Torrent details for "Francis Bacon And The Brutality Of Fact 1987 1080p WEBRip x264 R…" Log in to bookmark
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Category:
Language:
None
Total Size:
1.2 GB
Info Hash:
FD77FEEA2E057885A262CDD861D6711A5E9E7DCD
Added By:
Added:
May 31, 2023, midnight
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DL
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Size
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7.1 MB
[16
/
19]
2023-10-28
Uploaded by freecoursewb | Size 7.1 MB | Health [ 16 /19 ] | Added 2023-10-28 |
Genre:
Runtime:
0:58:00
Hours -
Rating:
7.4
Director:
Michael Blackwood
Cast:
Francis Bacon, John Deakin, David Sylvester…
Plot:
Pairing his collection of figurative paintings with an astute conversation surrounding mortality and humanity, "Francis Bacon and the Brutality of Fact" offers personal insight into the mind of an artist. In an interview led by friend and art critic, David Sylvester, Bacon opens up about his work and the, often times, grotesque and macabre tone of his paintings. His representations of the human figure in portraits and triptychs link him, in his view, to the distorted realism of Van Gogh and Picasso. With his unique take on life and death, Bacon explains to us the dichotomy of his art through an unexpectedly optimistic thesis which he dubbed the "brutality of fact". As Bacon's striking art conveys, with the acceptance of death comes a passionate vitality for life.
Francis Bacon and the Brutality of Fact
IMDB - https://www.imdb.com/title/tt1832355
NOTE
SOURCE: Francis Bacon And The Brutality Of Fact 1987 1080p WEBRip x264 RARBG ORARBG
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GENERAL INFO
Genre:
Director: Michael Blackwood
Stars: Francis Bacon, John Deakin, David Sylvester
Plot: Pairing his collection of figurative paintings with an astute conversation surrounding mortality and humanity, "Francis Bacon and the Brutality of Fact" offers personal insight into the mind of an artist. In an interview led by friend and art critic, David Sylvester, Bacon opens up about his work and the, often times, grotesque and macabre tone of his paintings. His representations of the human figure in portraits and triptychs link him, in his view, to the distorted realism of Van Gogh and Picasso. With his unique take on life and death, Bacon explains to us the dichotomy of his art through an unexpectedly optimistic thesis which he dubbed the "brutality of fact". As Bacon's striking art conveys, with the acceptance of death comes a passionate vitality for life.
Included subtitles
English
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COVER
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MEDIAINFO
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