Photography and Cinema
Objectives
1) Understanding the ontologies of photography and cinema and their mutations over the 20th and 20th centuries; 2) Understanding and reflect on a set of concepts to approach these ontologies, based on classic and contemporary texts; 3) Identifying the consequences arising from the use of digital in photography and cinema, namely accessing files, found footage, or other documentation; 4) Understanding the effect of using photography in cinema and cinematism in photography in different genres; 5) Reflecting on the massive presence of photography and cinema in contemporary art since the late 1980s, based on this conceptual approach.
General characterization
Code
722011133
Credits
10.0
Responsible teacher
Maria Margarida Abreu de Figueiredo Medeiros Mendes Godinho
Hours
Weekly - 3
Total - 280
Teaching language
Portuguese
Prerequisites
None
Bibliography
1. Henning, Michelle. “The Floating Face of Greta Garbo”. 2017. Photographies, 10:2, 157-178, DOI: 10.1080/17540763.2016.1266691
2. Jacobs, Steve & Lisa Colpaert. 2014. The Dark Galleries. A Museum Portraits in film Noir, Gothic melodramas, and Ghost Stories of the 1940s and 1950s. Gent: AraMER.
3. Campany, David. 2008. Photography and Cinema. Londres: reacktion Books.
4. Gunning, Tom. “What’s the Point of an Index? or, Faking Photographs.” In Still Moving: Between Cinema and Photography. Eds. Karen Beckman and Jean Ma, 23–41. Durham, NC: Duke University Press, 2008.
5. Barthes, Roland. A Câmara Clara. Lisboa: Edições 70, 1980
Teaching method
Interactive methodology: exposition, discussion, debate upon texts and visual works.
Evaluation method
oral assessment and written essay; oral participation(100%)
Subject matter
The seminar revolves around the development of some key concepts and themes, which cross both media, photography and cinema. Through them, we intend to problematize their mutations over almost two centuries, as well as to analyze some of the contemporary issues that call both media in the field of contemporary art, cinema and photography. On the other hand, the aim of the seminar is to understand the way the two media mix, especially in a post-digital context. Structuring topics of the seminar: 1. Animism 2. Absence 3. Indexicality 4. Document 5. Phantasmagoria 6. Transparency 7. Pause 8. Photogeny 9. Portrait
Programs
Programs where the course is taught: