Arts, Music, Graphic, Theatre, Cinema - (2024)

Related Papers

Doina Rusti, Monica Ilie-Prica, Sergiu Anghel

SUMMARY Sergiu ANGHEL, professor, National University of Drama and Film "I.L. Caragia- le” (UNATC), Bucharest - Editorial: Text and Its Worlds – Texture and Its Lights Alex IORDĂCHESCU, Producer Elephant Film -De l’importance du cinéma en tant qu’outil d’exploration de la conscience Andrei C. ȘERBAN, Ph. D c. „Lucian Blaga” University, Sibiu - La Pianiste ou l’homme-objet. Haneke et Jelinek : entre image et texte Sedat YILDIRIM, Ph. D c. Tallinn University, Estonian Institute of Humanities - Deconstructing The Musical Genre In ‘The Commitments’ (1991) Monica ILIE-PRICA, Ph.Dc., National University of Political Studies and Public Administration, Bucharest - Rediscovering the treasures of the Romanian cine- matographic art of the 1930s through the Cinema magazines. II. Cultural Studies Greek imaginary in contemporary forms Linda Maria BAROS, Linda Maria BAROS, Ph.D, Paris-SorbonneUniversity, - Traductions visuelles du modèle vénusien Diana NECHIT, Ph. D, “Lucian Blaga”University, Sibiu- Théâtralité et ciné- matographicité dans « La Vénus à la fourrure » de Roman Polanski Efstratia OKTAPODA, professor, Université de Paris IV-Sorbonne (France) - Pour une sociologie de la chanson et de la danse.Le théâtre d’ombres de Karaghiozis

View PDF

European Journal of Arts № 2 2015

Elshad Aliyev

Abstract: The conception and development of information-communication technologies had a strong impact on the sphere of art in XX century. Art experts make attempts to analyze modern tendencies in the development of artistic process dynamic. Over the last years, we had published works in which a lot of attention was paid to the issues of mutual influence and interdependence of technological novices and art. The author considers the peculiarities of impact of Motion Capture technology on the dynamic of development of artistic process in film art.

View PDF

2019 •

ewely sandrin

Art Style | Art & Culture International Magazine is an open access, biannual, and peer–reviewed online magazine that aims to bundle cultural diversity. All values of cultures are shown in their varieties of art. Beyond the importance of the medium, form, and context in which art takes its characteristics, we also consider the significance of socio-cultural, historical, and market influence. Thus, there are different forms of visual expression and perception through the media and environment. The images relate to the cultural changes and their time-space significance—the spirit of the time. Hence, it is not only about the image itself and its description but rather its effects on culture, in which reciprocity is involved. For example, a variety of visual narratives—like movies, TV shows, videos, performances, media, digital arts, visual technologies and video game as part of the video's story, communications design, and also, drawing, painting, photography, dance, theater, litera...

View PDF

REWIND | Italia, Early Video Art in Italy: I primi anni della videoarte in Italia

2016 •

Laura Leuzzi

View PDF

Viewpoint: REWIND, artists' video in the first decades

2009 •

Stephen Partridge

The Modern Language Review

The Art of Commedia: A Study in the 'Commedia dell'arte', 1560-1620, with Special Reference to the Visual Records

2007 •

Linda Carroll

View PDF

Edited by Luisella Farinotti, Barbara Grespi and Barbara Le Maître

2015 •

For a long time, comparisons of cinema and photography have been predominantly a question of contrast, both of their forms and their ways of seeing. This special issue of Cinéma&Cie reverses the perspective, by addressing some of the fundamental spaces of convergence and coexistence between the two languages. While they have always been somewhat present in the history of the two arts (not only in chronophotography, but also astronomic photography, photographic series, and still photography), the photocinematic forms have become particularly relevant in the archaeology of post-media culture that has characterised much scholarship lately. What tools should we employ to study these confluences today? Is it possible to perceive overlapping images also in strictly cinematic or photographic works? From this perspective, the special issue deals with borderline authors, such as Jeff Wall; post-filmic aesthetics, such as the cinematic tableau vivant and innovative examples of contemporary, experimental audiovisual production.

View PDF

Alexandra Nicu, Monica Ilie-Prica

View PDF

2020 •

Stephan Schmidt-Wulffen

View PDF

Journal MAP - Media Archive Performance

Assembling a Work of Art An Annotated History of Fluxfilm No. 1

2021 •

Hanna B . Hölling

“What is Zen for Film?,” I was asked on the occasion of a preparatory meeting for Revisions, an exhibition to feature Zen for Film (1962–64), Nam June Paik’s “blank” film projection. Despite the many discussions that preceded the meeting, when it came to the question of what the main—and the only—artwork of this exhibition was, we felt as if we’d been left in the dark. Is Zen for Film an idea, a concept— or rather, an event, a performance, or a process? In its original form, Revisions: Zen for Film combined a research project, pedagogy, an exhibition, and an exhibition catalogue. Revised again in the following pages, Revisions is an exercise in slow looking. It questions the ambition of constructing the work with a fixed identity, a product that moves seamlessly from the studio to the world of dissemination, distribution, and display. Instead, Zen for Film will appear once again as an assemblage of people, things, and events, a vibrant materiality destined for a changeable future.

View PDF
Arts, Music, Graphic, Theatre, Cinema - (2024)

FAQs

What 4 elements must be included if theatre arts is to be called theatre arts? ›

Theatre is a collaborative art form which combines words, voice, movement and visual elements to express meaning.

What are the four elements of musical theatre? ›

Four Magical Elements of Musical Theatre (Songs, Spoken Dialogue, Acting, and Dance) Musical theatre is a theatrical performance that includes four major elements: songs, spoken dialogue, acting, and dance.

Who ________________ was known as the father of tragedy and the earliest writer of Greek tragedy whose plays still exist? ›

AESCHYLUS. The first great tragedian, Aeschylus, was born around 525 b.c.e. He produced his first dramas in 498, and he had his first victory in 484. We know he was still working in 458, when he produced his trilogy Oresteia.

What are the elements of drama? ›

The elements of drama are essential pieces to the structure of a drama or play. Aristotle's six elements include plot, characters, diction, thought, music, and spectacle.

What are the 4 basic form of theater? ›

There are four basic theatrical genres either defined, implied, or derived by or from Aristotle: Tragedy, Comedy, Melodrama, and Drama. Any number of theatrical styles can be used to convey these forms. A good working definition of "Style" is how something is done.

What are the 13 elements of theatre? ›

Role and character, relationships, situation, voice, movement, focus, tension, space, time, language, symbol, audience, mood and atmosphere.

What are the three basic elements of theatre? ›

  • Elements of Theater.
  • What are the basic elements of Theatre?
  • 1) Performers.
  • 2) Audience.
  • 4) Theater Space.
  • 6) Text.

What are the 3 basic elements of theatre to be produced? ›

Generally speaking, all theatrical productions have certain elements in common: the performer or performers, their acting in space (usually some sort of stage) and time (some limited duration of performance), and a producing process and organization.

What are 5 musical elements and definition? ›

Melody, harmony, rhythm, and form and the expressive elements of dynamics, tempo, and timbre (tone color). melody. An organized sequence of single notes.

What two types of permanent public playhouses began appearing around London? ›

There were two different types of playhouse in London during Shakespeare's time. There were outdoor playhouses, also known as 'amphitheatres' or 'public' playhouses, and indoor playhouses, also known as 'halls' or 'private' playhouses. These were very different theatres that attracted different types of audiences.

What is worn to identify character and to amplify the voice using a megaphone like apparatus inside? ›

Heavily coiffured and of a size to enlarge the actor's presence, the Greek mask seems to have been designed to throw the voice by means of a built-in megaphone device and, by exaggeration of the features, to make clear at a distance the precise nature of the character.

Which of the following led to the beginning of mass media and the popularization of ideas? ›

Johannes Gutenberg's invention of the printing press enabled the mass production of media, which was then industrialized by Friedrich Koenig in the early 1800s. These innovations led to the daily newspaper, which united the urbanized, industrialized populations of the 19th century.

What are the six parts of tragedy? ›

According to Aristotle, tragedy has six main elements: plot, character, diction, thought, spectacle (scenic effect), and song (music), of which the first two are primary.

What is a fractured narrative? ›

Some drama contains many stories and moves between them. This is called a fractured narrative. The BBC soap opera, EastEnders is an excellent example where various scenes play out between different characters with the action cutting between them.

What is the climax in drama? ›

A climax is when the tension within a scene builds to its highest point. It's the most exciting moment. An anti-climax is the release of tension. It happens after the tension has reached its highest point and then suddenly drops.

What is the element of theater art? ›

The Greek philosopher Aristotle defined the 6 elements of drama as: Plot, Character, Thought, Diction, Song, and Spectacle, making clear the multi-faceted nature of theater. While we may look at these through a 21st-century lens, the elements remain integral to theatrical performance.

What are the elements of theatre art form? ›

To sum up, the following are the major elements of theater:
  • 1) Performers.
  • 2) Audience.
  • 3) Director.
  • 4) Theater Space.
  • 5) Design Aspects (scenery, costume, lighting, and sound)
  • 6) Text (which includes focus, purpose, point of view,

What are the elements of performing arts? ›

It involves five basic elements: time, space, body, and presence of the artist, and the relation between the creator and the public.

What are the elements of drama and theatre arts? ›

The 6 Elements of Drama
  • Plot (“Mythos”)
  • Character (“Ethos”)
  • Thought (“Dianoia”)
  • Diction (“Lexis”)
  • Melody (“Melos”)
  • Spectacle (“Opsis”)
Dec 24, 2020

Top Articles
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Margart Wisoky

Last Updated:

Views: 5421

Rating: 4.8 / 5 (58 voted)

Reviews: 81% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Margart Wisoky

Birthday: 1993-05-13

Address: 2113 Abernathy Knoll, New Tamerafurt, CT 66893-2169

Phone: +25815234346805

Job: Central Developer

Hobby: Machining, Pottery, Rafting, Cosplaying, Jogging, Taekwondo, Scouting

Introduction: My name is Margart Wisoky, I am a gorgeous, shiny, successful, beautiful, adventurous, excited, pleasant person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.