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Paradigm Case: The Cinema of Hitchcock and the Contemporary Visual Arts New edition [Pehme köide]

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With the migration of cinema into the art gallery, artists have been turning, with remarkable regularity and ingenuity, to Alfred Hitchcock-related images, sequences and iconography. The world of Hitchcocks cinema a classical cinema of formal unities and narrative coherence represents more than the spectre of a supposedly dead art form: it transcends its own filmic and institutional contexts, becoming an important audio-visual lexicon of desire, loss, mystery and suspense. Through a detailed study of the Hitchcock-related work of artist-filmmakers Matthias Müller and Christoph Girardet, Johan Grimonprez, Pierre Huyghe, Douglas Gordon and Atom Egoyan, this book facilitates a dialogue between the creative appropriation of Hitchcocks films and the cinematic practices that increasingly inform the wider field of the contemporary visual arts. Each chapter is structured around a consideration of how the artwork in question has reconfigured or remade key Hitchcockian expressive elements and motifs in particular, the relationship between mise en scène and the mechanics of suspense, time, memory, history and death. In a career that extended across silent and sound eras as well as the British, European and Hollywood industries, Hitchcocks film uvre can be seen as a history of the cinema itself. As the work of these contemporary artist-filmmakers shows, it was also a history of the future, a paradigm case par excellence.
List of Figures
vii
Acknowledgements xi
Introduction: `Paradigm Cases' 1(6)
Chapter 1 Mapping the Field of Hitchcockian Appropriation
7(64)
Chapter 2 Found Footage in Flames: Matthias Muller and Christoph Girardet's Phoenix Tapes
71(40)
Chapter 3 The Essay-Film (Expanded): Johan Grimonprez's Double Take
111(42)
Chapter 4 Horror in Real-Time: Douglas Gordon's 24 Hour Psycho
153(34)
Chapter 5 Participatory Remaking: Pierre Huyghe's Remake
187(32)
Chapter 6 Screening Memory: Atom Egoyan's Evidence/Felicia's Journey
219(34)
Conclusion 253(4)
Appendix: Visual Art and Filmic Review of Appropriations 257(16)
Bibliography 273(16)
Filmography 289(6)
Exhibitions 295(8)
Index 303
Bernard McCarron holds a PhD in Film Studies from Queens University Belfast, where he is currently a lecturer. While he has written extensively on the international influence of expressionist film outside Germany, his main research interests include the afterlife of cinema and its legacy in the digital age.