PWT CONTENTS :

Similar documents
AUTOUR DE L ARGENT OR THE MAKING-OF «MONEY»

Product Safety Summary Sheet

Continuity and Montage

Continuity and Montage

What do you consider to be the more TRUTHFUL mode of documentary - Observational or Performative?

CALIFORNIA STATE UNIVERSITY, NORTHRIDGE DEPARTMENT OF CINEMA AND TELEVISION ARTS. CTVA 416: The Documentary Tradition Spring units #10815

live mixed documentary by Julia Sokolnicka

Experimental Modernism in City Symphony Films. Cecilia Mouat. The film medium that provides spectators with new experiences through the

Still from Ben Rivers and Ben Russell s A Spell to Ward Off the Darkness, 2013, 16 mm, color, sound, 98 minutes. Iti Kaevats.

Assay Creosote Extraction of Selected Posts from the 1958 Cooperative Test After 50 Years of Exposure as a Ground Contact Preservative

REGULATIONS of the 33 rd WARSAW FILM FESTIVAL, October, 2017

The First Hundred Instant Sight Words. Words 1-25 Words Words Words

Arnold D. Kates Film Collection

Editing. A long process!

Earle Ernst Finding Aid

CHAPTER 10 SOUND DESIGN

Q&A: Bomb Girls Executive Producer Janis Lundman on being a woman in the world of film and television

Integrated Skills in English ISE I

ARTE at a glance 11/12/2018

A Finding Aid to the Carrig-Rohane Shop Records, , in the Archives of American Art

KRZYSZTOF KIEŒLOWSKI FACULTY OF RADIO AND TELEVISION

3 Instruction Bulletin 5.41-EU

Media Card International Documentary Film Festival Amsterdam 14/25 November 2018, 31 st edition

LENNON, WEINBERG, INC.

VV 301 FILM STUDIES TYPES OF FILM. Prepared by: WAN FARHANAH BINTI WAN ISMAIL (PTSS,2012)

A Film Is A Film Is A Film by Eva von Schweinitz. Press Notes

1.3. The 25 th European Film Awards will be presented by the European Film Academy e.v. and EFA Productions ggmbh on 1 December 2012 in Malta.

Unit 3: Reading and Understanding in Arabic

Grand OFF World Independent Short Film Awards 13th edition, 25 Nov - 2 Dec 2019, Warsaw

The History of Early Cinema

Inventory of the Samuel Greene Papers,

Exploring film production roles

Motion Picture, Video and Television Program Production, Post-Production and Distribution Activities

Archon Cheat Sheet. Determine the accession number. Create the Archon Collection Manager record

Pudovkin's Films And Film Theory (Dissertations On Film) By Peter Dart

COMPONENT 2 Introduction to Film Movements: Silent Cinema Student Resource

The Power Filmmaking Kit

Screen Champions 2011 Cineclub members


Cinema Vérité & Direct Cinema

Marshall Library of Economics. Jean-Gustave Courcelle Seneuil Papers

University of British Columbia Library Rare Books and Special Collections. Finding Aid - W.G. Swan fonds (RBSC-ARC-1540)

Editing. Editing is part of the postproduction. Editing is the art of assembling shots together to tell the visual story of a film.

International Documentary Film Festival Amsterdam

The Poetry of Phrases Foundation Lesson

RECOMMENDATION ITU-R BR.716-2* (Question ITU-R 113/11)

The Pipe Book By Alfred Dunhill

[PDF] Introduction To Jazz History (6th Edition)

The process of animating a storyboard into a moving sequence. Aperture A measure of the width of the opening allowing light to enter the camera.

Volume 3.2 (2014) ISSN (online) DOI /cinej

Episode 3, 2005: Szyk Drawings Glendale, California

The french new wave - What is and why does. it matter?

A Finding Aid to the Ludwig Sander Papers, , in the Archives of American Art

Screening Loans Registration Form

LCM Assembly Techniques...

Power Words come. she. here. * these words account for up to 50% of all words in school texts

3M No Polish Jacketed SC/APC Connector

Programat P310. Economical firing performance. Top-quality results. The user-friendly furnace. Now with new OSD display

SCREEN THEORY (RTF 331K, UNIQUE # 08100) Fall 2012 University of Texas at Austin

PAINTING CINEMAPH C OT O OGR M APHY IDIGITALCILLUSTRASTIONAMATEUR

Thank you for choosing Yamaha. We

Sir George Lee ( ) Papers

29. INTERNATIONALES FILMFEST EMDEN - NORDERNEY RULES & TERMS

Arthur Young Correspondence

the payoff of this is the willingness of individual audience members to attend screenings of films that they might not otherwise go to.

Film-Philosophy

HDCVI Camera User s Manual

Champions of Invention. by John Hudson Tiner

CONTENTS ALL ABOUT THE CHANNEL ALL ABOUT THE PROGRAMMES

Section I. Quotations

A Film by Sergei Loznitsa

A Finding Aid to the Robert Ebendorf Papers, , bulk , in the Archives of American Art

This presentation does not include audiovisual collections that are in possession

FISCHLI & WEISS. Swiss artists Peter Fischli and David Weiss have been collaborating since 1979.

BOOK NOW FOLLOW US bfi.org.uk/southbank Tickets from 6. bfi.org.uk

Inventory of the Joe Engel Papers,

Assessment Schedule 2015 French: Demonstrate understanding of a variety of extended written and/or visual French texts (91546)

The Power of Pictures: Early Soviet Photography, Early Soviet Film Presented at the Jewish Museum in New York September 25, 2015 February 7, 2016

Finding Aid for the Rudolph Holzapfel Collection About Edward Gordon Craig,

SmartMix Manual V5350A

No online items

workbook Listening scripts

Instrukcja montażu. FLEX LED Neon Instalacja

Memorial Middle School 2017 Beginner Band Information. Eric Schaefer, Music Director

HANS-PETER FELDMANN An exhibition of art

Documentary Transforms into Video Installation via the Processes of Intertextuality and Détournement

QUESTIONNAIRE. For Applicants for Errors and Omissions Insurance COMPANY NAME, IF ANY: State of incorporation or formation: NAME OF PRODUCTION:

James Stephens: An Inventory of His Collection at the Harry Ransom Center

!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! VCE_SAR_Annotation_Kinnersley_2013. VCE Studio Arts! Unit 3! Annotation

Memorial Middle School 2018 Beginner Band Information. Eric Schaefer, Music Director

BIRD 2. Owners manual MADE IN SWEDEN

MODULE No. 14: Age of Documents

As a young man trying to figure his way in the world of music, Miklós Rózsa (a

REGULATIONS FOR THE 31st EUROPEAN FILM AWARDS (EFAs)

THE MACHINE WHICH MAKES EVERYTHING DISAPPEAR A film by Tinatin Gurchiani An Icarus Films Release

FIAT/IFTA Television Study Grant. The Intervision Song Contest. Dean Vuletic

A Cinema Guild Release. Cousin Jules. A film by Dominique Benicheti

Ref.: Tel.: Fax: January 2014

Entertainment. 1 of 6 4/9/18, 9:50 AM. Weather Traffic Markets. Jobs. Skip to Main Window. News Crime Weather Traffic Blogs Video Sports.

MARCH 23, 2016 NATIONAL MUSEUM OF AMERICAN HISTORY, ARCHIVES CENTER FUNDED BY THE COUNCIL ON LIBRARY AND INFORMATION RESOURCES

Transcription:

WEEKLY TRANSMISSION N 11 THURSDAY 17 MARCH 2016 WARSAW, 1931 : THE MAKING-OF CREOSOTE, JORIS IVENS DOCUMENTARY MOVIE Lots n 3 + n 4 PWT-11 2016 CONTENTS : Joris Ivens, Germaine Krull, Eli Lotar and Jean Dréville III Creosote and Meat Smoking V Jean Dréville documenting Joris Ivens documentary, 24 prints 1-24

n 5, detail The e-bulletin presents articles as well as a selection of books, albums, photographs and ancient documents as they have been handed down to the actual owners by their creators and by amateurs from past generations. The physical descriptions, attributions, origins, and printing dates of the books and photographs have been carefully ascertained by collations and through close analysis of comparable works. The books and photographs consigned from all around the world are presented in chronological order. It is the privilege of ancient and authentic things to be presented in this fashion, mirroring the flow of ideas and creations. Prices in euros, Paypal is accepted. N 11 : The Making-of Creosote

Weekly Transmission 11 III 17 March 2016. Joris Ivens, Germaine Krull, Eli Lotar and Jean Dréville During the Thomas Walther Object Photo exhibition at MOMA, the projection of Joris Ivens 15 minutes documentary Regen (Rain), 1929, made still a sensation. Germany, 1920 s : young Dutch Joris Ivens had been sent by his family to Berlin to study the very new cinematographic techniques and technologies. He meet young photographer Germain Krull during an artist party organised by Arthur Lehning and Annie Grimmer in a Spring evening of 1923. They will share professional, intimate or legal lives for twenty years, but not political ideas: as biographer Hans Schoots notes, «whereas Ivens still had to move toward Communism, Krull had already become a dissident». Germaine followed her Dutch lover to Amsterdam but was not welcomed by the family, they stayed together with frequent separations until Germaine had an affair with a woman in 1926. And when Joris and Germaine got married in Paris XVIII, on April 2nd 1927, it was all by «convenience» to help her get a passport. She was becoming famous among artists and had chosen one of her assistants as lover, Eli Lotar, a young man with such a perfect profil that «it almost hurt to look at him» (Hans Schoots, Living Dangerously: A Biography of Joris Ivens, partly online). Germaine Krull and Eli Lotar working together... on a movie, Paris, c. 1930 (from an unpublished negative)

Weekly Transmission 11 IV 17 March 2016. Joris Ivens brought general attention of the avant-garde with two documentaries: De Brug (The Bridge) (1928) and Regen (Rain) (1929), those ones which went on view during MOMA exhibition Object Photo last year. «A search for a visual language, The Bridge is based on a systematic analysis of the movements of a railway bridge in Rotterdam that can be raised and lowered to let a boat pass underneath. He chose this subject because it repeated the same action over and over, and would be the same every time he could snatch an hour from work (and a few metres of film) to go and shoot it. The film announces its agenda from the very start, with a presentation of three different views of the camera itself, as if in a technical drawing. The result of the film club experience was that young filmmakers saw the great possibilities that the cinema had to offer, without being encumbered by conventions or genres. They had strong feelings about what was and was not good filmmaking, but almost no sense of anything being out of bounds. In a world where newsreels were made by cameramen standing a respectful distance from the event in question, it was obvious that a better film could be made by using close-ups, by moving along with the action, as in fiction films or in the purely abstract... The most celebrated of the commissioned films from this period is Philips Radio (1931), a portrait of work in the Philips factory, from the blowing of glass for valves and assembly of complete radios, to the research laboratories and the typing pool. Its French title, Symphonie industrielle, is more apt. Not only does it recall the city symphony films of directors such as Walter Ruttman, but it also captures the extraordinary soundtrack that was constructed for the film, combining noises of work, music, radio broadcasts and pure abstraction.the most celebrated of the commissioned films from this period is Philips Radio (1931), a portrait of work in the Philips factory, from the blowing of glass for valves and assembly of complete radios, to the research laboratories and the typing pool. Its French title, Symphonie industrielle, is more apt. Not only does it recall the city symphony films of directors such as Walter Ruttman, but it also captures the extraordinary soundtrack that was constructed for the film, combining noises of work, music, radio broadcasts and pure abstraction» (sensesofcinema). In 1929, Ivens was invited in the Soviet Union and started to travel there in 1930 and to work with Sergei Eisenstein, Vsevolod Pudovkin, and Dziga Vertov who became his friends. He could not be present full time for the less known commissioned film Creosote, and ask young jounalist Jean Dréville to assist him in Polish Silesia and Warsaw, and Krull and Lotar to help in Paris. We present here twenty-four set photographs by Jean Dréville documenting the Making of Creosote. They are all unique vintage prints.

Weekly Transmission 11 V 17 March 2016. Creosote and meat smoking... «Creosote was first discovered in its wood-tar form in 1832 by Carl Reichenbach, when he found it both in the tar and in pyroligneous acids obtained by a dry distillation of beechwood. Because pyroligneous acid was known as an antiseptic and meat preservative, Reichenbach did experiments with dipping meat in a dilute solution of distilled creosote. He found that the meat was dried without undergoing putrefaction and had attained a smoky flavor. This led him to reason that creosote was the antiseptic component contained in smoke, and he further argued that the creosote he had found in wood tar was also in coal tar, animal tar, and amber tar in the same abundance as in wood tar... Soon after it was discovered and recognized as the principle of meat smoking, woodtar creosote became used... Even before creosote as a chemical compound was discovered, it was the chief active component of medicinal remedies in different cultures around the world. Historically, coal-tar creosote has been distinguished from what was thought of as creosote proper the original substance of Reichenbach's discovery and referred to specifically as "creosote oil". But because creosote from coal-tar and wood-tar are obtained from a similar process and have some common uses, they have also been placed in the same class of substances, with the terms "creosote" or "creosote oil" referring to either product. Wood-tar creosote is a colourless to yellowish greasy liquid with a smoky odor, produces a sooty flame when burned, and has a burned taste. It is non-buoyant in water, with a specific gravity of 1.037 to 1.087, retains fluidity at a very low temperature, and boils at 205-225 C. When transparent, it is in its purest form. Dissolution in water requires up to 200 times the amount of water as the base creosote... Wood-tar creosote is to some extent used for wood preservation, but it is generally mixed with coal-tar creosote, since the former is not as effective. Commercially available preparations of "liquid smoke", marketed to add a smoked flavor to meat and aid as a preservative, consist primarily of creosote and other constituents of smoke.[46] Creosote is the ingredient that gives liquid smoke its function; guaicol lends to the taste and the creosote oils help act as the preservative...» (English Wikipedia, online)

Weekly Transmission 11 1 17 March 2016. Circle of JEAN DRÉVILLE (1906-1997). «Diener commande, Dréville obéit, Joris regarde», The Making of Creosote, Poland, 1931. Vintage silver print, 125x180 mm, annotated in pencil by Dréville «Diener commande, Dréville obéit, Joris regarde», verso. 200 euros Verso of n 1

Weekly Transmission 11 2 17 March 2016. Circle of JEAN DRÉVILLE (1906-1997). «Dréville, Ivens and a Diplomate», Warsaw, 1931. Vintage silver print, 125x180 mm, annotated in pencil by Dréville, verso. 400 euros

Weekly Transmission 11 3 17 March 2016. Circle of JEAN DRÉVILLE (1906-1997). The Making-of Creosote, Poland, 1931. Vintage silver print, 125x180 mm, annotated in pencil, verso : «saisi au vol!». 600 euros

Weekly Transmission 11 4 17 March 2016. Circle of JEAN DRÉVILLE (1906-1997). «Camera Cinex modifiée», Poland, 1931. Vintage silver print, 100x70 mm, annotated later by the photographer in ink, verso. 200 euros

Weekly Transmission 11 5 17 March 2016. JEAN DRÉVILLE (1906-1997). Camera Cinex, Making-of Creosote, Poland, 1931. Vintage silver print, 123x170 mm, numbered by the photographer in pencil, verso. 300 euros

Weekly Transmission 11 6 17 March 2016. JEAN DRÉVILLE (1906-1997). The Making of Creosote, Silesian forest, 1931. Vintage silver print, 80x110 mm, numbered by the photographer in pencil, verso. 600 euros

Weekly Transmission 11 7 17 March 2016. JEAN DRÉVILLE (1906-1997). Forest, Silesia, 1931. Vintage silver print, 80x110 mm, numbered by the photographer in pencil, verso. 600 euros

Weekly Transmission 11 8 17 March 2016. JEAN DRÉVILLE (1906-1997). Men and Horses, The Making of Creosote, Silesia, 1931. Vintage silver print, 120x173 mm, numbered in pencil, verso, crease. 100 euros

Weekly Transmission 11 9 17 March 2016. JEAN DRÉVILLE (1906-1997). Transportation, The Making of Creosote, Poland, 1931. Vintage silver print, 80x110 mm, numbered by the photographer in pencil, verso. 500 euros

Weekly Transmission 11 10 17 March 2016. JEAN DRÉVILLE (1906-1997). On the River, The Making of Creosote, Poland, 1931. Vintage silver print, 80x110 mm, numbered by the photographer in pencil, verso. 500 euros

Weekly Transmission 11 11 17 March 2016. JEAN DRÉVILLE (1906-1997). Toes, The Making of Creosote, Poland, 1931. Vintage silver print, 120x170 mm, numbered by the photographer in pencil, verso. 600 euros

Weekly Transmission 11 12 17 March 2016. JEAN DRÉVILLE (1906-1997). Assembling, The Making of Creosote, Poland, 1931. Vintage silver print, 80x110 mm, numbered by the photographer in pencil, verso. 600 euros

Weekly Transmission 11 13 17 March 2016. JEAN DRÉVILLE (1906-1997). Crane, The Making of Creosote, Poland, 1931. Vintage silver print, 80x110 mm, numbered by the photographer in pencil, verso. 400 euros

Weekly Transmission 11 14 17 March 2016. JEAN DRÉVILLE (1906-1997). Heavy, The Making of Creosote, Poland, 1931. Vintage silver print, 125x175 mm, numbered by the photographer in pencil, verso. 600 euros

Weekly Transmission 11 15 17 March 2016. JEAN DRÉVILLE (1906-1997). Preparing the fire, The Making of Creosote, Poland, 1931. Vintage silver print, 120x175 mm, numbered in pencil, verso. 400 euros

Weekly Transmission 11 16 17 March 2016. JEAN DRÉVILLE (1906-1997). Heavy Metal, The Making of Creosote, Poland, 1931. Vintage silver print, 125x175 mm, numbered by the photographer in pencil, verso. 600 euros

Weekly Transmission 11 17 17 March 2016. JEAN DRÉVILLE (1906-1997). Metal, The Making of Creosote, Poland, 1931. Vintage silver print, 130x180 mm, numbered by the photographer in pencil, verso. 600 euros

Weekly Transmission 11 18 17 March 2016. JEAN DRÉVILLE (1906-1997). Man at Work, The Making of Creosote, Poland, 1931. Vintage silver print, 125x175 mm, numbered by the photographer in pencil, verso. 600 euros

Weekly Transmission 11 19 17 March 2016. JEAN DRÉVILLE (1906-1997). Fire, The Making of Creosote, Poland, 1931. Vintage silver print, 80x110 mm, numbered by the photographer in pencil, verso. 400 euros

Weekly Transmission 11 20 17 March 2016. JEAN DRÉVILLE (1906-1997). Hot Creosote, Poland, 1931. Vintage silver print, 80x110 mm, numbered by the photographer in pencil, verso. 500 euros

Weekly Transmission 11 21 17 March 2016. JEAN DRÉVILLE (1906-1997). Smoke, The Making of Creosote, Poland, 1931. Vintage silver print, 120x172 mm, numbered by the photographer in pencil, verso. 400 euros

Weekly Transmission 11 22 17 March 2016. JEAN DRÉVILLE (1906-1997). Cold Creosote, Poland, 1931. Vintage silver print, 130x175 mm, numbered by the photographer in pencil, verso. 400 euros

Weekly Transmission 11 23 17 March 2016. JEAN DRÉVILLE (1906-1997). Rail, The Making of Creosote, Poland, 1931. Vintage silver print, 80x110 mm, numbered by the photographer in pencil, verso. 600 euros

180x125 mm Number Eleven, Second Season, of the Weekly Transmission has been uploaded on Thursday, 17 th March 2016 at 18:15 (Paris time). Upcoming uploads and transmissions on Thursdays : Thursday 24 th March, Thursday 31 st March, 15:15 (Paris time). serge@plantureux.fr fax +33153016870 Phone (10 am-5 pm) : (+33) 6.50.85.60.74