Vidéos : Cindy Sherman(En savoir plus sur Cindy Sherman) |
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Cindy Sherman: Transformations (excerpt, artnewyork.org)A three minute excerpt from ART/new york program number 58, "CINDY SHERMAN: Transformations (c) 2002" by Paul Tschinkel. For more information and many other titles on contemporary art, visit: www.artnewyork.org Or our online store: stores.ebay.com
Cindy Sherman: Characters | Art21 "Exclusive"Episode #139: Cindy Sherman reveals how dressing up in character began as a kind of performance and evolved into her earliest photographic series such as "Bus Riders" (1976), "Untitled Film Stills" (1977-1980), and the untitled rear screen projections (1980). In self-reflexive photographs and films, Cindy Sherman invents myriad guises, metamorphosing from Hollywood starlet to clown to society matron. Often with the simplest of means—a camera, a wig, makeup, an outfit—Sherman fashions ambiguous but memorable characters that suggest complex lives lived out of frame. Shermans investigations have a compelling relationship to public images, from kitsch (film stills and centerfolds) to art history (Old Masters and Surrealism) to green-screen technology and the latest advances in digital photography. Learn more about Cindy Sherman at: www.art21.org CREDITS | Producer: Ian Forster, Wesley Miller & Nick Ravich. Interview: Susan Sollins. Camera: Joel Shapiro. Sound: Roger Phenix. Editor: Joaquin Perez. Artwork Courtesy: Cindy Sherman. Video: © 2011, Art21, Inc. All rights reserved.
Cindy Sherman Part 1An academic documentary about the photographer Cindy Sherman
Cindy Sherman: Mannequins & Masks | Art21 "Exclusive"Episode #087: Surveying some of the props shes used over the years, including masks and mannequin parts, artist Cindy Sherman demonstrates how she uses stand-ins to gauge the focus and composition of her images. In self-reflexive photographs and films, Cindy Sherman invents myriad guises, metamorphosing from Hollywood starlet to clown to society matron. Often with the simplest of means—a camera, a wig, makeup, an outfit—Sherman fashions ambiguous but memorable characters that suggest complex lives lived out of frame. Shermans investigations have a compelling relationship to public images, from kitsch (film stills and centerfolds) to art history (Old Masters and Surrealism) to green-screen technology and the latest advances in digital photography. Learn more about Cindy Sherman: www.art21.org VIDEO | Producer: Wesley Miller & Nick Ravich. Interview: Susan Sollins. Camera: Joel Shapiro. Sound: Roger Phenix. Editor: Lizzie Donahue & Paulo Padilha. Artwork Courtesy: Cindy Sherman.
Cindy Sherman Doll Clothes (1975)ubu.com Super-8 black and white film transferred to video, silent 2min, 22sec installation One of the First Cindy Sherman's super-8 film,"Doll Clothes" has not been viewed since 1975, the year it was made. It comically crosses Duchamp's Nude Descending a Staircase with animated paper dolls in a sly, funny and clever precursor to the concerns that became signature elements in Sherman's remarkable body of photographic work. Purchased with assistance from the American Patrons of Tate, using funds raised by a group of private collectors including Kathy and Richard S Fuld Jr, Monica Kalpakian, and Steve and Lisa Tananbaum 2008 "Sherman's 1975 animated short Doll Clothes, is among the pieces that bring Sherman's early exploration of gender and identity into focus." -- Paul Ha and Catherine Morris
Cindy Sherman: Fashion | "Exclusive" | Art21Episode #143: Commissioned by French Vogue to create a fashion editorial featuring clothes from the Spanish design house Balenciaga, artist Cindy Sherman discusses the first time she used a digital camera to make pictures, ultimately creating different versions of images for the magazine and for herself. In self-reflexive photographs and films, Cindy Sherman invents myriad guises, metamorphosing from Hollywood starlet to clown to society matron. Often with the simplest of means—a camera, a wig, makeup, an outfit—Sherman fashions ambiguous but memorable characters that suggest complex lives lived out of frame. Shermans investigations have a compelling relationship to public images, from kitsch (film stills and centerfolds) to art history (Old Masters and Surrealism) to green-screen technology and the latest advances in digital photography. Learn more about Cindy Sherman at: www.art21.org CREDITS | Producer: Ian Forster, Wesley Miller & Nick Ravich. Interview: Susan Sollins. Camera: Joel Shapiro. Sound: Roger Phenix. Editor: Joaquin Perez. Artwork Courtesy: Cindy Sherman. Video: © 2011, Art21, Inc. All rights reserved.
Guest of CIndy Sherman - TrailerGuest of Cindy Sherman takes an eye-opening look at what happens when a skeptical outsider finds himself romantically involved with the ultimate insider. Paul HO became a fixture of the New York art scene in the 1990s with his public access show GalleryBeat. Armed with a video camera, he attended art gallery openings, amusing some with his candid, witty assessments of their work, but also winning many fans. Among the latter was Cindy Sherman, the press-shy artist who is internationally acknowledged as one of the worlds most gifted and significant visual talents. Cindy invites Paul to her studio for a series of exclusive interviews and through these videotaped encounters, he gains unprecedented insight into her artistic process and a romantic relationship blossoms. Their initial bliss ends when Paul finds himself wracked with anxiety about his own personality becoming subsumed by his role as Cindy's guest at the celebrity-studded openings and dinners she regularly attends. Filmed over 15 years and including interviews with a veritable who's who of the art and entertainment world (including Ingrid Sischy, John Waters, Robert Longo, Carol Kane, David Furnish, Danny DeVito, and Molly Ringwald), the film paints a vivid picture of the New York art scene that is also a witty, illuminating look at celebrity, male anxiety, and art.
Interview Magazine - Cindy Shermanwww.cindysherman.com
Cindy Sherman at Metro PicturesMetro Pictures Nov-Dec 2008. Cindy Sherman dresses for success, donning a range of disguises that masterfully evoke the absurdity of the 'too much money, too little taste' crowd.
Cindy Sherman filmed in 1986 from State of the ArtThis is from an episode of State of the Art, a series of documentaries about the visual arts in the 1980s. To buy the DVD, please go to www.illuminationsmedia.co.uk Filmed in Europe, the United States and Australia in 1985-6, the six programmes feature many key artists including -- in addition to Cindy Sherman -- Andy Warhol, Jean-Michel Basquiat, Antony Gormley, Hans Haacke, Eric Fischl and Joseph Beuys. The films also explore the intellectual context of the time and the ideas of post-modernism. The series was originally seen on Channel 4 in Britain, and then shown in more than 20 countries.
Untitled Film Still | Cindy Sherman | Wilshire & FairfaxUntitled Film Still (1977-1980/2008) Billboard at Wilshire Blvd and Fairfax Ave.
Barbara Kruger & Cindy Shermana presentation about two photograhers
Guest of Cindy Sherman - "Famous Girlfriend Syndrome"Paul HO on WFMU
Cindy Sherman Part 2An academic documentary about the photographer Cindy Sherman
Cindy ShermanA media arts class video about Cindy Sherman A MEDIA ARTIST
Cindy Sherman Artist Report - Final VersionMy artist report for my Conceptual Art class. She said we could do a video, so I did. There is real research in here somewhere, but aside from that. You may learn something from watching this. Before you comment this with a "that was dumb" think about what you are watching. You are watching my report for class. A REPORT FOR CLASS. just a heads up. Ps all the pics that arent of cindy sherman are random googles. old lady, little kids, the families... all random. This is the final version I presented today 11/27 in class.
"Guest of Cindy Sherman" Movie ClipDocumentary by Paul HO and Paul Donahue
Art:21 | Cindy Sherman | Season 5 Preview (October 2009)This video is excerpted from the Season 5 episode "Transformation" premiering on Wednesday, October 21, 2009 at 10pm (ET) on PBS (check local listings). Whether satirizing society or reinventing icons of literature, art history, and popular culture, the artists in Transformation—Paul McCarthy, Cindy Sherman, and Yinka Shonibare MBE—inhabit the characters they create and capture the sensibilities of our age. In self-reflexive photographs and films, Cindy Sherman invents myriad guises, metamorphosing from Hollywood starlet to clown to society matron. Often with the simplest of means—a camera, a wig, makeup, an outfit—Sherman fashions ambiguous but memorable characters that suggest complex lives lived out of frame. Learn more about Cindy Sherman: www.art21.org
"Guest of Cindy Sherman" Movie ClipClip from the film by Paul HO and Tom Donahue
Guest of Cindy Sherman - "Paul"Introduction to Paul HO and Gallery Beat Television.
Cindy of a Thousand Lives ~ Billy Bragg (1991)Billy Bragg wrote this hauntingly beautiful song which was inspired by American photographer Cindy Sherman. All the images used in this video montage are of Ms. Sherman. Bragg talked about this song and the inspiration behind it in the May 2009 issue of Q Magazine - "It was an obsession that started on an American tour sometime in the mid-80s. I got into buying postcards, to paste onto the wall in my flat back home. Pictures of mythic figures like Paul Robeson, classic portraits such as Max Yavno's Muscle Beach, 1949 and Lewis Hine's iconic Powerhouse Mechanic. Many portrayed musical heroes like Eddie Cochran. Some were just odd, like the 3D-effect Astronaut's Prayer, which pictured the Apollo spacecraft floating above the Moon's surface accompanied by Albrecht Durer's Praying Hands. These ephemeral objects were to be found everywhere - on sunny afternoons in radical bookshops and late at night in redneck truck stops. There were 6"x4" pieces of Americana that I hoped would offer insights as to where I might fit into this vibrant culture that threatened to engulf me. Of all the pieces of of this jigsaw that I collected, there was one that both intrigued and disturbed me. It was a colour photograph, dark and side-lit, of a child with black, curly hair, human eyes and ears and an upturned pig's snout. The child's face was smeared with dirt, maybe blood, and as it gazed out distractedly at the viewer, it was placing something into its mouth. What stuff of nightmares was this ...
Cindy Sherman, Transformations: The Making of a DocumentaryMarch 21, 2007 Cindy Sherman, Transformations: The Making of a Documentary - Professor Paul Tschinkel As an undergraduate, Paul Tschinkel studied painting at the Yale School of Art and Architecture, then, as a member of the New York art scene, pursued video as an art form early in its conception. Since then, he has trained his camera on friends and colleagues in the art world and produced documentaries that have become important accounts of contemporary art and valuable resources for scholars and students of recent art. His video studies capture defining and cutting-edge works by such iconic names as Warhol, Lichtenstein, Basquiat, Koons, Sherman, and many others. CINDY SHERMAN (1954- ) creates innovative work that explores the place of women in society. With photographs she takes of herself, in which she impersonates various fictitious characters, she challenges us to think about our perceptions as she shows us numerous roles women can have in our world, such as house wife, sex symbol, lover, victim. Over the past 25 years, she has produced a much acclaimed body of work that depicts the female persona as seen through the filter of the media. In his lecture, Professor Tschinkel will screen his documentary that covers Sherman's first show of color photographs at Metro Pictures in 1981 and a 2000 show, also at Metro Pictures. Included is a rare 1981 interview with Sherman and recent interviews with Helene Winer, her dealer, and Peter Schjeldahl, art critic for the The New ...
Cindy Sherman Part 3An academic documentary about the photographer Cindy Sherman
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