brilliant discussing Gertrude Stein or romantic love as he is on child psychology, astronomy, and physiology, all the while teasing out vital correspondences between the arts, and upending conventional ideas of how we perceive. His investigations of other artists are models of sympathetic intuition and generosity. Above all, he shares his theories, discoveries and understandings in the spirit of establishing a groundwork for many varieties of human liberation. His prose is filled with flashes of insight, elaborated metaphors, playful elisions, shorthand puns and neologisms, personal digressions, surprising epiphanies, leaps of faith, affronts to authority. He appeals to the imagination, and invites us to a more profound and personal experience of art.
Author : Herbert Barth
Publisher :
Page : 0 pages
File Size : 22,35 MB
Release : 1975
Category :
ISBN :