In his interviews, Peter Greenaway infamously claims that we have never seen films, only literature or theatre put on screen. He, being a painter himself, mostly characterises his construction of film-narrative as image-centred, a position in opposition to that of traditional plot-centred movies based on verbal narration. He wanted to make a cinema of ideas and not of plots, trying to use the same aesthetics as painting, which always paid great attention to formal devices of structure and the composition of framing (Woods 18). Not only is there a competitive relationship between the plot and the visual narration, but in his films the mediums used also vary. This contributes to the multi-layered structures of his movies, which are not limite...
Covering television, cinema, visual art, and virtual digital spaces, this collection of articles off...
Este artículo se propone reexaminar la filmografía de Peter Greenaway, en particular su aclamada The...
The chapter focusses on the performative production of acclaimed British director Peter Greenaway. I...
In his interviews, Peter Greenaway infamously claims that we have never seen films, only literature ...
ABSTRACT - In 1911, Ricciotto Canudo labeled the cinema as the Seventh Art and claimed that it was s...
Within his cinematic works, British filmmaker, painter, curator, and multi-media artist Peter Greena...
In The Tulse Luper Suitcases trilogy – Part 1 – The Moab Story (2003); Part 2 – From Vaux to the Sea...
In an attempt to exemplify Peter Greenaway's fascination with heterotopias, alternative organisatio...
International audiencePeter Greenaway’s 1991 Prospero’s Books is still today a tantalizing film whic...
An artwork does not obliterate the traces of its making. In the contemporary technological context s...
As early as 1997, long before the publication of Henry Jenkins’s theory on media convergence, Peter ...
This is the final version. Available on open access from the Open Library of Humanities via the DOI ...
The Baby of Mâcon (1993), a film by Peter Greenaway is studied in this work which aims at investigat...
How are we to characterise the art of Peter Greenaway, especially in the light of his new project Tu...
Peter Greenaway has established himself as one of British cinema's most distinctive film-makers. Yet...
Covering television, cinema, visual art, and virtual digital spaces, this collection of articles off...
Este artículo se propone reexaminar la filmografía de Peter Greenaway, en particular su aclamada The...
The chapter focusses on the performative production of acclaimed British director Peter Greenaway. I...
In his interviews, Peter Greenaway infamously claims that we have never seen films, only literature ...
ABSTRACT - In 1911, Ricciotto Canudo labeled the cinema as the Seventh Art and claimed that it was s...
Within his cinematic works, British filmmaker, painter, curator, and multi-media artist Peter Greena...
In The Tulse Luper Suitcases trilogy – Part 1 – The Moab Story (2003); Part 2 – From Vaux to the Sea...
In an attempt to exemplify Peter Greenaway's fascination with heterotopias, alternative organisatio...
International audiencePeter Greenaway’s 1991 Prospero’s Books is still today a tantalizing film whic...
An artwork does not obliterate the traces of its making. In the contemporary technological context s...
As early as 1997, long before the publication of Henry Jenkins’s theory on media convergence, Peter ...
This is the final version. Available on open access from the Open Library of Humanities via the DOI ...
The Baby of Mâcon (1993), a film by Peter Greenaway is studied in this work which aims at investigat...
How are we to characterise the art of Peter Greenaway, especially in the light of his new project Tu...
Peter Greenaway has established himself as one of British cinema's most distinctive film-makers. Yet...
Covering television, cinema, visual art, and virtual digital spaces, this collection of articles off...
Este artículo se propone reexaminar la filmografía de Peter Greenaway, en particular su aclamada The...
The chapter focusses on the performative production of acclaimed British director Peter Greenaway. I...