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Narrated by Ed Harris and produced by the National Gallery of Art in conjunction with the exhibition. Joan Miro was passionately committed to his native Catalonia and its struggle for independence from Spain. But he also longed to escape into artistic freedom. This tension drove his art in strange and beautiful ways. Miro was by turns influenced by Dada, surrealism, and abstract expressionism. His changes in styles and subjects also reflected the horrific events of the Spanish Civil War, World War II, and the dictatorship of Franco. This documentary includes original footage shot in Barcelona and Catalonia, interviews with scholars, images of Miro's paintings and sculpture, and archival footage and photos.
| Catalog Number: MC-1308 |
Type: Short |
Genre: Documentary, Art / Artist, Political / Social, Modern Culture |
| Copyright: 2012 |
Length: 0:32:02 |
Format:
DVD Region: 0 |
| TV System: NTSC |
ISBN: |
UPC/EAN: 880198130891 |
| Label: National Gallery of Art |
Rating: Not Rated |
This program is closed captioned
This is a Microcinema Exclusive title.
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Exhibition:
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Films In Compilation
Joan Miro: The Ladder of Escape directed by
,
Art / Artist,
2012,
HD,
Color,
Dolby Digital 2.0,
00:32:02
Joan Miró was passionately committed to his native Catalonia and its struggle for independence from Spain. But he also longed to escape into artistic freedom. This tension drove his art in strange and beautiful ways. Miró was by turns influenced by Dada, surrealism, and abstract expressionism. His changes in styles and subjects also reflected the horrific events of the Spanish Civil War, World War II, and the dictatorship of Franco. This documentary includes original footage shot in Barcelona and Catalonia, interviews with scholars, images of Miró’s paintings and sculpture, and archival footage and photos.
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Barclona: What Miró Saw--a visual tour. directed by
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00:02:42
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Miró's Squigles, Blobs, and Beasts-- a look at the amusing abstract and realistic imagery in his paintings directed by
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00:01:18
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2012-05-23 Audiophile Audition By John Sunier
This short film was made to accompany a major touring exhibition from the National Gallery, which had the same subtitle. It is a retrospective survey of the politically-engaged art of Joan Miro – probably among the most easily-recognized of all modern artists, and reproduced everywhere – not just in books.
Miro was in strong opposition to the fascist government of Franco, but unlike Picasso – who left Spain – he exiled himself to the island of Mallora, where his wife was from. He had a strong Catalan nationalism and it is reflected in his early paintings of his parents’ farm at Mont-roig del Camp, some distance from where he was born in Barcelona. It was here that he developed a symbolism and nationalism that he would have thruout his career.
In 1924 he join the Surrealists in Paris and was felt by their leader Breton to be the most surrealistic of them all. He had a symbolic, schematic language of little forms and designs which became increasingly abstract. Some of his favorite subjects were child-like images of women, birds and the moon. Events of the Spanish Civil are seen in some of his paintings. His The Sun, the Moon and One Star – later renamed Miro’s Chicago – is in the Loop area of Chicago, across the street from the Chicago Picasso sculpture. Later in life Miro wanted to “annihilate painting” and influenced by Jackson Pollack and deconstructivist approaches dripped paint on the canvases and even walked on them.
The film has archival footage and photos shot in Catalonia, interviews with figures in the art world, and closeups of many of Miro’s paintings. Ed Harris is the narrator. |
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George Bellows
MC-1310, 2012
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Narrated by Ethan Hawke and produced by the National Gallery of Art in conjunction with the exhibition, George Bellows. Arriving in New York in 1904, George Bellows (1882 –1925) depicted America on the move. In a twenty-year career cut short... more >
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J.M.W. Turner - A National Gallery Production
MC-729, 2007
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One of the greatest landscape painters of all time, Joseph Mallord William Turner (1775 – 1851) rendered the subtle effects of light and atmosphere in revolutionary ways. This documentary chronicles the rise of Turner, a barber's son who... more >
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No screenings found
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