|
Henry Moore: London 1940-42The Series of Shelter Drawings This film features the explicitly figurative imagery of Moore's famous wartime bomb-shelter drawings, depicting the heads, torsos and limbs of the people of London taking refuge from air-raids in the tunnels of the city's subway system. The figures are likened, through the artist's distortions, to the pebbles, hillsides and valleys of an idyllic, peaceful Britain, which seems so far from urban, war-devastated London, yet with which they have some strange communion through their burrowing into the bowels of the earth. In his benign and essentially rural humanism, in the face of modern wars and the modern world they heralded, Moore is close to others of his generation working in other media: the poets Auden or Betjeman, and the composer Britten. There is no narration. `A revelation: a strength and force disclosed, a mastery made clear' Sunday Times, London `... pictures of exceptional quality. Silently the film demonstrates that great art can easily dispense with commentary, and the value of the drawings is thus enhanced.' UNESCO `... captures these drawings and their detail with great mastery ... the editing is outstanding. With the aid of music which is very impressive ... the film has succeeded in reproducing the essential feature of these drawings, which is not dependent on the representation of terror itself ... but solely on the greatness and dignity of man...' German Center for Film Classification `It's uncanny, Anthony Roland, the master of the montage and dissolve ... The film melts moment by moment into a living and breathing homage to the people of London.' Michigan Education Journal For more information see section 20 and section 32 |
| ||||||||||||||
|
Availability: Available worldwide Additional information Order number: 580
|
![]() Henry Moore Reclining figure
| |||||||||||||||
|
|
|||||
| sales@rolandcollection.com |
© 1998-2008 The Roland Collection
& Pira Intl. |