A short made by Joseph Cornell in the late 1930s– An ode to imagination, travel and literature. In true Cornellian fashion, the film borrows footage from, among other films, a Burton Holmes travelogue; Sightseeing tours of Dutch Marken and agrarian Asia therefore become the dream of a boy at a bookstall.Read More »
Joseph Cornell
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Joseph Cornell – Bookstalls (1938)
1931-1940ExperimentalJoseph CornellUSA -
Joseph Cornell – Children’s Party (1938)
1931-1940ExperimentalJoseph CornellUSAQuote:
“Cornell combines vaudeville and animal acts, circus performers, children eating and dancing, science demonstrations, mythical excerpts, and crucial freeze-frames of faces into a timeless structure, totally unconcerned with our usual expectations of “montage” or cinematic progression. It’s a delight to anyone whose soul has not been squashed by the heavy dictates of Art” —Larry JordanRead More » -
Joseph Cornell – Rose Hobart (1936)
Joseph Cornell1931-1940ExperimentalUSAQuote:
The first and greatest American Surrealist, Joseph Cornell is best known for his boxes. The best of his mysterious assemblages of dime-store tchochkes and paper ephemera in little hand-made cabinets perfectly realize the elusive sublime at the heart of Surrealism, while avoiding the juvenile theatrics of his European colleagues.Read More » -
Joseph Cornell – The Aviary (1955)
Joseph Cornell1951-1960ExperimentalUSAQuote:
A collaboration between Joseph Cornell and Rudy Burckhardt, Aviary is an impression of Union Square. The location held a particular fascination for Cornell who wanted to establish a foundation for artists and art therapy there. In the film, he treats the park as an outdoor aviary. – P. Adams SitneyRead More » -
Joseph Cornell – Jack’s Dream (1938)
1931-1940ExperimentalFantasyJoseph CornellUSAQuote:
Jack’s Dream sees a frightful outside force enter and threaten the domestic space. Jack, the faithful dog, attempts to protect it and its inhabitants by chasing away the intruder. But his progress is blocked or retarded at several points (he views the scene through a window, a treacherous chair falls over) – evoking the familiar dream sensation of impossibly heavy feet, and suddenly multiplying obstructions. – Michael PigottRead More » -
Joseph Cornell – Angel (1957)
1951-1960ExperimentalJoseph CornellShort FilmUSAQuote:
The image of the fountain returns in Angel (1957; color; 3 min.), one of Cornell’s most poignant films. Dedicated, as Cornell said, to his friend, the painter Pavel Tchelichew, who had recently died, the film offers a rather moving meditation on mortality. Comprised of static shots of a statue of an angel and a fountain in a Flushing cemetery, the films elegant and quiet close-ups against an expanse of blue sky of the statues solid yet partly decaying marble brilliantly capture a sense both of the earthly and time-bound and the unworldly and eternal. The films stylistically innovative dissociation of moving image from moving subject (a technique Cornell also largely deploys in “Centuries of June” from the same year) anticipates by several years the daring cinematic experiments of Andy Warhol’s Sleep (1963) and Empire (1964), foregrounding duration, in contrast to movement, as cinemas true subject.Read More »