Does moving pictures produce ekstasis? Challenge to Leonardo and Michelangelo

What do we feel and understand when we look at Leonardo's Last Supper and Michelangelo's frescoes projected on the screens? The history of the production of films, critofilms, television documentaries, amateur movies on the web, devoted to these masterpieces of Renaissance art is a constan...

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Main Author: Tommaso Casini
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Bologna 2019-08-01
Series:piano b
Subjects:
Online Access:https://pianob.unibo.it/article/view/9804
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spelling doaj-59bb3c0907d6485c9a054b1728b29edd2020-11-25T02:10:13ZengUniversity of Bolognapiano b2531-98762019-08-013211914510.6092/issn.2531-9876/98048356Does moving pictures produce ekstasis? Challenge to Leonardo and MichelangeloTommaso Casini0Università IULM di MilanoWhat do we feel and understand when we look at Leonardo's Last Supper and Michelangelo's frescoes projected on the screens? The history of the production of films, critofilms, television documentaries, amateur movies on the web, devoted to these masterpieces of Renaissance art is a constantly growing world of moving imagery, coming before the era of the recent media experiences. It is difficult to say exactly when the first movie camera was introduced into S. Maria delle Grazie’s refectory in Milan, or into the Sistine Chapel in Vatican. We know however that the huge filmed material concerning these two works is unequalled by any other figurative testimony. This paper intends, on the one hand, to focus in a historical perspective on the relationship between the pictorial work and the cinematic work, that is a real technical and narrative “challenge” to the pictorial language of both these Renaissance masters; on the other hand, it intends to pose some critical questions on media practices and their possible future development. From Ėjzenštejn to Greenaway (for the Last Supper), from Oertel to the immersive show (for the Sistine frescoes); from Ragghianti to the RAI TV documentaries after the restoration by the end of the XXth century.https://pianob.unibo.it/article/view/9804critofilmleonardomichelangeloultima cenasistina
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Tommaso Casini
spellingShingle Tommaso Casini
Does moving pictures produce ekstasis? Challenge to Leonardo and Michelangelo
piano b
critofilm
leonardo
michelangelo
ultima cena
sistina
author_facet Tommaso Casini
author_sort Tommaso Casini
title Does moving pictures produce ekstasis? Challenge to Leonardo and Michelangelo
title_short Does moving pictures produce ekstasis? Challenge to Leonardo and Michelangelo
title_full Does moving pictures produce ekstasis? Challenge to Leonardo and Michelangelo
title_fullStr Does moving pictures produce ekstasis? Challenge to Leonardo and Michelangelo
title_full_unstemmed Does moving pictures produce ekstasis? Challenge to Leonardo and Michelangelo
title_sort does moving pictures produce ekstasis? challenge to leonardo and michelangelo
publisher University of Bologna
series piano b
issn 2531-9876
publishDate 2019-08-01
description What do we feel and understand when we look at Leonardo's Last Supper and Michelangelo's frescoes projected on the screens? The history of the production of films, critofilms, television documentaries, amateur movies on the web, devoted to these masterpieces of Renaissance art is a constantly growing world of moving imagery, coming before the era of the recent media experiences. It is difficult to say exactly when the first movie camera was introduced into S. Maria delle Grazie’s refectory in Milan, or into the Sistine Chapel in Vatican. We know however that the huge filmed material concerning these two works is unequalled by any other figurative testimony. This paper intends, on the one hand, to focus in a historical perspective on the relationship between the pictorial work and the cinematic work, that is a real technical and narrative “challenge” to the pictorial language of both these Renaissance masters; on the other hand, it intends to pose some critical questions on media practices and their possible future development. From Ėjzenštejn to Greenaway (for the Last Supper), from Oertel to the immersive show (for the Sistine frescoes); from Ragghianti to the RAI TV documentaries after the restoration by the end of the XXth century.
topic critofilm
leonardo
michelangelo
ultima cena
sistina
url https://pianob.unibo.it/article/view/9804
work_keys_str_mv AT tommasocasini doesmovingpicturesproduceekstasischallengetoleonardoandmichelangelo
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