-
Ricciotto Canudo (French: [kanydo]; 2
January 1877,
Gioia del
Colle – 10
November 1923, Paris) was an
early Italian film
theoretician who
lived primarily...
-
University of
California Press, 1982. Stravinsky, Igor (29 May 1913). Canudo,
Ricciotto (ed.). "Ce que j'ai
voulu exprimer dans 'Le
sacre du printemps'" [What...
- schools. The
secondary schools which are
located in the city are: the "
Ricciotto Canudo"
liceo scientifico, the "Publio
Virgilio Marone"
liceo classico...
- in The Sun (New York City), 15
March 1914. It was then
reproduced in
Ricciotto Canudo's Montjoie! Montparn****e, André Salmon, numéro spécial consacré...
- was
mostly concerned with
defining the
crucial elements of the medium.
Ricciotto Canudo was an
early Italian film
theoretician who saw
cinema as "plastic...
- hub for
discourse on
cinema on the
African continent. Hugo Münsterberg
Ricciotto Canudo Germaine Dulac Béla Balázs
Siegfried Kracauer Vsevolod Pudovkin...
- of film as art. The
concept of film as an art-form
began in 1911 with
Ricciotto Canudo's
manifest The
Birth of the
Sixth Art. The
Moscow Film School,...
- prestigious. In 1903,
during a seance,
which were in
vogue at the time, she met
Ricciotto Canudo, an
Italian poet and
writer born in Bari in 1877.
Canudo was also...
- Óneiros, the
personification of dreams.
Early film
theorists such as
Ricciotto Canudo (1879–1923) and Jean
Epstein (1897–1953)
argued that
films had...
- to
argue that
films could also be
considered a form of art. In 1911,
Ricciotto Canudo wrote a
manifesto proclaiming cinema to be the "Sixth Art" (later...