Experimental Filmmaking


Download Experimental Filmmaking PDF/ePub or read online books in Mobi eBooks. Click Download or Read Online button to get Experimental Filmmaking book now. This website allows unlimited access to, at the time of writing, more than 1.5 million titles, including hundreds of thousands of titles in various foreign languages.

Download

Experimental Filmmaking


Experimental Filmmaking

Author: Kathryn Ramey

language: en

Publisher: CRC Press

Release Date: 2015-07-30


DOWNLOAD





Experimental Filmmaking emerges out of a deep and abiding love of celluloid and artisanal media practices and a personal exploration of the field of avant-garde and experimental film, animation and video produced since the beginnings of cinema. Although there have been many critical and historical books on the subject, with the exception of zines and hand-published volumes, there has never been a comprehensive instructional manual on experimental processes. This book will introduce film students and professional filmmakers alike to various methods of experimental animation, film and video production that involve material interventions into the normative process of the medium while offering brief introductions to artists and their works.

Women's Experimental Cinema


Women's Experimental Cinema

Author: Robin Blaetz

language: en

Publisher: Duke University Press

Release Date: 2007-10-16


DOWNLOAD





This volume offers introductions to the work of fifteen avant-garde American women filmmakers.

Experimental Filmmaking and Punk


Experimental Filmmaking and Punk

Author: Rachel Garfield

language: en

Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing

Release Date: 2021-10-21


DOWNLOAD





Just as punk created a space for bands such as the Slits and Poly Styrene to challenge 1970s norms of femininity, through a transgressive, strident new female-ness, it also provoked experimental feminist film makers to initiate a parallel, lens-based challenge to patriarchal modes of film making. In this book, Rachel Garfield breaks new ground in exploring the rebellious, feminist punk audio-visual culture of the 1970s, tracing its roots and its legacies. In their filmmaking and their performed personae, film and video artists such as Vivienne Dick, Sandra Lahire, Betzy Bromberg, Ruth Novaczek, Sadie Benning, Leslie Thornton, Abigail Child and Anne Robinson offered a powerful, deliberately awkward alternative to hegemonic conformist femininity, creating a new “punk audio visual aesthetic”. A vital aspect of our vibrant contemporary digital audio visual culture, Garfield argues, can be traced back to the techniques and forms of these feminist pioneers, who like their musical contemporaries worked in a pre-digital, analogue modality that nevertheless influenced the emergent digital audio visual culture of the 1990s and 2000s.