ABSTRACT

Bringing together an international range of scholars, as well as filmmakers and curators, this book explores the rich variety in form and content of the contemporary art documentary.

Since their emergence in the late 1940s as a distinct genre, documentaries about the visual arts have made significant contributions to art education, public television, and documentary filmmaking, yet they have received little scholarly attention from either art history or film studies. Documenting the Visual Arts brings that attention to the fore. Whether considering documentaries about painting, sculpture, photography, performance art, site-specific installation, or fashion, the chapters of this book engage with the key question of intermediality: how film can reframe other visual arts through its specific audio-visual qualities, in order to generate new ways of understanding those arts. The essays illuminate furthermore how art documentaries raise some of the most critical issues of the contemporary global art world, specifically the discourse of the artist, the dynamics of documentation, and the visuality of the museum. Contributors discuss documentaries by filmmakers such as Frederick Wiseman, Lynn Hershman Leeson, Jia Zhangke, and Trisha Ziff, and about artists such as Michael Heizer, Ai Weiwei, Do Ho Suh, and Marina Abramović.

This collection of new international and interdisciplinary scholarship on visual art documentaries is ideal for students and scholars of visual arts and filmmaking, as well as art history, arts education, and media studies.

chapter |20 pages

Introduction

part I|2 pages

Historical foundations

chapter 2|16 pages

A Sculptor’s Life on Screen

John Read’s film portraits of Henry Moore for BBC television

part II|2 pages

Representing the artist

chapter 3|15 pages

A Portrait of the Artist as Automaton

52Creativity, labor, and technology in Tim’s Vermeer

chapter 4|14 pages

Flesh and Vision

Jia Zhangke’s Still Life and Dong

chapter 5|14 pages

Globalizing Ai Weiwei

part III|2 pages

Questions of documentation

chapter 6|14 pages

Film and the Performance of Marina Abramovi´c

98Documentary as documentation

chapter 7|15 pages

Gained in Translation

Site-specificity in recent documentaries

chapter 8|15 pages

The Wages of !W.A.R.

Activist historiography and the feminist art movement

part IV|2 pages

Museum gazing

chapter 9|15 pages

When Art Exhibition Met 
Cinema Exhibition

145Live documentary and the remediation 
of the museum experience

chapter 11|15 pages

“Seeing Too Much Is 
Seeing Nothing”

The place of fashion within the 
documentary frame