
- AND YET IT MOVES JOHN HEARTFIELD MOVIE
- AND YET IT MOVES JOHN HEARTFIELD SERIES
- AND YET IT MOVES JOHN HEARTFIELD TV
"L'aspirant habite Javel et moi j'avais l'habite en spirale.The John Heartfield exhibition opening today at the Museum of Modern Art, the first substantial show in an American museum to be devoted to Heartfield, is overdue in paying tribute to one of the more inventive, and underappreciated, artists of the century. "Parmi nos articles de quincaillerie par essence, nous recommandons le robinet qui s'arrête de couler quand on ne l'écoute pas." "Avez-vous déjà mis la moëlle de l'épée dans le poêle de l'aimée?" "Esquivons les ecchymoses des Esquimaux aux mots exquis." "Inceste ou passion de famille, à coups trop tirés." "On demande des moustiques domestiques (demi-stock) pour la cure d'azote sur la côte d'azur." "Si je te donne un sou, me donneras-tu une paire de ciseaux?" "L'enfant qui tète est un souffleur de chair chaude et n'aime pas le chou-fleur de serre-chaude." "Bains de gros thé pour grains de beauté sans trop de bengué." (BenGay was invented in France by Dr.
AND YET IT MOVES JOHN HEARTFIELD SERIES
He also added a series of spiraling phrases that are intended to be puns.

Duchamp made a series of spirals and filmed them while turning on a phonograph turntable.
AND YET IT MOVES JOHN HEARTFIELD MOVIE
Ordinary objects seem to come to life and have a will of their own in this plotless movie that uses stop action animation in a very original way.Īnemic Cinema, 1926. In this 6 minute film, Richter appears in the movie along with two composers, Darius Milhaud, and Paul Hindemith who wrote the music for the now destroyed soundtrack. The First World War is a largely forgotten conflict for most Americans, but the memory of that war still touches open wounds for a lot of Europeans, even a century later, as you can see in the large attendance at this ceremony and every ceremony at the Menin Gate.Ī film by Hans Richter, 1928. The Menin Gate is a war memorial whose walls are covered with the names of British, Canadian, Australian, and New Zealander soldiers who perished in fighting around Ypres, and whose bodies were never recovered.Įvery evening buglers from the Ypres fire department play The Last Post, and have done so since 1918, except for the years of German occupation during World War II. The First World War: The Menin Gate, Ypres Belgium Marcel Duchamp, The Large Glass (The Bride Stripped Bare By Her Bachelors, Even)

You can't do anything on Warhol or Pop Art without at least one tune by The Velvet Underground. Ah, where are the cigarette ashes of yesteryear? They certainly have changed a lot since 1965.

AND YET IT MOVES JOHN HEARTFIELD TV
This first appearance live on TV to an audience of millions was a great success for Kennedy. Kennedy not only had to be knowledgeable on the issues, but had to "look" presidential, to reassure the voters that he could lead.

Kennedy before this debate was perceived as a mindless rich playboy, the creation of his powerful father Joseph P. On the issues, Nixon arguably prevailed or held his own. It is sometimes said that this first of all televised debates tipped the 1960 election in Kennedy's favor. Richard Nixon would later make brilliant use of television advertising in his 1968 presidential campaign, but he was never comfortable or confident appearing before TV cameras, not in this 1960 debate and not ever. As you can see on this video, Kennedy was confident on TV, and had the poise and the looks for TV. Note the strange vividness and grainy slippage of early TV.ĭwight Eisenhower was the first American President to use television, however TV made John F. Here is a sample of the Kennedy-Nixon debates of 1960.
