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07:26
A short film about singer / songwriter Dave House, recorded between October 2008 and May 2009 through out the creation of his third LP 'Intersections'.</p>
Rating:0%
Added: 6 months ago
Plays: 28
Comments: 0
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03:38
A sneak peak at "The Rawside of... Metric" documentary
The new album “Fantasies” is out 27th April on CD
www.ilovemetric..com/uk
www.myspace.com/metric
Rating:92%
Added: 7 months ago
Plays: 76
Comments: 0
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03:20
Before ‘Mad Max’ and ‘The Road Warrior’ there was ‘Stone’.
Rating:0%
Added: 8 months ago
Plays: 6
Comments: 0
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02:59
Though Kitaj was one of the most public of artists, making some of the most immediate, accessible and honest images of our age, he was also a very private man, determined to avoid the spontaneity of film. He finally relented in 1994 and the result is a remarkably candid look at his life and work.
“All my life I’ve been a good bad boy” R. B. Kitaj
The film transports us from the early years of baseball and girls in upstate New York, to his years as a merchant seaman on the “Romance Run”, through post war Vienna to London where he placed himself at the centre of “The School of London” with friends David Hockney, Michael Andrews, Frank Auerbach, Leon Kossoff and Lucian Freud
www.myspace.com/jake_auerbach_films
Rating:0%
Added: 1 year ago
Plays: 68
Comments: 0
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02:59
Although Walter Sickert is considered the father of modern British painting, he was born in Germany. He became Britain’s most famous artist but after his death he drifted into obscurity, ironically rejected for the same inventive spirit that had first made his name. He remains one of the undiscovered heroes of modern art.
This vivid film discovers Howard Hodgkin rummaging in the Sickert archive, follows Frank Auerbach around the streets of Camden Town, encourages Professor Quentin Bell to recall what it was like to be drawn by the man himself; artist John Wannacott studies the drawings; Peter Ackroyd describes the context of London’s back streets and secrets; Lady Mary Soames reveals the artists’ friendship with her father Winston Churchill; solicitor Sir David Napley shares Sickert’s fascination with The Camden Town Murder, while Sickert’s biographer Richard Shone explodes the myth that Sickert was Jack the Ripper. With music by Jools Holland and Sickert’s writings read by Alan Bennett this film manages to conjure up the spirit of one of Europe’s greatest artists.
www.myspace.com/jake_auerbach_films
Rating:0%
Added: 1 year ago
Plays: 22
Comments: 0
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