Posted on Wednesday, July 5, 2017
The Art Directors Guild (ADG, IATSE Local 800) and the American Cinematheque will present a special double-header screening of The Draughtsman’s Contract (1982) and Prospero’s Books (1991) in tribute to British director, screenwriter and cinematic genius Peter Greenaway Sunday, July 30, at the Egyptian Theatre. The evening will feature a discussion that explores the creative legacy of Greenaway between The Draughtsman’s Contract’s cinematographer, Curtis Clark ASC, and production designer Thomas A. Walsh ADG/USA. This double billing concludes the 2017 ADG Film Society Screening Series entitled “Production Design: Legacy, Pageantry & Artistry.”
“Greenaway is among the most ambitious and controversial filmmakers of his era. His artistic genius incorporates imaginative avant-garde cinematic visuals as he pushes the limits of production design, set design, lighting and storytelling,” said Walsh. “He turned out several impressive experimental films before springing on the post-modern art-film world and launching to the forefront of the global film community.”
Greenaway is a British painter turned filmmaker. The Draughtsman’s Contract, his first conventional feature length film, was his critical breakthrough and received much acclaim as a stylish and beautifully rendered murder mystery set on a rural English country estate in 1694. In the film, an artist (Anthony Higgins) is hired to draw landscapes for a wealthy couple, and with his meticulous detail, the young man’s art unwittingly captures evidence of foul play. Greenaway creates an elegant, multi-layered puzzle that goes way beyond a simple “whodunit” to explore class and sexual politics.
Prospero’s Books is Greenaway’s highly imaginative and magical retelling of Shakespeare’s The Tempest, starring Sir John Gielgud. In the film, an exiled magician finds an opportunity for revenge against his enemies until his daughter (Isabelle Pasco) falls in love with his chief rival’s son (Mark Rylance). Greenaway’s portrayal of the classic play is among his most dazzlingly visual films with its remarkable innovative use of choreography, animation and digitally manipulated imagery. Prospero’s Books was his most experimental feature using an “electronic paint box” which allowed Greenaway to fill the screen with elaborate progressions of double exposures and illusive overlays.
Trained as a painter, Greenaway’s avant-garde films are noted for the influence of Renaissance, Baroque and Flemish painting. The Falls (1980), a documentary set in the future, was his feature debut. Greenaway made his American debut with The Cook, the Thief, His Wife and Her Lover (1989). He then returned to television with M is for Man, Music, Mozart and Darwin, among many others. His current projects include multimedia installations involving the original paintings of Rembrandt's Night Watch in Amsterdam, da Vinci’s Last Supper in Milan, and the Veronese Marriage at Cana in Venice Films. Currently in production are Walking to Paris, Food for Love and the films in the Eisenstein trilogy Eisenstein Abroad. Greenaway also creates live cinema by combining different film scenes with the music of a live DJ.
All screenings start at 5:30 PM. To learn more and purchase tickets, please visit:
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