A History of Artists' Film and Video in Britain

A History of Artists' Film and Video in Britain

by David Curtis
A History of Artists' Film and Video in Britain

A History of Artists' Film and Video in Britain

by David Curtis

eBook

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Overview

In recent years the use of film and video by British artists has come to widespread public attention. Jeremy Deller, Douglas Gordon, Steve McQueen and Gillian Wearing all won the Turner Prize (in 2004, 1996, 1999 and 1997 respectively) for work made on video. This fin-de-siecle explosion of activity represents the culmination of a long history of work by less well-known artists and experimental film-makers. Ever since the invention of film in the 1890s, artists have been attracted to the possibilities of working with moving images, whether in pursuit of visual poetry, the exploration of the art form's technical challenges, the hope of political impact, or the desire to re-invigorate such time-honoured subjects as portraiture and landscape. Their work represents an alternative history to that of commercial cinema in Britain - a tradition that has been only intermittently written about until now. This major new book is the first comprehensive history of artists' film and video in Britain. Structured in two parts ('Institutions' and 'Artists and Movements'), it considers the work of some 300 artists, including Kenneth Macpherson, Basil Wright, Len Lye, Humphrey Jennings, Margaret Tait, Jeff Keen, Carolee Schneemann, Yoko Ono, Malcolm Le Grice, Peter Gidal, William Raban, Chris Welsby, David Hall, Tamara Krikorian, Sally Potter, Guy Sherwin, Lis Rhodes, Derek Jarman, David Larcher, Steve Dwoskin, James Scott, Peter Wollen and Laura Mulvey, Peter Greenaway, Patrick Keiller, John Smith, Andrew Stones, Jaki Irvine, Tracy Emin, Dryden Goodwin, and Stephanie Smith and Ed Stewart. Written by the leading authority in the field, A History of Artists' Film and Video in Britain, 1897-2004 brings to light the range and diversity of British artists' work in these mediums as well as the artist-run organisations that have supported the art-form's development. In so doing it greatly enlarges the scope of any understanding of 'British cinema' and demonstrates the crucial importance of the moving image to British art history.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781838714161
Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing
Publication date: 07/25/2019
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 320
File size: 102 MB
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About the Author

David Curtis is Senior Research Fellow at the AHRB British Artists' Film&Video Study Collection, Central Saint Martins, University of the Arts London. From 1977 to 2000 he was responsible for artists' film at the Arts Council of Great Britain. In 2003-4 he curated Tate Britain's largest-ever show of artists' film and video, A Century of Artists' Film in Britain. He was involved in the London Filmmakers' Co-op in the late 1960s and ran the cinema at both the Drury Lane and Robert Street (IRAT) Arts Laboratories. His book Experimental Cinema (1970) was one of the first books to survey the international film avant-garde.
David Curtis is an expert in artists' film and he has written widely on the subject, including London's Arts Labs and the Avant-garde of the 1960s (2020) and A History of Artists' Film&Video in Britain (BFI, 2006). From 1977 to 2000 he was responsible for artists' film at the Arts Council of Great Britain and in 2003-4 he curated Tate Britain's 'A Century of Artists' Film in Britain'.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments
Introduction
Artists
Economics
PART ONE
1.1: Artists
The Film Society
Little Magazines
Internationalism and Festivals
Schooling Artists
The London Filmmakers Co-op
Into the Gallery
Video as Video
The 1990s
1.2: Institutions
Sponsored Films
Museums and Collections
Post-War Recovery
Experimental Film Fund
The Arts Council
The BFI
Funders and Broadcasters
PART TWO
2.1: Film and Fine Art
The Camera
Landscape
Portrait
Still Life
Collage
Pop Art
Absurd
Psychedelic
Sculptors' Films
Abstraction
Figurative Animation
2.2: Narrative: Fiction, Documentary, Polemic
'Studies in Thought'
1920s Amateurs
Grierson's Avant-Garde
War
Post-War Revival
Free Cinema
Ambitious Narrative
Work
The Production of Meaning
Image and Voice
2.3: Expanded Cinema and Video Art
Film as Film
Conceptual Art and Early Installations
Video Art and Television
Expanded Cinema
Other Structures
Gidal's Legacy
Later Installations
2.4: Politics and Identity
Sexual Liberation?
Feminism
New Romantics
Identity
The Body
Social Space
Conclusion
Index

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From the Publisher

Winner of the 2008 Kraszna-Krausz Award for the Best Moving Image Book. For more information about this prize, see the website: http://www.kraszna-krausz.org.uk/

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