Description
An important examination of fine art's impact upon filmmaking that grapples with the question of authenticity.
About the Author
Gillian McIver studied History at the University of Toronto, Canada, and completed a PhD in Art History and Cinema at the University of Roehampton, UK. She has lectured at Central St Martins, The National Film and Television School, and the University for the Creative Arts, UK. She is the author of Art History for Filmmakers (Bloomsbury, 2016).
Reviews
A thoughtful exploration of the relationship between art and cinema in the historical film, a relationship that McIver construes in terms of a tension between a quest for authenticity and realism and the desire to create an immersive world provoking intense emotional engagement, Art and the Historical Film: Between Realism and the Sublime (2022) provides a probing and remarkably wide-ranging analysis of the complex ways in which art has shaped the past for us. Grounding her discussion in the growing number of interdisciplinary studies on the relationship between art and cinema, McIver offers a fresh look at the different ways in which historical films like Girl with a Pearl Earring, Meek's Cutoff, The Baader-Meinhof Complex, The Mummy: The Night of Counting the Years, and Admiral adapt, transpose, invoke, evoke, or reference paintings by artists like Rubens, Albert Bierstadt, and Jacques-Louis David to communicate specific ideas about the past. * Temenuga Trifonova, Associate Professor of Cinema and Media Studies, York University, Canada *
Art and the Historical Film: Between Realism and the Sublime approaches a handful of historical films with a welcome focus on various ways that art history is reflected or incorporated in their cinematic rhetoric. From speculative biopics inspired by portraits to narratives based on historical record in which painterly precedents-quoted or invoked-provide a sense of authenticity, realism, sublimity, or spectacle, Gillian McIver thinks through a dialectic between art and cinema as it informs historical representation, sometimes surprisingly, as with The Baader Meinhoff Complex, a film that is not only set within historical memory but which hews closely to a journalistic account, depicting events well-known from mass media. The book offers a thought-provoking frame for contemplating the meanings and emotions with which art infuses historical narratives. * Susan Felleman, Professor of Art History and Film and Media Studies, University of South Carolina, USA *
Art and the Historical Film: Between Realism and the Sublime explores the dialogue between the painterly and the cinematic in a compelling selection of international films. This is a work of interdisciplinary ambition that expands the aesthetic vocabulary of art and historical representation in the cinema. Written in an accessible and engaging style, Gillian McIver's book reclaims the historical film image in all its complexity and appeal. * Belen Vidal, Reader in Film Studies, King's College London, UK, and author of Figuring the Past. Period Film and the Mannerist Aesthetic (2012) *
[The book's] close readings are perceptive and well informed, providing novel interpretations of the films and contributing to the book's larger theoretical goals. * Choice *
Book Information
ISBN 9781501384738
Author Dr Gillian McIver
Format Paperback
Page Count 280
Imprint Bloomsbury Academic USA
Publisher Bloomsbury Publishing Plc