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Cinécollection William Piasio: |
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L’exposition «Cinécollection W. Piasio» est fermée pour cause d’une transformation totale, du 14.04.2008 jusqu'au 21.10.2008. Ouverture de la toute nouvelle exposition: le 22.10.2008: |
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Call#: Fine Arts Library Fine Arts ND1942.R64 H39
Call#: Van Pelt Library Microfiche 966
phantasmagoria 1803
Call#: Rare Bk & Ms Library RBC PQ1983.F6 F3 1792
"Entrez, entrez..."
cited by Mervyn, Phantasmagoria
Call#: Van Pelt Library PT2298.H3 A1 1968
Does this contain Abhandlungen vom physikalischen Aberglauben und der Magie (Halle, 1778)? First to suggest painting ghost against black background (Mervyn, Phantasmagoria, 51)
Call#: Rare Bk & Ms Library E.F. Smith Collection BF1603 .E2 1790
Call#: Rare Bk & Ms Library Lea Collection LEA S.22.3.10
Call#: Van Pelt Library BD103 .E3513 1989
Knew Schröpfer. Was first true professional practitioner of ghost-projection in context of stage performance. (Mervyn, Phantasmagoria)
Call#: Van Pelt Library CB411 .B648
18 (Autumn 1995) - Schuchard, "Wiliam Blake and the Promiscuous Baboons: a Cagliostrean Seance Gone Awry"
Call#: Van Pelt Library PN55 .L5 1990
Loutherbourg's spectral transformations and evocations of exotic sublime for hit patomime Omai - cited by Iain McCalman in Romantic Metropolis.
Peepshow box Martin Engelbrecht 1750
Phantasmagorian magic lantern
Call#: Van Pelt Library Microtext Microtext Microfiche 1092 fiche 13860.
Call#: Rare Bk & Ms Library RBC GV1547 .R68 1779
vol. 1 read by German Romantics according to The Power of the Charlatan
over all volumes - explains Laterna magica, described electrical, magnetic, optical, chemical, mechanical tricks
tricks described = tricks performed by traveling exhibitors at fairs, according to tPotC
intro to vol. 1 - "Magic, in its widest sense, is thus the art of producing phenomena which appear to exceed the natural forces of a human being."
unheimlich?
Call#: Van Pelt Library PT285 .L3 1968
Call#: Van Pelt Library Microtext Microtext Microfiche 1092 fiche 12401.
Call#: Van Pelt Library M1503.N42 A4 1922
Call#: Van Pelt Library Microtext Microtext Microfiche 1092 fiche 15016.
Wandering among Obelisks: Goethe and the Idea of the Monument
Clark S. Muenzer
Modern Language Studies, Vol. 31, No. 1, Remembering Goethe: Essays for the 250th Anniversary (Spring, 2001), pp. 5-34
Call#: Fine Arts Library Fine Arts N72.T4 S73 2001
Call#: Van Pelt Library TR848 .B36
traces history of magic lantern. also shadow plays
Call#: Rare Bk & Ms Library Furness Collection FURNESS PR2978 .H45 2008
Call#: Rare Bk & Ms Library Furness Collection FURNESS PR2978 .H45 2008
Call#: Van Pelt Library PR2978 .H45 2008
Call#: Van Pelt Library PR2978 .H45 2008
Call#: Penn Library Web -
Call#: Fine Arts Library ND546 .F73
"...Diderot meant his 'dream' of a phantasmagoric - one is tempted to say cinematic (ft 78)- Coresus et Callirhoe to be understood as corresponding to the painting's most salient features and overall atmosphere, in particular to the partial dissolution of solid form under the influence of a colored chiaroscuro..." 143
ft 78 (p. 234-5) - There is an obvious affinity between Diderot's account of the projection of speaking colored images on a screen - an idea doubtless extrapolated from his acquaintance with magic lanterns - and the modern cinema. But I am thinking as well of the similarity between other aspects of his commentary on the Coresus et Callirhoe - e.g., his use of the fiction of dreaming, his description of his physical immobilization in the cave (a detail clearly derived from Plato), and his characterization of the projected images as fantomes...See Cavell, The World Viewed: Reflections on the Ontology of Film, esp. pp. 25-7, where the 'helplessness' of the viewer is said to be 'mchanically assured'; pp. 101-2, where movies are compared with and distinguished from dreams and fantasies...also discussed in a long essay by Cavell, "More of The World Viewed" The Georgia Review, 28 (1974). also Francis Macdonald Cornford remarks in his translation of The Republic of Plato "A modern Plato would compare his Cave to an underground cinema, where the audience watch the play of shadows thrown by the film passing before a light at their backs."
Call#: Van Pelt Library PN1993.5.U6 H55 1990 v.1
Call#: Van Pelt Library B2784 .Z36 1992
magic lantern p. 247
Call#: -
magic lantern and more
Call#: PR448.G6 C37 1995
Call#: Van Pelt Library Q185 .D3513
manufacture
Call#: -
Call#: Van Pelt Library QC425 .H97
Call#: Van Pelt Library Q127.E8 S48 1992
Call#: Van Pelt Library QC352 .D55 2004
Call#: Van Pelt Library Q143.H96 S95 1979
Call#: Q113 .H9
Call#: Van Pelt Library ML410.H4 G713 1963
"What can one say to a natural history or geogony set to music, where the objects pass before us as in a magic lantern...." (200)
Griesinger first in AmZ 11 (23 August 1809), includes extended quotation from Critique of Judgment on the unconscious nature of artistic genius
Call#: Van Pelt Library ML196 .H7 1989
See review of Beethoven's Piano Trios op. 70 - imagery of a garden and a painting. (Mark Evan Bonds 58)
Peter Brunette's Commentary: "What David Hemmings is doing here is putting photographs together to makes some kind of narrative to figure
out what the story was, which of course is the definition of a movie, putting together still photographs that run in some kind of narrative way through some kind of temporal sequence to makes some kind of meaning. And that's exactly what's happening here."
Call#: Van Pelt Library PN1993.5.A1 M34 1995
Call#: Fine Arts Library TR848 .M27413 2000
FA Carrel 307.
Call#: Fine Arts Library N7430.5 .M36 2004
Call#: Van Pelt Library PN1995.75 .B83 1990
On needing to know narrative to make sense of images, pp. 143-7.
Title: Inwardness of Mental Life
Quotes Tristam Shandy on magic lantern.
Call#: Microfiche 1092 fiche 5351-5439.
III, 405-10
Call#: -
Call#: Rare Bk & Ms Library RBC 504 B758
letter 67
Call#: Van Pelt Library PN1995.9.F36 S5 1985
Has nothing to do with magic lantern.
Call#: TR506 .C43 1878


