Oskar Fischinger (19[zasłonięte]967) steered cinema in an
entirely new direction in the 1920s, 30s and 40s. He
created a new abstract film language that parallels and
interacts with musical qualities such as harmony and
dissonance, and was one of the first animators to couple
abstract images with music and rhythms, long before the
arrival of the music video. Not only was he a true
virtuoso in the way he created highly complex patterns
that develop dynamic rhythms, harmonies and
counterpoints, but he also played an important and
influential role in the development of early abstraction
in film during the interwar period, amid artistic
movements such as Orphism (Kupka, Delaunay),
Neo-Plasticism (Mondrian, Van Doesburg), Suprematism
(Malevich), and Futurism (Marinetti, Boccioni). In 1926
Fischinger began working with multiple projector cinema
performances, creating some of the earliest cinematic
immersive environments, precursors to expanded cinema.
This comprehensive and richly illustrated monograph on
Fischinger explores the positioning of his work within
the international avant-garde, his animation, music,
painting and interaction with Hollywood, and his
influence on todays filmmakers, artists and musicians.
The book contains many hitherto unseen documents,
including an essay by Fischinger himself. It also
includes a filmography, and biography and a
bibliography.
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