Strategie obrazu. O „adaptacjach” Jeana-Luc Godarda
View/ Open
Author:
Kita, Barbara
xmlui.dri2xhtml.METS-1.0.item-citation: Annales Universitatis Paedagogicae Cracoviensis. 135, Studia de Cultura 5 (2013), s. [152]-161
xmlui.dri2xhtml.METS-1.0.item-iso: pl
Subject:
Godardobraz
malarstwo
adaptacja
film
Godard
imageen_EN
painting
adaptation
film
Date: 2013
Metadata
Show full item recordDescription:
Dokument cyfrowy wytworzony, opracowany, opublikowany oraz finansowany w ramach programu "Społeczna Odpowiedzialność Nauki" - modułu "Wsparcie dla bibliotek naukowych" przez Ministerstwo Nauki i Szkolnictwa Wyższego w projekcie nr rej. SONB/SP/465103/2020 pt. "Organizacja kolekcji czasopism naukowych w Repozytorium UP wraz z wykonaniem rekordów analitycznych".Abstract
The article results from introductory research into the question of broadly defined
pictorialness of film images in Jean-Luc Godard’s works. Strategies of the image inscribed
by the director in his own films may be interpreted as a type of adaptations of paintings.
Recollection of the most exemplary adaptations of paintings in the trilogy: Passion (1982),
First Name: Carmen (1983) and Hail Mary (1984), and in the early film Pierrot le fou (Pete
the Madman; 1965) evokes reflections upon the nature of the film image. It also testifies to
the constant search for the nature of pictorialness and experiments with pictures stemming
from various disciplines which meet in one work. The mode of existence of painted
images in relation to the film, characteristic of Godard, is described by Jacques Aumont as
“cinematization” (to be differentiated from the known kinetisation), that is the mechanism
of the film image emerging from a painting. Thus characteristic and unique image strategies
can be deciphered from Godard’s works. The strategies should not necessarily be seen as
determinants of quotations, although they point to their origin, but as an element enriching
the reflection on film–cinema. Research in the scope of lighting, composition of frame, colour
(Godard–colourist), artistic shaping of frame, all lead the filmmaker directly from the film
image to the painted image, and the other way round.
Hence Godard seems to approach the substantiation of Andre Malraux’ Museum of Imagination
understood as an archive of images, realizing the idea completely in “Histoire(s) du cinéma”
(1988–1998) – a project broadly described and appreciated by its contemporaries.