5 resultados para Pictorial modernism

em Repositório Científico do Instituto Politécnico de Lisboa - Portugal


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António Ferro foi uma personalidade fulcral para a cultura do século XX em Portugal, sendo as suas obras reflexo do tempo que viveu e das ideias que defendeu, estando quer estas, quer as de sua mulher, Fernanda de Castro, recheadas de referências à indumentária e as modas que se iam sucedendo e que muitas vezes descreveu. ABSTRACT - António Ferro was a main personality of the cultural scene of the twentieth century in Portugal. His works reflect the time he lived and ideas that defended, being either it, or those written by his wife, Fernanda de Castro, filled with references to clothing and the fashions that were succeeding and that he often described.

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ABSTRACT: The American metacinema which, by tradition, is narrative but extremely formulaic favours the story above the telling. No man contributed more to alter this state of affairs than Orson Welles, whose cinematic practice exalted the filmic enunciation and linked it more explicitly to the narrative intentions of the creator, making it obvious that metanarrative is synonymous with metacinema. With Citizen Kane (1941), in particular, the cinema was made more disnarrative, as meant by French writer/director Alain Robbe–Grillet, well ahead of Modernism. The fragmented narration, the temporal convolutions, a tendency for paradox and the interpretative obstacles all come together to anticipate the serial practice of David Lynch in his last four features. Structuring the films in segments which constitute different but complementary versions of the same events, Lynch manages to express the director’s enunciation along with the narration of the characters, reinforcing the role of the telling in the midst of the story. In INLAND EMPIRE (2006) the use of mise-en-abyme as a way of duplicating stories and tellers further increases the objective and complicates what is clearly the reign of the puzzle or mind-game film. In the footsteps of Welles, Lynch contributed for an outbreak of metanarrative / metacinematic crossover indie films closer to the European aesthetic practice but still very much within the American narrative tradition.

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A batalha é geralmente considerada como um dos géneros mais característicos da literatura organística ibérica do Barroco. Paradoxalmente é, de todas os géneros da música de órgão peninsular, aquele acerca do qual se possuem menos dados sobre a prática interpretativa. A informação que se pode obter a partir da generalidade dos textos seiscentistas sobre música de tecla, aplica-se sobretudo à interpretação das obras contrapontísticas, deixando em aberto muitas questões relacionadas com o carácter eminentemente descritivo das batalhas. Por outro lado, é também interessante verificar que algumas das mais convincentes interpretações de batalhas que actualmente escutamos são aquelas que resultam de uma leitura menos literal do texto musical e de uma intenção clara de sublinhar o seu carácter descritivo. A informação extraída da Batalha famoza (presente no manuscrito MM 43 da Biblioteca Pública Municipal do Porto) e apresentada ao longo deste texto parece pôr em evidência o apelo que a execução das batalhas fazia a um esforço interpretativo por parte do organista, não só através da utilização de recursos específicos do órgão ibérico, mas também mediante o emprego de uma ornamentação mais livre que pusesse em evidência o carácter descritivo daquele género musical.

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Trabalho de Projecto submetido à Escola Superior de Teatro e Cinema para cumprimento dos requisitos necessários à obtenção do grau de Mestre em Teatro - especialização em Teatro e Comunidade.

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One of the filmic trends which has been neglected by the Academy Awards is the metacinema, which for practical purposes I will consider to be a cross between the complexities of the self-reflexive cinema (highly connoted with modernism) and the Hollywood Film (the classical films about the urge to ‘make it’ in Hollywood). Indeed, these films have always existed and some, as Sunset Boulevard (Billy Wilder, 1950, USA) and Mulholland Dr. (David Lynch, 2001, FRA/USA), have even made it to the ceremony, but were, predictably, defeated in the main categories, by other more ‘serious’ or less self-reflexive products. The United States has always insisted on not revealing the tricks of the trade while, ironically, generating films that deal with this theme, in order to cater to the curiosity of the metacinema-inclined spectator. For this reason such films are usually about the universe of cinema but not its medium, at least not in a way that discloses the operations of the technical apparatus. Why are these films not viewed as serious enough and artistic enough to be awarded Oscars by the Academy in the categories of Best Picture, Best Director, Best Screenplay, and Best Cinematography? Are they being discarded for the same reasons that comedy and musicals usually are? Or are they being punished for being too unveiling? Or is the industry going for commercial products that can easily be pushed on a global scale and make a profit?