Rayon Philosophie et théorie, esthétique
Day of ciné-musique

Fiche technique

Format : Cartonné
Nb de pages : 115 pages
Poids : 400 g
Dimensions : 12cm X 20cm
EAN : 9782970039891

Day of ciné-musique


Collection(s) | ShushLarry
Paru le
Cartonné 115 pages
paintings Christian Pellet
Tout public

Quatrième de couverture

Day of cine-musique

Ciné-musique is a perhaps fancied form that the authors have continued to invent since 1986. By now, in this text, it is a combination of movie music, discussions of cinema that is musical in feeling but has no actual music going on, and focuses on Hollywood... Ciné-musique is the refracted movie-light which we allow to reflect in prose and painting - another version of Bergman's « magic lantern ». The Doctors of Lausanne are back !

Biographie

Patrick Mullins was born in 1951 in Alabama. He graduated from The Juilliard School with his degrees in piano. He studied under Nadia Boulanger in Paris in 1970-1972, and started a career as a pianist and a composer, which he suddenly interrupted in the late 1980s. Since then, in voluntary seclusion in his Greenwich Village apartment, he began a vast literary and poetic project, including autobiographical elements, a sort of portrait of contemporary America, whose cultural decline is for him a source of enchantment and despair. In between the two « Ciné-Musiques » with Christian Pellet, he produced World Trade Aporia, a CD of piano music with a text after Jacques Derrida, and a concert at New York's Steinway Hall in 2003.


Christian Pellet, born in New York in 1964, worked as a psychologist for several international organisations before he became a portrait painter and a publisher. He is currently Secrétaire de la Collection Le savoir suisse. Deep Tropical Ciné-Musique (art&fiction, Lausanne and New York, 2000) was the first trace of his collaboration with writer and musician Patrick Mullins. Day of Ciné-Musique presents recent portraits inspired by contemporary American drama and its 1950 to 1970 Hollywood cinematographic versions. The association of these images and the text sheds a particular light on the vision a painter can have regarding fiction.

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