Keen's watercolor drawing series from
the 1970s accompanying the film features fragmented film - noir inspired narrative told through a combination of words and images; the works are significant expressions of the artist's complex and idiosyncratic creative philosophy.
Not exact matches
Eileen Pullen and Gwen Davis, two of the «Dagenham girls» whose stand for equal rights helped usher in the
1970 Equal Pay Act,
accompanied the actor Gemma Arterton, who starred in Made in Dagenham, the 2010
film about their struggle.
Accompanied by a dub soundtrack featuring a looped sample of Alton Ellis's
1970 classic «Black Man's World» and the 1971 remake «Black Man's Pride», the
film takes in a bomb - damaged sculpture in front of the Cleveland Museum of Art; the riotous swaying of windblown trees in dark LA streets; and a fireworks display above Berlin's Olympiastadion.
In the late
1970's Baumgarten had dwelled for 18 months with these indigenous people in the forests of Venezuela and Brazil, with only cameras,
film, art supplies and whatever else fit into a single backpack
accompanying him, having no contact with the outside world.