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CRAZY ABOUT CINEMA – FOLIE À CINÉ

CRAZY ABOUT CINEMA – FOLIE À CINE

La mostra è a ingresso libero

2 October 2024

Soggettiva Gallery presents from 2 October (until 3 November) “Crazy About Cinema – Folie a Ciné”, tribute to the most famous “brothels” in the history of cinema, coinciding with the release at the cinema of “Joker – Folie à Deux” The second and most anticipated chapter of the saga directed by Todd Philips and played by the Istrions Joaquin Phoenix and Lady Gaga. The exhibition retraces some of the “crazy” characters that have most impressed lovers of the seventh art: figures feared or not accepted by society, thanks to their status as marginalised, are able to reflect the deformations of those who consider themselves “normal”.

The exhibition explores the most intriguing and unusual nuances of the human mind through eccentric characters, weird, odd, unbalanced, a little bit “crazy” in short, each in its own way “special”. From the madness that comes from social isolation we move to that which can cause the human psyche to split; from the imbalance of folk horror cinema to that typical of dream and hallucination; the madness that borders on the obsession with love to the one not so different from the infatuation that serial killers feel for their victims; the irrationality that cinema highlights in contemporary society to that which distinguishes our fear of evil; from the delusion that the thirst for revenge can instill in the human mind to that of instability that can be caused by a distorted perception of ourselves and the reality around us.

FOLIE À CINÉ

From 2 October Soggettiva Gallery presents the exhibition “Pazzi di Cinema – Folie à Ciné”, a selection of Alternative Movie Posters dedicated to the most complex, disturbed and fascinating characters ever conceived by the seventh art, in conjunction with the release of the awaited “Joker – Folie à Deux” Directed by Todd Philips who will see duets Joaquin Phoenix and Lady Gaga. The works, by international artists, propose a reflection on the crazy and brothel figures that cinema has told.

In exhibition characters who, marginalized by society, are forced to react by extreme and, in many ways, crazy gestures. First of all Joker. Oregon designer Dakota Randall dedicates three dazzling portraits to three great actors who have played the role of Batman’s antagonist: Jack Nicholson, Heath Ledger and Joaquin Phoenix. And the unforgettable Joker by Heath Ledger is at the center of the works of Anthony Jensen and Vance Kelly – who have captured the disarming unpredictability of the character – while Christopher Conner represents the eerie cheerfulness embodied by Joaquin Phoenix. The exhibition includes other “apart” figures such as the distressing Norman Bates of Psycho, the “threatening” Edward Scissorhands and the destabilizing Jack Nance of Eraserhead.

DOUBLE OR NOTHING + FOLK LOVERS

In some cases, reality puts the psyche of the characters to such a test that it leads to a split or, in other cases, to the superposition of two separate personalities into an unseparable unicum: they belong to the first set, Among others, Twin Peaks and three extraordinary classics such as Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde, Shining and Blue Velvet; The second category includes Persona, made unique by the symbiotic relationship between the disturbing Bibi Andersson and Liv Ullmann.

The folk settings characterize the films of a cult director like Robert Eggers: to his movies The Witch and The Lighthouse reference are the prints, respectively, of the Californian visual artist Carrie Anne Hudson, who plays with the demonic imagery of the film, and the French artist Fredlobo Lopez, who creates a hyper-realistic portrait of Robert Pattinson and Willem Dafoe. On the other hand, two feature films from northern European settings such as Lamb and Midsommar, which were inspired by the American graphic designer Maxwell Joseph Hargreaves and Garbhan Grant.

SWEET DREAMS ARE MADE OF THIS

Another theme addressed by the selected Alternative Movie Posters is that of the dream: revolutionaries the animated film Paprika, reinterpreted in a dreamlike way by Vincent Aseo, and Inception, by Javier Vera Lainez, with a quadrilogia of works inspired by the faces and key objects of Christopher Nolan’s film. A further collective hallucination like Fight Club is the starting point of two scratchy performances such as those by Raj Khatri and Adam Rabalais. Not less the visions induced by the drugs taken by Johnny Depp in Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas, at the base of the work made by Ricardo Diseño, or the paranormal atmospheres of De Palma in The Fury, in the illustration of Chris Malbon; or the hallucinations of Naked Meal that are found in the manifesto that Nick Charge dedicates to the film by David Cronenberg.

Between desire and obsession the posters inspired by films where love and ambition take disturbing traits: among the works the Drive, which Javier Maria Lainez reproposes the figure of Ryan Gosling with a hammer, symbol of the protective and violent love he embodies, and Memento, whose inextricable circle of suffering is perfectly synthesized by Adam Rabalais with the representation of arms tattooing each other. Finally, the attraction that the deformed musician of the classic The Phantom of the Opera feels for a young lyric singer gives life to the fantastical opera by the Balbusso Twins.

THE SOCIAL KILLER

It is difficult to determine which (ir)rational principles can govern the deviant mind of a serial killer: the works on display represent some of the most frightening individuals ever appeared in a film, able to start prolific cinematic sagas: Friday the 13th and Halloween, from which Matt Ritchie takes inspiration for two deadly as fascinating illustrations. We can not mention the most iconic and terrifying of the killers, Hannibal Lecter by Anthony Hopkins in Silence of the Lambs: to him, the fearsome Buffalo Bill and the combtututa agent Clarice Sterling (Jodie Foster) are inspired by the baffling works of Shelby Hohl, Yvan Quinet and Greg Ruth.

There is no shortage of Alternative Movie Posters of films halfway between dystopia and social criticism, in which the traumatic events depicted mirror a deeply sick society: It includes films like A Clockwork Orange – the devastating destructive charge of the drug Alex DeLarge is concentrated in a small but refined print by Max Dalton -, The Truman Show – the petty TV performance of which the unsuspecting Jim Carrey is a victim is translated by Josh Seth Blake in a work full of irony – and Get Out, criticism of racism inherent in American society that is reproposed in the intense creation of Garbhan Grant.

VENGEANCE OF THE THIRD KIND

Crossing the boundaries of the real and entering the territories of the extra-sensory, are essential some works that re-imagine the evil according to the different personifications accomplished by the seventh art: from the more diabolical ones typical of The Exorcist – in whose dark imaginary invites us to enter the poster by Rich Davies – and Suspiria – to which the kaleidoscope work by Adam Juresko is based – to the more experimental ones evoked by Frankenstein and, In a much more ironic way, from Frankenstein Jr., which inspired Chris Walker and Conor Langton respectively.

Revenge, one of the most insane and at the same time most human feelings ever depicted on the big screen. Among the revenge movies on display, a cult as Kill Bill – protagonist of the creation of Craig Drake an unstoppable Uma Thurman armed with katana and an action film milestone as Oldboy, replayed in a thrilling clash of hammer and dagger by Dan Mumford.

AGAIN AND AGAIN

Finally, a series of characters out of the box: from the Drugo of The Big Lebowski – immortalized by Malone in a quote from the dreamlike bowling alley scene in space – to Uma Thurman as the “ballata” Mia Wallace in Pulp Fiction, shot by Adam Juresko; from Tim Burton’s dark Wednesday, reviewed by the Duke Duel poster, to the melancholic Margot in The Royal Tenenbaums, to which Shannon Bonnatakis devotes a poignant close-up. Up to the stoned Bill Murray in Groundhog Day, to whom Matthew Rabalais dedicates an ironic portrait.

All the works on display are for sale.

INFO

SOGGETTIVA GALLERY

Via Pasquale Sottocorno 5/A, 20122 Milano

3357722437 – 3458463222 – 3342378116

info@soggettivagallery.com 

www.soggettivagallery.com 

Opening hours:

Monday: 15.45 – 19.45
Tuesday to Friday: 10 – 13.30 / 15.45 – 19.45
Saturday and Sunday: 10.30 – 13.30 / 15.45 – 19.45

Alternative movie poster Joker (Dance) | Todd Phillips | Christopher Conner | Soggettiva Gallery Milano
Alternative movie poster Batman - Il cavaliere oscuro (Joker) | Christopher Nolan | Anthony Jensen | Soggettiva Gallery Milano
Alternative movie poster The Witch | Robert Eggers | Carrie Anne Hudson | Soggettiva Gallery Milano
Foto alternative movie poster | The Lighthouse | Fred Lobo Lopez | Robert Eggers | Soggettiva Gallery Milano
Foto alternative movie poster del film "Memento" | Adam Rabalais | Christopher Nolan | Soggettiva Gallery Milano
Alternative movie poster Drive | Nicolas Winding Refn | Javier Vera Lainez | Soggettiva Gallery Milano
Foto alternative movie poster del film Suspiria | Adam Juresko | Dario Argento | Soggettiva Gallery Milano
Foto alternative movie poster del film Ricomincio da capo (Bill)| Harold Ramis | Matthew Rabalais | Soggettiva Gallery Milano

Soggettiva Gallery presents from 2 October (until 3 November) “Crazy About Cinema – Folie a Ciné”, tribute to the most famous “brothels” in the history of cinema, coinciding with the release at the cinema of “Joker – Folie à Deux” The second and most anticipated chapter of the saga directed by Todd Philips and played by the Istrions Joaquin Phoenix and Lady Gaga. The exhibition retraces some of the “crazy” characters that have most impressed lovers of the seventh art: figures feared or not accepted by society, thanks to their status as marginalised, are able to reflect the deformations of those who consider themselves “normal”.

The exhibition explores the most intriguing and unusual nuances of the human mind through eccentric characters, weird, odd, unbalanced, a little bit “crazy” in short, each in its own way “special”. From the madness that comes from social isolation we move to that which can cause the human psyche to split; from the imbalance of folk horror cinema to that typical of dream and hallucination; the madness that borders on the obsession with love to the one not so different from the infatuation that serial killers feel for their victims; the irrationality that cinema highlights in contemporary society to that which distinguishes our fear of evil; from the delusion that the thirst for revenge can instill in the human mind to that of instability that can be caused by a distorted perception of ourselves and the reality around us.

Alternative movie poster Joker (Dance) | Todd Phillips | Christopher Conner | Soggettiva Gallery Milano

FOLIE À CINÉ

From 2 October Soggettiva Gallery presents the exhibition “Pazzi di Cinema – Folie à Ciné”, a selection of Alternative Movie Posters dedicated to the most complex, disturbed and fascinating characters ever conceived by the seventh art, in conjunction with the release of the awaited “Joker – Folie à Deux” Directed by Todd Philips who will see duets Joaquin Phoenix and Lady Gaga. The works, by international artists, propose a reflection on the crazy and brothel figures that cinema has told.

In exhibition characters who, marginalized by society, are forced to react by extreme and, in many ways, crazy gestures. First of all Joker. Oregon designer Dakota Randall dedicates three dazzling portraits to three great actors who have played the role of Batman’s antagonist: Jack Nicholson, Heath Ledger and Joaquin Phoenix. And the unforgettable Joker by Heath Ledger is at the center of the works of Anthony Jensen and Vance Kelly – who have captured the disarming unpredictability of the character – while Christopher Conner represents the eerie cheerfulness embodied by Joaquin Phoenix. The exhibition includes other “apart” figures such as the distressing Norman Bates of Psycho, the “threatening” Edward Scissorhands and the destabilizing Jack Nance of Eraserhead.

Alternative movie poster Batman - Il cavaliere oscuro (Joker) | Christopher Nolan | Anthony Jensen | Soggettiva Gallery Milano

DOUBLE OR NOTHING + FOLK LOVERS

In some cases, reality puts the psyche of the characters to such a test that it leads to a split or, in other cases, to the superposition of two separate personalities into an unseparable unicum: they belong to the first set, Among others, Twin Peaks and three extraordinary classics such as Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde, Shining and Blue Velvet; The second category includes Persona, made unique by the symbiotic relationship between the disturbing Bibi Andersson and Liv Ullmann.

The folk settings characterize the films of a cult director like Robert Eggers: to his movies The Witch and The Lighthouse reference are the prints, respectively, of the Californian visual artist Carrie Anne Hudson, who plays with the demonic imagery of the film, and the French artist Fredlobo Lopez, who creates a hyper-realistic portrait of Robert Pattinson and Willem Dafoe. On the other hand, two feature films from northern European settings such as Lamb and Midsommar, which were inspired by the American graphic designer Maxwell Joseph Hargreaves and Garbhan Grant.

Alternative movie poster The Witch | Robert Eggers | Carrie Anne Hudson | Soggettiva Gallery Milano
Foto alternative movie poster | The Lighthouse | Fred Lobo Lopez | Robert Eggers | Soggettiva Gallery Milano

SWEET DREAMS ARE MADE OF THIS

Another theme addressed by the selected Alternative Movie Posters is that of the dream: revolutionaries the animated film Paprika, reinterpreted in a dreamlike way by Vincent Aseo, and Inception, by Javier Vera Lainez, with a quadrilogia of works inspired by the faces and key objects of Christopher Nolan’s film. A further collective hallucination like Fight Club is the starting point of two scratchy performances such as those by Raj Khatri and Adam Rabalais. Not less the visions induced by the drugs taken by Johnny Depp in Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas, at the base of the work made by Ricardo Diseño, or the paranormal atmospheres of De Palma in The Fury, in the illustration of Chris Malbon; or the hallucinations of Naked Meal that are found in the manifesto that Nick Charge dedicates to the film by David Cronenberg.

Between desire and obsession the posters inspired by films where love and ambition take disturbing traits: among the works the Drive, which Javier Maria Lainez reproposes the figure of Ryan Gosling with a hammer, symbol of the protective and violent love he embodies, and Memento, whose inextricable circle of suffering is perfectly synthesized by Adam Rabalais with the representation of arms tattooing each other. Finally, the attraction that the deformed musician of the classic The Phantom of the Opera feels for a young lyric singer gives life to the fantastical opera by the Balbusso Twins.

Foto alternative movie poster del film "Memento" | Adam Rabalais | Christopher Nolan | Soggettiva Gallery Milano

THE SOCIAL KILLER

It is difficult to determine which (ir)rational principles can govern the deviant mind of a serial killer: the works on display represent some of the most frightening individuals ever appeared in a film, able to start prolific cinematic sagas: Friday the 13th and Halloween, from which Matt Ritchie takes inspiration for two deadly as fascinating illustrations. We can not mention the most iconic and terrifying of the killers, Hannibal Lecter by Anthony Hopkins in Silence of the Lambs: to him, the fearsome Buffalo Bill and the combtututa agent Clarice Sterling (Jodie Foster) are inspired by the baffling works of Shelby Hohl, Yvan Quinet and Greg Ruth.

There is no shortage of Alternative Movie Posters of films halfway between dystopia and social criticism, in which the traumatic events depicted mirror a deeply sick society: It includes films like A Clockwork Orange – the devastating destructive charge of the drug Alex DeLarge is concentrated in a small but refined print by Max Dalton -, The Truman Show – the petty TV performance of which the unsuspecting Jim Carrey is a victim is translated by Josh Seth Blake in a work full of irony – and Get Out, criticism of racism inherent in American society that is reproposed in the intense creation of Garbhan Grant.

Foto alternative movie poster del film Suspiria | Adam Juresko | Dario Argento | Soggettiva Gallery Milano

VENGEANCE OF THE THIRD KIND

Crossing the boundaries of the real and entering the territories of the extra-sensory, are essential some works that re-imagine the evil according to the different personifications accomplished by the seventh art: from the more diabolical ones typical of The Exorcist – in whose dark imaginary invites us to enter the poster by Rich Davies – and Suspiria – to which the kaleidoscope work by Adam Juresko is based – to the more experimental ones evoked by Frankenstein and, In a much more ironic way, from Frankenstein Jr., which inspired Chris Walker and Conor Langton respectively.

Revenge, one of the most insane and at the same time most human feelings ever depicted on the big screen. Among the revenge movies on display, a cult as Kill Bill – protagonist of the creation of Craig Drake an unstoppable Uma Thurman armed with katana and an action film milestone as Oldboy, replayed in a thrilling clash of hammer and dagger by Dan Mumford.

Foto alternative movie poster del film Suspiria | Adam Juresko | Dario Argento | Soggettiva Gallery Milano

AGAIN AND AGAIN

Finally, a series of characters out of the box: from the Drugo of The Big Lebowski – immortalized by Malone in a quote from the dreamlike bowling alley scene in space – to Uma Thurman as the “ballata” Mia Wallace in Pulp Fiction, shot by Adam Juresko; from Tim Burton’s dark Wednesday, reviewed by the Duke Duel poster, to the melancholic Margot in The Royal Tenenbaums, to which Shannon Bonnatakis devotes a poignant close-up. Up to the stoned Bill Murray in Groundhog Day, to whom Matthew Rabalais dedicates an ironic portrait.

All the works on display are for sale.

Foto alternative movie poster del film Ricomincio da capo (Bill)| Harold Ramis | Matthew Rabalais | Soggettiva Gallery Milano

INFO

SOGGETTIVA GALLERY

Via Pasquale Sottocorno 5/A, 20122 Milano

3357722437 – 3458463222 – 3342378116

info@soggettivagallery.com 

www.soggettivagallery.com 

Opening hours:

Monday: 15.45 – 19.45
Tuesday to Friday: 10 – 13.30 / 15.45 – 19.45
Saturday and Sunday: 10.30 – 13.30 / 15.45 – 19.45

Categories
News

HITCHCOCK’S VERTIGO

HITCHCOCK’S VERTIGO

Exhibition entrance is free of charge

21 August 2024

Soggettiva Gallery presents from 27 August (until 30 September) “Vertigine Hitchcock”, a tribute to the English director who with more than 50 films has earned the nickname of “Master of the Shiver”, inextricably linking his name to the history of cinema. 125 years after Hitchcock’s birth, the exhibition retraces the highlights of his career with a selection of Alternative Movie Posters inspired by his greatest masterpieces.

Hitchcock’s influence is not limited to the cinema, but it extends into all fields of creativity (video games, comics, design, art, literature, fashion) until he leaves an indelible mark in pop culture, Not to mention the in-depth and very current representation of American society that he has returned with his films. While the artists whose works are on display must therefore confront themselves with the monumental artistic heritage of the English director, On the other hand, they cannot ignore the work of artists who before them have put their creativity at the service of Hitchcock’s boundless cinematic imagination: in this sense, the legacy of the American illustrator Saul Bass is essential, close collaborator of the director in several films.

HITCHCOCK THE INFLUENCER

From August 27 (until September 30) Soggettiva Gallery presents the exhibition “Hitchcock’s Vertigo” that collects more than thirty Alternative Movie Posters, inspired by his films. A tribute to the English director who revolutionized cinema with his ability to turn each of his films into a journey into the darkest depths of the human soul, revealing how true terror is hidden behind normality.

A kind of “Hitchcock style” recognizable across all artistic fields: from video games to comics and contemporarty art, not to mention the contaminations with the art of the surrealist painter Salvador Dalì – to design – the decor of many of his films’ interiors have been an inspiration to important interior designers; from literature – authors of the caliber of Stephen King and Patricia Highsmith recognize in Hitchcock a master of suspence and human psychology – fashionable – his actresses, from Kim Novak to Grace Kelly, from Tippi Hedren to Janet Leigh, have become true icons of style thanks to the refined dresses and elaborate hairstyles designed by Hitchcock in collaboration with the eclectic costume designer Edith Head, so much to influence over the years the collections of designers such as Alexander McQueen, Miuccia Prada and Dior.

A LOOK INTO AMERICAN SOCIETY

The films honored by the works on display reveal a social cross-section of American society, to which Hitchcock has always devoted a careful and very current analysis: emblematic two films such as “Rear Window” and “Psycho”: if the first one reveals the change taking place in a society that has lost all elements of common life, the second one addresses the theme of class struggle.

In the exhibition, graphic works by international artists who had to confront, on the one hand, the legacy of Hitchcock’s films and, on the other, that of those with whom he has measured himself before them: just think of the famous American illustrator Saul Bass, author of both the iconic poster of “Vertigo” and of the opening titles of this and other two milestones of Hitchcock’s cinema such as “North by Northwest” and “Psycho”. The irresistible tension that characterizes “Psycho” has unleashed the creativity of the Australian illustrator Nick Charge and the French graphic designer Melvin Mago, who have insisted on the more gothic aspects of the film. Whereas the mid-century art enthusiast Todd Alcott has played ironically with the psychiatric and “phrenological” aspect of the film, Sheila C chooses the horizontal format to create a destabilizing and at times “diabolical” portrait of Norman/Anthony Perkins.

A MATTER OF PERSPECTIVE

Inspired by “The Birds”, to visually recreate the sense of total vulnerability conveyed by the film, Adam Juresko with an abstract illustration, Max Dalton with a work of delirious and amusing madness, Olivier Courbet with a work that uses perspective by applying a style that mimics watercolor to create dynamism and the Italian Utopian Movies, whose experimental approach mixes human creativity with the technological potential offered by Artificial Intelligence. In addition, the painter from Marche, Veronica Chessa, pays her personal tribute to “The birds” with an acrylic painting that, through the iconic “boule de neige” configuration, materializes with skilful brushstrokes the very difficult atmosphere staged by Hitchcock (with a refined reference to the plot).

The vertigo felt in front of “Vertigo” is at the center of Jonathan Burton’s work, characterized by a two-dimensional stretch, while the dismay of James Stewart in “Rear Window” is taken by illustrator Zeb Love and the Brooklyn designer Katherine Lam who, playing with the elements of the plot, echo the theme on which the whole film revolves: are we watching our neighbour or is it the opposite?

UNESCAPABLE FEAR

It would not be an exhibition on Hitchcock if there was no film like “Nort by Northwest”, which inspired Joseph Chang, author of a quadrilogia of retro-workspop dedicated to Hitchcock and characterized by a mix between a modernist graphic style and a minimalist taste of oriental, and the Portland artist Dakota Randall, who has taken over the atmosphere of the film with Cary Grant through a classic approach and elegant sepia tones.

Two other films of fundamental importance such as “Rope” and “The Man Who Knew Too Much” are presented in a new and original key by the Belgian illustrator Jack Durieux, master in the use of perspective and in the balance of warm cold tones within the refined serigraphs with which he also pays tribute to “Psycho” and “Vertigo”. In addition, two examples of how Hitchcock was master in adapting literary works such as “The 39 Steps” and “Dial M for Murder” were reinterpreted by pop culture expert Benedict Woodhead – to whom a few black and white shapes are enough to bring to mind in a precise and punctual way the key elements of the film – and by the London designer Adam Simpson, Instead, it relies on a three-dimensional effect orchestrated on several levels to graphically render the steps that give the title to the film itself.

TWO CINEMATIC TRIOS

Finally, two groups of works, by the Florida artist Danny Haas and the original Flemish designer Mark Borgions, respectively, they compose two representative tryptics that are consistent in style – in the first case for their sought-after colour palettes and clever references to posters the originals of the films, the second for rarefied atmospheres and geometric lines – and format.

All the works on display are for sale.

INFO

SOGGETTIVA GALLERY

Via Pasquale Sottocorno 5/A, 20122 Milano

3357722437 – 3458463222 – 3342378116

info@soggettivagallery.com 

www.soggettivagallery.com 

Opening hours:

Monday: 15.30 – 19.45
Tuesday to Friday: 10 – 13.30 / 15.30 – 19.45
Saturday and Sunday: 10.30 – 13.30 / 15.30 – 19.45

Foto alternative movie poster del film Psyco | Melvin Mago | Alfred Hitchcock | Soggettiva Gallery Milano
Foto alternative movie poster del film La donna che visse due volte | Joseph Chang | Alfred Hitchcock | Soggettiva Gallery Milano
Foto alternative movie poster del film Psyco | Micheal Stiles | Alfred Hitchcock | Soggettiva Gallery Milano
Foto alternative movie poster del film Psyco | Todd Alcott | Alfred Hitchcock | Soggettiva Gallery Milano
Foto alternative movie poster del film Gli uccelli | Danny Haas | Alfred Hitchcock | Soggettiva Gallery Milano
Foto alternative movie poster del film La donna che visse due volte | Jack Durieux | Alfred Hitchcock | Soggettiva Gallery Milano
Foto alternative movie poster del film Il delitto perfetto | Benedict Woodhead | Alfred Hitchcock | Soggettiva Gallery Milano
Foto alternative movie poster del film La donna che visse due volte | Jonathan Burton | Alfred Hitchcock | Soggettiva Gallery Milano
Foto alternative movie poster del film La FINESTRA SUL CORTILE | Jonathan Burton | Alfred Hitchcock | Soggettiva Gallery Milano
Foto alternative movie poster del film Intrigo internazionale | Mark Borgions | Alfred Hitchcock | Soggettiva Gallery Milano

Soggettiva Gallery presents from 27 August (until 30 September) “Vertigine Hitchcock”, a tribute to the English director who with more than 50 films has earned the nickname of “Master of the Shiver”, inextricably linking his name to the history of cinema. 125 years after Hitchcock’s birth, the exhibition retraces the highlights of his career with a selection of Alternative Movie Posters inspired by his greatest masterpieces.

Hitchcock’s influence is not limited to the cinema, but it extends into all fields of creativity (video games, comics, design, art, literature, fashion) until he leaves an indelible mark in pop culture, Not to mention the in-depth and very current representation of American society that he has returned with his films. While the artists whose works are on display must therefore confront themselves with the monumental artistic heritage of the English director, On the other hand, they cannot ignore the work of artists who before them have put their creativity at the service of Hitchcock’s boundless cinematic imagination: in this sense, the legacy of the American illustrator Saul Bass is essential.

Foto alternative movie poster del film Psyco | Melvin Mago | Alfred Hitchcock | Soggettiva Gallery Milano

HITCHCOCK THE INFLUENCER

From August 27 (until September 30) Soggettiva Gallery presents the exhibition “Hitchcock’s Vertigo” that collects more than thirty Alternative Movie Posters, inspired by his films. A tribute to the English director who revolutionized cinema with his ability to turn each of his films into a journey into the darkest depths of the human soul, revealing how true terror is hidden behind normality.

A kind of “Hitchcock style” recognizable across all artistic fields: from video games to comics and contemporarty art, not to mention the contaminations with the art of the surrealist painter Salvador Dalì – to design – the decor of many of his films’ interiors have been an inspiration to important interior designers; from literature – authors of the caliber of Stephen King and Patricia Highsmith recognize in Hitchcock a master of suspence and human psychology – fashionable – his actresses, from Kim Novak to Grace Kelly, from Tippi Hedren to Janet Leigh, have become true icons of style thanks to the refined dresses and elaborate hairstyles designed by Hitchcock in collaboration with the eclectic costume designer Edith Head, so much to influence over the years the collections of designers such as Alexander McQueen, Miuccia Prada and Christian Dior.

Foto alternative movie poster del film La donna che visse due volte | Joseph Chang | Alfred Hitchcock | Soggettiva Gallery Milano

A LOOK INTO AMERICAN SOCIETY

The films honored by the works on display reveal a social cross-section of American society, to which Hitchcock has always devoted a careful and very current analysis: emblematic two films such as “Rear Window” and “Psycho”: if the first one reveals the change taking place in a society that has lost all elements of common life, the second one addresses the theme of class struggle.

In the exhibition, graphic works by international artists who had to confront, on the one hand, the legacy of Hitchcock’s films and, on the other, that of those with whom he has measured himself before them: just think of the famous American illustrator Saul Bass, author of both the iconic poster of “Vertigo” and of the opening titles of this and other two milestones of Hitchcock’s cinema such as “North by Northwest” and “Psycho”. The irresistible tension that characterizes “Psycho” has unleashed the creativity of the Australian illustrator Nick Charge and the French graphic designer Melvin Mago, who have insisted on the more gothic aspects of the film. Whereas the mid-century art enthusiast Todd Alcott has played ironically with the psychiatric and “phrenological” aspect of the film, Sheila C chooses the horizontal format to create a destabilizing and at times “diabolical” portrait of Norman/Anthony Perkins.

Foto alternative movie poster del film Psyco | Micheal Stiles | Alfred Hitchcock | Soggettiva Gallery Milano

A MATTER OF PERSPECTIVE

Inspired by “The Birds”, to visually recreate the sense of total vulnerability conveyed by the film, Adam Juresko with an abstract illustration, Max Dalton with a work of delirious and amusing madness, Olivier Courbet with a work that uses perspective by applying a style that mimics watercolor to create dynamism and the Italian Utopian Movies, whose experimental approach mixes human creativity with the technological potential offered by Artificial Intelligence. In addition, the painter from Marche, Veronica Chessa, pays her personal tribute to “The birds” with an acrylic painting that, through the iconic “boule de neige” configuration, materializes with skilful brushstrokes the very difficult atmosphere staged by Hitchcock.

The vertigo felt in front of “Vertigo” is at the center of Jonathan Burton’s work, characterized by a two-dimensional stretch, while the dismay of James Stewart in “Rear Window” is taken by illustrator Zeb Love and  designer Katherine Lam who, playing with the elements of the plot, echos the theme on which the whole film revolves: are we watching our neighbour or is it the opposite?

Foto alternative movie poster del film Psyco | Todd Alcott | Alfred Hitchcock | Soggettiva Gallery Milano

UNESCAPABLE FEAR

It would not be an exhibition on Hitchcock if there was no film like “Nort by Northwest”, which inspired Joseph Chang, author of a quadrilogia of retro-workspop dedicated to Hitchcock and characterized by a mix between a modernist graphic style and a minimalist taste of oriental, and the Portland artist Dakota Randall, who has taken over the atmosphere of the film with Cary Grant through a classic approach.

Two other films of fundamental importance such as “Rope” and “The Man Who Knew Too Much” are presented in a new and original key by the Belgian illustrator Jack Durieux, master in the use of perspective and in the balance of warm cold tones within the refined serigraphs with which he also pays tribute to “Psycho” and “Vertigo”. In addition, two examples of how Hitchcock was master in adapting literary works such as “The 39 Steps” and “Dial M for Murder” were reinterpreted by pop culture expert Benedict Woodhead – to whom a few black and white shapes are enough to bring to mind in a precise and punctual way the key elements of the film – and by the London designer Adam Simpson, Instead, it relies on a three-dimensional effect orchestrated on several levels to graphically render the steps that give the title to the film itself.

Foto alternative movie poster del film La donna che visse due volte | Jack Durieux | Alfred Hitchcock | Soggettiva Gallery Milano

TWO CINEMATIC TRIOS

Finally, two groups of works, by the Florida artist Danny Haas and the original Flemish designer Mark Borgions, respectively, they compose two representative tryptics that are consistent in style – in the first case for their sought-after colour palettes and clever references to posters the originals of the films, the second for rarefied atmospheres and geometric lines – and format.

All the works on display are for sale.

Foto alternative movie poster del film La donna che visse due volte | Jonathan Burton | Alfred Hitchcock | Soggettiva Gallery Milano

INFO

SOGGETTIVA GALLERY

Via Pasquale Sottocorno 5/A, 20122 Milano

3357722437 – 3458463222 – 3342378116

info@soggettivagallery.com 

www.soggettivagallery.com 

Opening hours:

Monday: 15.30 – 19.45
Tuesday to Friday: 10 – 13.30 / 15.30 – 19.45
Sat – Sunday: 10.30 – 13.30 / 15.30 – 19.45

Foto alternative movie poster del film La FINESTRA SUL CORTILE | Jonathan Burton | Alfred Hitchcock | Soggettiva Gallery Milano
Foto alternative movie poster del film Intrigo internazionale | Mark Borgions | Alfred Hitchcock | Soggettiva Gallery Milano
Categories
News

MIDSUMMER’S CINEMA

MIDSUMMER’S CINEMA

The exhibition is free of entrance

20 June 2024

From 20 June (until 25 August) Soggettiva Gallery presents Midsummer’s Cinema, centered on the world of Alternative Movie Posters, dedicates an in-depth analysis to the films that are approaching the summer season by setting, color or atmosphere.

The period when the light of day reaches its peak is celebrated, by contrast, by a series of Alternative Movie Posters inspired by the darkness typical of horror cinema, the most classic of the “genres” of cinema of the summer. Several works inspired by a cult like Midsommar, which plays its expressive forces right on the contrast light/ shadow: from the flaming poster of the Spanish illustrator and gamer Stella Ygris to the floral and bright colors of the multimedia designer Francesca Pusceddu, up to the geometric and almost mystical representation of the Scottish designer Scott Balmer.

Other works inspired by horror movies complete the section: among others, The Texas Chainsaw Massacre reinterpreted in the context of the warm light of a wheat field at sunset by the Scotsman Rich Davies and Sharknado, revised in an ultra-lightpop artist and Californian advertising artist Anthony Petrie.

BARBIE GOES TO L.A

Another focus is on works with warm atmospheres typically more summer (and holiday). Not to be missed in this sense Barbie, a planetary success brought to the big screen by Greta Gerwig: on display the graphic representation of two essential “accessories” for Barbie lovers such as the Camper, at the center of the work of Mark Borgions, graphic designer based in Flanders and the House, redesigned by English George Townley in shades of pink.

Of the British illustrator there are also several works that, through a hyperrealistic style and changing colors, pay homage to places in the city where “it’s summer all year”, Los Angeles, real open-air movie set: from a diner that becomes the symbol of Lynch’s iconic Mulholland Drive to Fox Plaza, made famous as Nakatomi Tower by Bruce Willis in the film Die Hard.

ADVENTURE UNDER THE SUN

There will be adventure movies, especially those in which twists unfold under the scorching sun, often in semi-desert places, as in the case of Mad Max 2, from which Scott Balmer takes inspiration to create a two-dimensional illustration and bright metallic colors and Indiana Jones, which the Virginia designer Adam Juresko revisits representing the figure played by Harrison Ford with a “spiritual” aura which brings him to some sort of Lawrence of Arabia. In addition, two adrenalinic and “sunny” works inspired by the adventures of Thelma & Louise – the Milanese illustrator Matteo Costa in a reinterpretation of the film in a “cartoon” key – and Top Gun, a source of inspiration for the Texan Casey Callender in a mixture of cinema and the art of the American painter Edward Hopper.

Always the “summer” setting characterizes some of the films on display, taken from literary works of great success, for the series “great classics to re-read under the umbrella: from Dune – whose second chapter is for months in the lead box office – to which the Canadian designer Kris Miklos dedicates a sand-colored portrait of Zendaya in the shoes of Chani, to the “scorching” Lolita, revised by Polish Andrzej Krajewski with an illustration with bright colors and almost expressionist style, up to the blinding Death on the Nile and the initiatory Stand by Me, proposed by Murugiah – illustrator from Sri Lanka – and by House Bear Design – graphic studio located in Arkansas – thanks to works characterized respectively by psychedelic atmospheres.

THE MAESTROS

Also on display are films by two directors such as Hayao Miyazaki and Wes Anderson, who often chose to set their stories during the summer, the real protagonist of their stories. By Matteo Costa the brilliant alternative poster of The Boy and the Heron, a film that won the Japanese animation master his second Oscar; Some of Miyazaki’s classics such as Spirited Away and Howl’s Moving Castle can be rediscovered thanks to the luminous works of Craig Drake, illustrator based in Tokyo and Costa Rica’s designer Fabiocs, respectively.

As for the American director, it shows the re-interpretations of several films through which Anderson built his unique style: from the alpine holidays at the Grand Budapest Hotel – here the painter from the Marche Veronica Chessa sets one of her boule de neige containing the unmistakable hotel – to The Life Acquatic Steve Zissou – in this case is the marine setting of the high-rate opera sentimental that the Los Angeles illustrator Josh Set Blake dedicates to the film -, until the exotic The Darjeeling Limited and the “summer camp” of Moonrise Kingdom, to which the English graphic artist Sam Gilbey dedicates two evocative portraits of the respective and formidable cast of actors and actresses.

100 YEARS OF MARLON BRANDO

Last but not least, the 20th anniversary of the death of the legendary Marlon Brando on July 1, 2004. To celebrate the American actor, creator of countless memorable performances, a “glowing” version of one of his most iconic films is on display, Apocalypse Now, with which the Swiss multidisciplinary artist Alberto Russo captures all the destructive power and moral ambiguity staged in Francis Ford Coppola’s masterpiece.

INFO

SOGGETTIVA GALLERY

Via Pasquale Sottocorno 5/A, 20122 Milano

3357722437 – 3458463222

info@soggettivagallery.com 

www.soggettivagallery.com 

Opening hours:

Monday 13-20.30
Tuesday and Wednesday 10.30-13.30 e 16-20.30
Thursday 10.30 – 20.30
Friday and Saturday 10.30-13.30 e 16-19.30

Foto alternative movie poster del film Mulholland Drive | Zita Walker | David Lynch | Soggettiva Gallery Milano
Foto alternative movie poster del film Midsommar | Francesca Pusceddu | Ari Aster | Soggettiva Gallery Milano
Foto alternative movie poster del film Midsommar (Hills) | Garbhan Gránt | Ari Aster | Soggettiva Gallery Milano
Foto alternative movie poster del film Midsommar | Scott Balmer | Ari Aster | Soggettiva Gallery Milano
Foto alternative movie poster del film Dune | Murugiah | Denis Villeneuve | Soggettiva Gallery Milano
Foto alternative movie poster Stand by me (Train) | Housebear| Stephen King | Rob Reiner | Soggettiva Gallery Milano
Foto alternative movie poster del film Midsommar (Bear) | Stella Ygris | Ari Aster | Soggettiva Gallery Milano
Foto alternative movie poster del film Non aprite quella porta | Rich Davies | Tobe Hooper | Soggettiva Gallery Milano
Foto alternative movie poster del film Barbie | Mark Borgions | Greta Gerwig | Soggettiva Gallery Milano
Foto alternative movie poster del film Apocalypse Now | Alberto Russo | Francis Ford Coppola | Soggettiva Gallery Milano

From 20 June (until 25 August) Soggettiva Gallery presents Midsummer’s Cinema, centered on the world of Alternative Movie Posters, dedicates an in-depth analysis to the films that are approaching the summer season by setting, color or atmosphere.

The period when the light of day reaches its peak is celebrated, by contrast, by a series of Alternative Movie Posters inspired by the darkness typical of horror cinema, the most classic of the “genres” of cinema of the summer. Several works inspired by a cult like Midsommar, which plays its expressive forces right on the contrast light/ shadow: from the flaming poster of the Spanish illustrator and gamer Stella Ygris to the floral and bright colors of the multimedia designer Francesca Pusceddu, up to the geometric and almost mystical representation of the Scottish designer Scott Balmer.

Other works inspired by horror movies complete the section: among others, The Texas Chainsaw Massacre reinterpreted in the context of the warm light of a wheat field at sunset by the Scotsman Rich Davies and Sharknado, revised in an ultra-lightpop artist and Californian advertising artist Anthony Petrie.

Foto alternative movie poster del film Mulholland Drive | Zita Walker | David Lynch | Soggettiva Gallery Milano
Foto alternative movie poster del film Barbie | Mark Borgions | Greta Gerwig | Soggettiva Gallery Milano

BARBIE GOES TO L.A

Another focus is on works with warm atmospheres typically more summer (and holiday). Not to be missed in this sense Barbie, a planetary success brought to the big screen by Greta Gerwig: on display the graphic representation of two essential “accessories” for Barbie lovers such as the Camper, at the center of the work of Mark Borgions, graphic designer based in Flanders and the House, redesigned by English George Townley in shades of pink.

Of the British illustrator there are also several works that, through a hyperrealistic style and changing colors, pay homage to places in the city where “it’s summer all year”, Los Angeles, real open-air movie set: from a diner that becomes the symbol of Lynch’s iconic Mulholland Drive to Fox Plaza, made famous as Nakatomi Tower by Bruce Willis in the film Die Hard.

Foto alternative movie poster del film Midsommar | Francesca Pusceddu | Ari Aster | Soggettiva Gallery Milano
Foto alternative movie poster del film Midsommar (Hills) | Garbhan Gránt | Ari Aster | Soggettiva Gallery Milano
Foto alternative movie poster del film Midsommar | Scott Balmer | Ari Aster | Soggettiva Gallery Milano
Foto alternative movie poster del film Midsommar (Bear) | Stella Ygris | Ari Aster | Soggettiva Gallery Milano

ADVENTURE UNDER THE SUN

There will be adventure movies, especially those in which twists unfold under the scorching sun, often in semi-desert places, as in the case of Mad Max 2, from which Scott Balmer takes inspiration to create a two-dimensional illustration and bright metallic colors and Indiana Jones, which the Virginia designer Adam Juresko revisits representing the figure played by Harrison Ford with a “spiritual” aura which brings him to some sort of Lawrence of Arabia. In addition, two adrenalinic and “sunny” works inspired by the adventures of Thelma & Louise – the Milanese illustrator Matteo Costa in a reinterpretation of the film in a “cartoon” key – and Top Gun, a source of inspiration for the Texan Casey Callender in a mixture of cinema and the art of the American painter Edward Hopper.

Always the “summer” setting characterizes some of the films on display, taken from literary works of great success, for the series “great classics to re-read under the umbrella: from Dune – whose second chapter is for months in the lead box office – to which the Canadian designer Kris Miklos dedicates a sand-colored portrait of Zendaya in the shoes of Chani, to the “scorching” Lolita, revised by Polish Andrzej Krajewski with an illustration with bright colors and almost expressionist style, up to the blinding Death on the Nile and the initiatory Stand by Me, proposed by Murugiah – illustrator from Sri Lanka – and by House Bear Design – graphic studio located in Arkansas – thanks to works characterized respectively by psychedelic atmospheres.

Foto alternative movie poster del film Dune | Murugiah | Denis Villeneuve | Soggettiva Gallery Milano
Foto alternative movie poster Stand by me (Train) | Housebear| Stephen King | Rob Reiner | Soggettiva Gallery Milano

THE MAESTROS

Also on display are films by two directors such as Hayao Miyazaki and Wes Anderson, who often chose to set their stories during the summer, the real protagonist of their stories. By Matteo Costa the brilliant alternative poster of The Boy and the Heron, a film that won the Japanese animation master his second Oscar; Some of Miyazaki’s classics such as Spirited Away and Howl’s Moving Castle can be rediscovered thanks to the luminous works of Craig Drake, illustrator based in Tokyo and Costa Rica’s designer Fabiocs, respectively.

As for the American director, it shows the re-interpretations of several films through which Anderson built his unique style: from the alpine holidays at the Grand Budapest Hotel – here the painter from the Marche Veronica Chessa sets one of her boule de neige containing the unmistakable hotel – to The Life Acquatic Steve Zissou – in this case is the marine setting of the high-rate opera sentimental that the Los Angeles illustrator Josh Set Blake dedicates to the film -, until the exotic The Darjeeling Limited and the “summer camp” of Moonrise Kingdom, to which the English graphic artist Sam Gilbey dedicates two evocative portraits of the respective and formidable cast of actors and actresses.

Foto alternative movie poster del film Non aprite quella porta | Rich Davies | Tobe Hooper | Soggettiva Gallery Milano

100 YEARS OF MARLON BRANDO

Last but not least, the 20th anniversary of the death of the legendary Marlon Brando on July 1, 2004. To celebrate the American actor, creator of countless memorable performances, a “glowing” version of one of his most iconic films is on display, Apocalypse Now, with which the Swiss multidisciplinary artist Alberto Russo captures all the destructive power and moral ambiguity staged in Francis Ford Coppola’s masterpiece.

Foto alternative movie poster del film Apocalypse Now | Alberto Russo | Francis Ford Coppola | Soggettiva Gallery Milano

INFO

SOGGETTIVA GALLERY

Via Pasquale Sottocorno 5/A, 20122 Milano

3357722437 – 3458463222

info@soggettivagallery.com 

www.soggettivagallery.com 

Opening hours:

Monday 13-20.30
Tuesday and Wednesday 10.30-13.30 e 16-20.30
Thursday 10.30 – 20.30
Friday and Saturday 10.30-13.30 e 16-19.30

Categories
News

MOVIE FACES

MOVIE FACES

Exhibition entrance is free of charge

9 May 2024

Soggettiva Gallery dedicates a tribute to the film portrait, the most recent declination of an art form among the oldest ever used by man to represent himself and the reality that surrounds him.

Crowning a path that over the centuries has crossed the history of art before, photography then and finally cinema, the exhibition focuses on portrait as a tool through which the greatest directors have been able to create an indissoluble emotional bond with the public, taking advantage of the big screen to instill the features of the actors, captured by a camera placed a few inches from their faces, an expressive power never reached by any other artistic form.

THE BEST OF WESTERN CINEMA

The exhibition travels through the filmography of some key directors of the history of American cinema – from Scorsese to Tarantino, from the Coen brothers to Lynch, from Tim Burton to Wes Anderson -, French – the protagonists of the Nouvelle Vague, Truffaut and Godard -, and Italian – with two internationally recognized masters such as Fellini, Antonioni and Scola.

After a foray into Gothic literature – with the characters of Dracula, Doctor Jekyll and Mr. Hyde and The Wife of Frankenstein – in horror cinema – among others They Live and The Silence of the Innocent – and in the filmic universe “hallucinated” – Trainspotting and Fear and Deliro in Las Vegas – the exhibition shows some of the most recent releases welcomed by the public and critics.

CINEMA IN THE SPOTLIGHT

From 9 May (until 16 June) Subjective Gallery presents The Face of Cinema, a study of the central role that the portrait plays in making a film unforgettable. Among the most ancient artistic genres, the portrait, since ancient painting, is the instrument to which the human being has entrusted his own self-representation, giving him a value of witness and memory.

Over time the portrait has been able to return the different perception that the artist and the human being more generally had of himself according to the different eras in which he lived: up to the twentieth century when, with the advent of psychology and psychoanalysis, the portrait was seen not only as an objective representation of the external appearance of a person, but as a real subjective mirror of his inner self: in this epochal change a prominent role is played by new inventions such as photography and above all cinema, which, looking at man through a new perspective, that of the camera and camera lens, established a whole new relationship with the portrait.

THE HOLLYWOOD MAESTROS

The filmographies through the works on display touch some of the countries that best expressed an imagination in the form of film sequences, often thanks to shots that represent a subject in an extremely close, with a first or very close-up. Starting from the United States, the birthplace of the seventh art, there will be films by a movie giant like Martin Scorsese – from classics like Taxi Driver and Toro Scatenato, whose protagonists played by Robert De Niro have been reinterpreted respectively by the Canadian graphic designer Samuel Ho and the French illustrator Fredlobo Lopez, up to more recent films such as The Age of Innocence and Killers of the Flower Moon, where the iconic Michelle Pfeiffer and Lily Gladstone are shot respectively in the works of a well-rounded artist like Stefania Gagliano and in that of the Milanese painter and cartoonist Matteo Costa – as well as the disturbing films of David Lynch – if on the one hand the designer of Washington Jeffrey Everett dedicates to three masterpieces like Eraserhead, Blue Velvet and Twin Peaks three portraits inspired by the musical performances that appear in the three films, on the other the American artist Joel Daniel Phillips pays homage to the same Lynch with a surreal portrait in the company of a hen – and the films of the pulp master Quentin Tarantino – the protagonists of a cornerstone of his cinema as Pulp Fiction and Kill Bill are re-imagined by Colorado art director Aaron Lea (with the profiles of Uma Thurman and John Travolta that become the cover of two vinyl with the film’s soundtrack) and digital artist Cristina Stifanic, while the Irish designer Conor Langton proposes a portrait able to capture the essence of the same Tarantino.

There will also be films by two innovators such as the Coen brothers: among the works on display those inspired by a great actor like Jeff Bridges, the protagonist of two films that have redefined the genre cinema, namely The Great Lebowski and The Grit: The magical Drugo is inspired by the work of Parisian graphic designer Malone, while the amazing hit man Reuben Cogburn is portrayed three quarters by the French illustrator Yvan Quinet. As for the most emblematic figures staged by Tim Burton and Wes Anderson, you can discover on the one hand characters such as those played by Michael Keaton in Beetlejuice (edited by Conor Langton) and those of Johnny Depp and Winona Ryder in Edward Scissorhands (taken from the Marche painter Veronica Chessa in a fairy-tale format boule de neige), on the other hand those entrusted to the sweet Saoirse Ronan in Grand Budapest Hotel (magazine by Adam Juresko) and the enigmatic Gwyneth Paltrow in I Tenenbaum, chosen as the subject of the captivating work of illustrator Shannon Bonatakis.

A LEAP INTO EUROPE

Taking a trip across the Atlantic, in Europe, will be presented some films from two essential film schools such as French and Italian. As for France, there will be works that refer to the cinema of two sacred monsters of the Nouvelle Vague as François Truffaut and Jean-Luc Godard: in tribute Truffaut will be exhibited two works inspired by two timeless films such as I 400 colpi and Jules and Jim – in which Jean-Pierre Léaud on the one hand and Jeanne Moreau, Oskar Werner and Henri Serre on the other are redesigned by the Virginia designer Adam Juresko -, while to Godard are dedicated – again by Juresko – two reinterpretations of films unique in their genre as Until the last breath, with Jean Seberg chased by Jean-Paul Belmondo, and This is my life, with the profile of Anna Karina that stands out on a three-tone engraving.

Crossing the Italian borders, you can discover the films of three authors in the true sense of the word as Federico Fellini, Michelangelo Antonioni and Ettore Scola. If Fellini will be present with a penetrating portrait of the master of Polish illustration Waldemar Świerzy and with a revisiting of Adam Juresko’s La dolce vita in which Marcello Mastroianni and Anita Ekberg are taken up in a work with dark shades and a “jazz” flavor, Antonioni will be represented by one of his most evocative films, Blow Up, in which the protagonist starring David Hemmings takes us back with his camera, while Scola will be present with A particular day, a timeless classic immortalized by Matteo Costa with a poignant portrait of Sophia Loren and Marcello Mastroianni.

HORROR MOVIES

As for the portraits inspired by the world of “thrill”, the works on display will follow three strands: that of films taken from Gothic literature – three icons such as Dracula (in the version directed by Francis Ford Coppola and interpreted by Keanu Reeves)Dr. Jekyll and Mr Hyde and The Bride of Frankenstein are reinterpreted by Pennsylvania graphic artist Death Kat Design, respectively, by the New York illustrator Timothy Pittides and the Venetian designer Le Nevralgie Constants – that of horror films – on all of them They Live by John Carpenter and a classic like The Silence of the Innocents, honored by the Californian motion designer Hanzel Haro and Yvan Quinet – and the one characterized by films with atmospheres and characters hallucinatory to say the least, as Trainspotting – which was inspired by the British illustrator Scott Balmer – and Fear and delirium in Las Vegas – by graphic designer Gibson Graphix.

THE SUCCESSES OF RECENT MONTHS

Finally a focus will be on the most recent film releases that have stood out for favorable criticism – as in the case of Past Lives, that Matteo Costa rethinks representing the two protagonists Greta Lee and Teo Yoo who look at themselves in a game of temporal and geographical references – for the great success at the box office – as happened at Dune – Part 2, revised by Kris Miklos with a portrait of Zendaya in sand colours – and Poveri Creature, triumphant at the Venice Film Festival and the Oscars, of which Matteo Costa has created a work that enhances the performance of Emma Stone, awarded in Hollywood with the statuette for Best Actress.

INFO

SOGGETTIVA GALLERY

Via Pasquale Sottocorno 5/A, 20122 Milano

3357722437 – 3458463222

info@soggettivagallery.com 

www.soggettivagallery.com 

Opening hours:

Tuesday-Friday 10 – 20.30
Saturday and Sunday 10-13.30 // 16-19.30

Foto alternative movie poster del film Il grande Lebowski (blue) | Malone | Coen | Soggettiva Gallery Milano
Foto alternative movie poster di Dracula | Gibson Graphix | Death Kat Design | Soggettiva Gallery Milano
Foto alternative movie poster de Il silenzio degli innocenti | Yvan Quinet | Jonathan Demme | Soggettiva Gallery Milano
Alternative movie poster Thumbellina | | Shannon Bonatakis | Soggettiva Gallery Milano
Foto alternative movie poster del film Questa è la mia vita (coral) | Adam Juresko | Jean-Luc Godard | Soggettiva Gallery Milano
Foto alternative movie poster del film Velluto blu | Jeffrey Everett |  | Soggettiva Gallery Milano
Foto alternative movie poster del film Una giornata particolare | Matteo Costa | Soggettiva Gallery Milano
Foto alternative movie poster del film Dottor Jekill e Mr. Hyde | Timothy Pittides | Soggettiva Gallery Milano
Foto alternative movie poster del film Trainspotting | Scott Balmer | Danny Boyle | Soggettiva Gallery Milano
Foto alternative movie poster del film Dune | Murugiah | Denis Villeneuve | Soggettiva Gallery Milano
Foto alternative movie poster di Paura e delirio a Las Vegas | Gibson Graphix | Alfred Hitchcock | Soggettiva Gallery Milano

Soggettiva Gallery dedica un omaggio al ritratto cinematografico, la più recente declinazione di una forma d’arte tra le più antiche mai impiegate dall’uomo per rappresentare sé stesso e la realtà che lo circonda.

Coronando un percorso che nei secoli ha attraversato la storia dell’arte prima, della fotografia poi e infine del cinema, l’esposizione si concentra sul ritratto in quanto strumento tramite il quale i più grandi registi hanno saputo creare un legame emotivo indissolubile con il pubblico, approfittando del grande schermo per infondere ai lineamenti degli attori, catturati da una cinepresa posta a pochi centimetri dai loro volti, una potenza espressiva mai raggiunta da nessun’altra forma artistica.

Foto alternative movie poster del film Il grande Lebowski (blue) | Malone | Coen | Soggettiva Gallery Milano

IL MEGLIO DEL CINEMA OCCIDENTALE

L’esposizione viaggia attraverso attraverso la filmografia di alcuni registi cardine della storia del cinema americano – da Scorsese a Tarantino, dai fratelli Coen fino a Lynch, da Tim Burton a Wes Anderson –, francese – i protagonisti della Nouvelle Vague, Truffaut e Godard –, e italiana – con due maestri internazionalmente riconosciuti come Fellini, Antonioni e Scola.

Dopo un’incursione nella letteratura gotica – con i personaggi di Dracula, Dottor Jekyll e Mr. Hyde e de La moglie di Frankenstein – nel cinema horror – tra gli altri Essi vivono e Il silenzio degli innocenti – e in universo filmico “allucinato” – Trainspotting e Paura e Deliro a Las Vegas – la mostra alcune delle uscite più recenti accolte dal favore di pubblico e critica.

Foto alternative movie poster di Dracula | Gibson Graphix | Death Kat Design | Soggettiva Gallery Milano

IL CINEMA IN PRIMO PIANO

Dal 9 maggio (fino al 16 giugno) Soggettiva Gallery presenta Il volto del cinema, approfondimento sul ruolo centrale che il ritratto gioca nel rendere un film indimenticabile. Tra i più antichi generi artistici, il ritratto, fin dalla pittura antica, è lo strumento a cui l’essere umano ha affidato la propria auto-rappresentazione, attribuendogli un valore di testimonianza e memoria che si contrappone all’implacabile avanzare del tempo.

Nel tempo il ritratto è stato in grado di restituire la diversa percezione che l’artista e l’essere umano più in generale ha avuto di sé in base alle diverse epoche in cui ha vissuto: fino ad arrivare al XX secolo quando, con l’avvento della psicologia e della psicanalisi, il ritratto è stato visto non solo come raffigurazione oggettiva dell’aspetto esteriore di una persona, ma come vero e proprio specchio soggettivo della sua interiorità: in questo cambiamento epocale un ruolo di primo piano è giocato da nuove invenzioni quali la fotografia e soprattutto il cinema, che, guardando all’uomo attraverso una prospettiva nuova, quella dell’obiettivo della macchina fotografia e della cinepresa, ha stabilito un rapporto del tutto nuovo con il ritratto, permettendo allo spettatore di guardare fuori e dentro i volti inquadrati come mai aveva potuto fare prima.

Foto alternative movie poster de Il silenzio degli innocenti | Yvan Quinet | Jonathan Demme | Soggettiva Gallery Milano

I MAESTRI DI HOLLYWOOD

Le filmografie attraversate dalle opere in mostra toccano alcuni dei paesi che meglio hanno saputo esprimere un immaginario sotto forma di sequenze cinematografiche, spesso grazie a inquadrature che rappresentano un soggetto in modo estremamente ravvicinato, con un primo o primissimo piano.
Partendo dagli Stati Uniti, culla per eccellenza della settima arte, non mancheranno i film di un colosso del cinema come Martin Scorsese – dai classici come Taxi Driver e Toro Scatenato, i cui protagonisti interpretati da Robert De Niro sono stato reinterpretati rispettivamente dal grafico canadese Samuel Ho e dall’illustratore francese Fredlobo Lopez, fino a pellicole più recenti come L’età dell’innocenza e Killers of the Flower Moon, dove le iconiche Michelle Pfeiffer e Lily Gladstone sono riprese rispettivamente nelle opera di un’artista a tutto tondo come Stefania Gagliano e in quella del pittore e fumettista milanese Matteo Costa – così come le perturbanti pellicole di David Lynch – se da un lato il designer di Washington Jeffrey Everett dedica a tre capolavori come Eraserhead, Velluto blu e Twin Peaks tre ritratti ispirati alle performance musicali che appaiono nei tre film, dall’altro il disegnatore americano Joel Daniel Phillips omaggia lo stesso Lynch con un surreale ritratto in compagnia di una gallina – e i film del maestro del pulp Quentin Tarantino – i protagonisti di un caposaldo del suo cinema come Pulp Fiction e Kill Bill sono re-immaginati dall’art director del Colorado Aaron Lea (con i profili di Uma Thurman e John Travolta che diventano la copertina di due vinili con la colonna sonora del film) e dalla digital artist Cristina Stifanic, mentre il designer irlandese Conor Langton propone un ritratto in grado di catturare l’essenza dello stesso Tarantino.

Saranno presenti anche i film di due innovatori come i fratelli Coen: tra le opere in mostra quelle ispirate a un grande attore come Jeff Bridges, protagonista di due pellicole che hanno ridefinito il cinema di genere, ovvero Il grande Lebowski e Il Grinta: al magico Drugo si ispira il lavoro del graphic designer parigino Malone, mentre lo stralunato sicario Reuben Cogburn viene ritratto di tre quarti dall’illustratore francese Yvan Quinet. Per quanto riguarda le figure più emblematiche messe in scena da Tim Burton e Wes Anderson, si potranno scoprire da un lato personaggi come quelli interpretati da Micheal Keaton in Beetlejuice (a cura di Conor Langton) e quelli di Johnny Depp e Winona Ryder in Edward mani di forbici (ripresi dalla pittrice marchigiana Veronica Chessa in un fiabesco formato boule de neige), dall’altro quelli affidati alla dolce Saoirse Ronan in Grand Budapest Hotel (rivista da Adam Juresko) e all’enigmatica Gwyneth Paltrow ne I Tenenbaum, scelta come soggetto dell’ammaliante lavoro dell’illustratrice Shannon Bonatakis.

Alternative movie poster Thumbellina | | Shannon Bonatakis | Soggettiva Gallery Milano
Foto alternative movie poster del film Velluto blu | Jeffrey Everett |  | Soggettiva Gallery Milano

UN SALTO IN EUROPA

Facendo un salto dall’altra parte dell’Atlantico, in Europa, saranno presentati alcuni film di due scuole cinematografiche imprescindibili come quella francese e italiana. Per quanto riguarda la Francia, saranno visibili opere che si rifanno al cinema di due mostri sacri della Nouvelle Vague come François Truffaut e Jean-Luc Godard: in omaggio Truffaut saranno esposte due opere ispirate a due film senza tempo come I 400 colpi e Jules e Jim – in cui Jean-Pierre Léaud da un lato e Jeanne Moreau, Oskar Werner e Henri Serre dall’altro sono ridisegnati dal designer della Virginia Adam Juresko –, mentre a Godard sono dedicate – sempre da Juresko – due reinterpretazioni di film unici nel loro genere come Fino all’ultimo respiro, con Jean Seberg rincorsa da Jean-Paul Belmondo, e Questa è la mia vita, con il profilo di Anna Karina che si staglia su di una calcografia in tre sfumature.

Varcando i confini italiani, si potranno scoprire i film di tre autori nel vero senso della parola come Federico Fellini, Michelangelo Antonioni e Ettore Scola. Se Fellini sarà presente con un penetrante ritratto del maestro dell’illustrazione polacca Waldemar Świerzy e con una rivisitazione de La dolce vita di Adam Juresko in cui Marcello Mastroianni e Anita Ekberg sono ripresi in un’opera dalle tinte scure e dal sapore “jazz”, Antonioni sarà rappresentato da uno dei suoi film più evocativi, Blow Up, in cui è il protagonista interpretato da David Hemmings a riprenderci con la sua macchina fotografica, mentre Scola sarà presente con Una giornata particolare, un classico senza tempo immortalato da Matteo Costa con uno struggente ritratto di Sophia Loren e Marcello Mastroianni.

Foto alternative movie poster del film Questa è la mia vita (coral) | Adam Juresko | Jean-Luc Godard | Soggettiva Gallery Milano
Foto alternative movie poster del film Una giornata particolare | Matteo Costa | Soggettiva Gallery Milano

CINEMA “DA BRIVIDI”

Per quanto riguarda i ritratti ispirati al mondo del “brivido, le opere esposte seguiranno tre filoni: quello delle pellicole tratte dalla letteratura gotica – tre icone come Dracula (nella versione diretta da Francis Ford Coppola e interpretata da Keanu Reeves), Dottor Jekyll e Mr. Hyde e La moglie di Frankenstein sono reinterpretate rispettivamente dall’artista grafico della Pennsylvania Death Kat Design, dall’illustratore newyorchese Timothy Pittides e dal disegnatore veneto Le Nevralgie Costanti – quello dei film horror – su tutti Essi Vivono di John Carpenter e un classico come Il silenzio degli innocenti, omaggiati dal motion designer californiano Hanzel Haro e da Yvan Quinet – e quello caratterizzato da pellicole dalle atmosfere e dai personaggi a dir poco allucinati, come Trainspotting – a cui si è ispirato l’illustratore inglese Scott Balmer – e Paura e delirio a Las Vegas – ad opera del graphic designer Gibson Graphix.

Foto alternative movie poster del film Dottor Jekill e Mr. Hyde | Timothy Pittides | Soggettiva Gallery Milano
Foto alternative movie poster del film Trainspotting | Scott Balmer | Danny Boyle | Soggettiva Gallery Milano

I SUCCESSI DEGLI ULTIMI MESI

Infine un focus sarà rivolto alle uscite cinematografiche più recenti che si sono distinte per la critica favorevole – come nel caso di Past Lives, che Matteo Costa ripensa rappresentando i due protagonisti Greta Lee e Teo Yoo che si guardano in un gioco di rimandi temporali e geografici – per il grande successo al botteghino – come è successo a Dune – Parte 2, rivisto da Kris Miklos con un ritratto di Zendaya dalle tinte color sabbia – e a Povere Creature, trionfatore alla Mostra del Cinema di Venezia e agli Oscar, di cui Matteo Costa ha realizzato un’opera che esalta la performance di Emma Stone, premiata a Hollywood con la statuetta per la Miglior attrice protagonista.

Foto alternative movie poster di Paura e delirio a Las Vegas | Gibson Graphix | Alfred Hitchcock | Soggettiva Gallery Milano

INFORMAZIONI AL PUBBLICO

SOGGETTIVA GALLERY

Via Pasquale Sottocorno 5/A, 20122 Milano

3357722437 – 3458463222

info@soggettivagallery.com 

www.soggettivagallery.com 

Orari di apertura:

dal martedì al venerdì dalle 10 alle 20.30
Sabato e Domenica 10-13.30 e 16-19.30

Foto alternative movie poster del film Dune | Murugiah | Denis Villeneuve | Soggettiva Gallery Milano
Categories
News

AMERICAN MOVIE PLACES

AMERICAN MOVIE PLACES

The exhibition is entrance-free

29 March 2024

On the occasion of the Salone del Mobile (16-21 April) and the release of a film on the famous painter Edward Hopper, Soggettiva Gallery dedicates an in-depth analysis of two symbolic places of American and world cinema, New York and Los Angeles. To do this, it borrow two disciplines other than the Seventh Art: art and architecture.

On the one hand, in fact, “Nighthawks” by Edward Hopper – “cinematic” painter par excellence (he influenced many directors including Alfred Hitchcock and David Lynch) to whom the documentary “Hopper. An American love story” is dedicated – is reinterpreted by the Texan illustrator Casey Callender, who inserts in the painting the most iconic protagonists of cinema: from Batman to The Big Lebowski, from Blade Runner to The Godfather, from Terminator to Matrix, Ghostbusters to Beetlejuice.

On the other hand, the architecture of Los Angeles represents an essential source of inspiration for the English artist George Townley, whose encounter with L.A. gave rise to a series of works that portray ordinary places – often made extraordinary by “cinematic” events, above all The Viper Room, linked to the tragic fate of River Phoenix – as well as sets of cult films – from Pearl Harbor to The Simpsons, from La La Land to Don’t Worry Darling and Karate Kid, from Barbie to The Dark Knight Rises.

DISPLAYING CINEMA IN NEW YORK

New York, in particular a classic American diner on Greenwich Avenue, inspires one of the most important paintings of the entire 20th century, Nighthawks by Edward Hopper: a work that transcends time and space by a painter who, with his works , has staged both the architecture and the landscapes, both real and of the soul, which distinguish the infinite nuances of a multifaceted country like the United States. The iconic image generated by Hopper is inspired by the Texan illustrator Casey Callender, who, by reinterpreting it, transforms it into a film set capable of welcoming the protagonists of the films that have marked our imagination, like the scene of a film lit by the best of photographers and furnished by the most meticulous of set designers.

The “main performers” of this scene are sitting at the counter like ordinary customers; if only from the shop window you can glimpse the terrifying extra-terrestrial creature of Alien (Ridley Scott) in the street, one of the bizarre beings that populate the Burtonian world of Beetlejuice, the iconic Batmobile parked behind Batman as well as the lethal airplanes flown by Tom Cruise in Top Gun. In some cases the place painted by Hopper is transported by Callender entirely into another dimension: be it the paranormal reality of the Ghostbusters – following the explosion of Stay Puft, with the ghostbusters covered in the soft marshmellow paste of which the gigantic ectoplasm is made – or the simulated one of the Matrix – with Neo and Morpheus immersed in a flow of alpha-numeric codes that make up what we believe to be the real world -, the result is always incredibly fascinating and a source of infinite interpretative ideas for fans of Edwardo Hooper’s paintings and above all of great cinema.

CALIFORNIA DREAMING

Taking a trip to the other coast of the United States, to Los Angeles, the encounter with cinema is simply inevitable, as this city is permeated with that filmic imagery that the Hollywood industry has been able to export all over the world. In this sense, the London artist George Townley developed a real obsession with the warm, soft light and saturated colors that make the Californian atmosphere unique.

The places that inspired Townley range from the El Rey Theater – historic cinema and art deco landmark built in 1936 where Bob Dylan, Billie Eilish, Kendrick Lamar and many others played, among others – to the Fox Plaza – made famous as Nakatomi Tower by Die Hard with Bruce Willis – from the Lighthouse Cafe – a real jazz cafe where the scene from La La Land in which Ryan Gosling meets John Legend was filmed – up to the Griffith Observatory – icon of Los Angeles and set of countless films including Youth burned, Yes Man and Terminator – and to the set that reproduces Barbie’s house, made 20% smaller than a traditional building to give it the aura of a real doll’s house.

Among the locations portrayed by Townely, Mulholland Drive could not be missing, known throughout the world thanks to the brilliant film of the same name by David Lynch: if in fact Townley inserts a clear reference to the director of Twin Peaks in a diner he reinterpreted, another reference This symbolic place is located in the Chemosphere, an unprecedented spaceship-shaped home designed by Californian architect John Lautner and located a few meters from Mulholland Drive.

ENNIS HOUSE AND OTHER ARCHITECTURAL MILESTONES

A focus is dedicated to the great architects who have left their mark on the Los Angeles skyline: from the spectacular Ennis House – for which the famous architect Frank Lloyd Wright was inspired by the buildings of the ancient Inca civilization – employed who set the futuristic city portrayed in Blade Runner, to the Kaufmann House designed by the Austrian designer Richard Neutra, whose geometric lines immersed in the lush nature of Palm Springs appear against the backdrop of the film Don’t Worry Darling.

ONCE UPON A TIME IN…HOLLYWOOD!

Finally, Townley’s works also refer to ordinary places: be it the Georgian Hotel, which over the years has hosted stars like Charlie Chaplin and Clark Gable, or the Californian fast food chain In n’ Out portrayed while a plane departed from LAX airport flies over it, or The Viper Room, a local that involuntary witnessed to a tragic event such as the premature death of the actor River Phoenix, the charm of Hollywood is always present, as if a city like Los Angeles, even in its less glamorous corners, was able to awaken in those who observe the desire to relive those stories that have become the very substance of the dreams that cinema inspires us wiht.

INFO

SOGGETTIVA GALLERY

Via Pasquale Sottocorno 5/A, 20122 Milano

3357722437 – 3458463222

info@soggettivagallery.com 

www.soggettivagallery.com 

Opening hours:

Tuesday to Friday 10 – 20.30
Saturday and Sunday 10-13.30 e 16-19.30

Foto alternative movie poster del film Gioventù bruciata di Nicholas Ray | George Townley | Soggettiva Gallery Milano
Foto alternative movie poster del film Batman (Hopper) | Casey Callender | Tim Burton | Soggettiva Gallery Milano
Foto alternative movie poster del film Matrix | Casey Callender | Andy e Larry Wachowski | Soggettiva Gallery Milano
Foto alternative movie poster del film Ghostbusters (Marshmallow) | Casey Callender | Ivan Reitman | Soggettiva Gallery Milano
Foto alternative movie poster del film Alien (Hopper) | Casey Callender | Ridley Scott | Soggettiva Gallery Milano
Foto alternative movie poster del film Il grande Lebowski (Hopper) | Casey Callender | Joel Coen | Soggettiva Gallery Milano
Foto alternative movie poster de El Rey Theatre (La La Land) | George Townley | Soggettiva Gallery Milano
Foto alternative movie poster del film Mulholland Drive di David Lynch | George Townley | Soggettiva Gallery Milano
Foto alternative movie poster de ENNIS HOUSE | George Townley | Soggettiva Gallery Milano
Foto alternative movie poster de The Viper Room | George Townley | Soggettiva Gallery Milano
Foto alternative movie poster de The Georgian Hotel | George Townley | Soggettiva Gallery Milano

On the occasion of the Salone del Mobile (16-21 April) and the release of a film on the famous painter Edward Hopper, Soggettiva Gallery dedicates an in-depth analysis of two symbolic places of American and world cinema, New York and Los Angeles. To do this, it borrow two disciplines other than the Seventh Art: art and architecture.

Foto alternative movie poster del film Gioventù bruciata di Nicholas Ray | George Townley | Soggettiva Gallery Milano

On the one hand, in fact, “Nighthawks” by Edward Hopper – “cinematic” painter par excellence (he influenced many directors including Alfred Hitchcock and David Lynch) to whom the documentary “Hopper. An American love story” is dedicated – is reinterpreted by the Texan illustrator Casey Callender, who inserts in the painting the most iconic protagonists of cinema: from Batman to The Big Lebowski, from Blade Runner to The Godfather, from Terminator to Matrix, Ghostbusters to Beetlejuice.

Foto alternative movie poster del film Batman (Hopper) | Casey Callender | Tim Burton | Soggettiva Gallery Milano

On the other hand, the architecture of Los Angeles represents an essential source of inspiration for the English artist George Townley, whose encounter with L.A. gave rise to a series of works that portray ordinary places – often made extraordinary by “cinematic” events, above all The Viper Room, linked to the tragic fate of River Phoenix – as well as sets of cult films – from Pearl Harbor to The Simpsons, from La La Land to Don’t Worry Darling and Karate Kid, from Barbie to The Dark Knight Rises.

Foto alternative movie poster del film Matrix | Casey Callender | Andy e Larry Wachowski | Soggettiva Gallery Milano

DISPLAYING CINEMA IN NEW YORK

New York, in particular a classic American diner on Greenwich Avenue, inspires one of the most important paintings of the entire 20th century, Nighthawks by Edward Hopper: a work that transcends time and space by a painter who, with his works , has staged both the architecture and the landscapes, both real and of the soul, which distinguish the infinite nuances of a multifaceted country like the United States.

Foto alternative movie poster del film Ghostbusters (Marshmallow) | Casey Callender | Ivan Reitman | Soggettiva Gallery Milano

The iconic image generated by Hopper is inspired by the Texan illustrator Casey Callender, who, by reinterpreting it, transforms it into a film set capable of welcoming the protagonists of the films that have marked our imagination, like the scene of a film lit by the best of photographers and furnished by the most meticulous of set designers.

Foto alternative movie poster del film Alien (Hopper) | Casey Callender | Ridley Scott | Soggettiva Gallery Milano

The “main performers” of this scene are sitting at the counter like ordinary customers; if only from the shop window you can glimpse the terrifying extra-terrestrial creature of Alien (Ridley Scott) in the street, one of the bizarre beings that populate the Burtonian world of Beetlejuice, the iconic Batmobile parked behind Batman as well as the lethal airplanes flown by Tom Cruise in Top Gun. In some cases the place painted by Hopper is transported by Callender entirely into another dimension: be it the paranormal reality of the Ghostbusters or the simulated one of the Matrixthe result is always incredibly fascinating.

Foto alternative movie poster del film Il grande Lebowski (Hopper) | Casey Callender | Joel Coen | Soggettiva Gallery Milano

CALIFORNIA DREAMING

Taking a trip to the other coast of the United States, to Los Angeles, the encounter with cinema is simply inevitable, as this city is permeated with that filmic imagery that the Hollywood industry has been able to export all over the world. In this sense, the London artist George Townley developed a real obsession with the warm, soft light and saturated colors that make the Californian atmosphere unique.

Foto alternative movie poster de El Rey Theatre (La La Land) | George Townley | Soggettiva Gallery Milano

The places that inspired Townley range from the El Rey Theater – historic cinema and art deco landmark built in 1936 where Bob Dylan, Billie Eilish, Kendrick Lamar and many others played, among others – to the Fox Plaza – made famous as Nakatomi Tower by Die Hard with Bruce Willis – from the Lighthouse Cafe – a real jazz cafe where the scene from La La Land in which Ryan Gosling meets John Legend was filmed – up to the Griffith Observatory – icon of Los Angeles and set of countless films including Youth burned, Yes Man and Terminator – and to the set that reproduces Barbie’s house, made 20% smaller than a traditional building to give it the aura of a real doll’s house.

Foto alternative movie poster del film Mulholland Drive di David Lynch | George Townley | Soggettiva Gallery Milano

Among the locations portrayed by Townely, Mulholland Drive could not be missing, known throughout the world thanks to the brilliant film by David Lynch: if in fact Townley inserts a clear reference to the director of Twin Peaks in a diner he reinterpreted, another reference This symbolic place is located in the Chemosphere, an unprecedented spaceship-shaped home designed by Californian architect John Lautner and located a few meters from Mulholland Drive.

Foto alternative movie poster de ENNIS HOUSE | George Townley | Soggettiva Gallery Milano

ENNIS HOUSE AND OTHER ARCHITECTURAL MILESTONES

A focus is dedicated to the great architects who have left their mark on the Los Angeles skyline: from the spectacular Ennis House – for which the famous architect Frank Lloyd Wright was inspired by the buildings of the ancient Inca civilization – employed who set the futuristic city portrayed in Blade Runner, to the Kaufmann House designed by the Austrian designer Richard Neutra, whose geometric lines immersed in the lush nature of Palm Springs appear against the backdrop of the film Don’t Worry Darling.

Foto alternative movie poster de The Viper Room | George Townley | Soggettiva Gallery Milano

ONCE UPON A TIME IN…HOLLYWOOD!

Finally, Townley’s works also refer to ordinary places: be it the Georgian Hotel, which over the years has hosted stars like Charlie Chaplin and Clark Gable, or the Californian fast food chain In n’ Out portrayed while a plane departed from LAX airport flies over it, or The Viper Room, a local that involuntary witnessed to a tragic event such as the premature death of the actor River Phoenix, the charm of Hollywood is always present, as if a city like Los Angeles, even in its less glamorous corners, was able to awaken in those who observe the desire to relive those stories that have become the very substance of the dreams that cinema inspires us wiht.

INFO

SOGGETTIVA GALLERY

Via Pasquale Sottocorno 5/A, 20122 Milano

3357722437 – 3458463222

info@soggettivagallery.com 

www.soggettivagallery.com 

Opening hours:

Tuesday to Friday 10 – 20.30
Saturday and Sunday 10-13.30 e 16-19.30

Foto alternative movie poster de The Georgian Hotel | George Townley | Soggettiva Gallery Milano
Categories
News

CINEMATIC WOMEN

CINEMATC WOMEN

FREE-ENTRANCE EXHIBITION

4 March 2024

SOGGETTIVA GALLERY PRESENTS FROM 5 MARCH 2024 THE NEW EXHIBITION:
CINEMATIC WOMEN
With posters inspired by the greatest actresses and female directors.

From 5 March to 7 April Soggettiva Gallery presents Cinematic Women, an exhibition focused on the importance of women in Cinema. The graphic works on display illustrate a path of self-determination culminating with Poor Things,  awarded with the Golden Lion, starring and produced by Emma Stone

On the one hand, Marilyn Monroe in The Misfits – a film that ended her brief and dazzling ascent – is the protagonist alongside Clark Gable in the dreamy work of Cristina Stifanic; on the other, Adam Juresko pays homage to Jane Fonda, unforgettable space explorer with costumes designed by a young Paco Rabanne in Barbarella, role rejected by Virna Lisi and Brigitte Bardot for the sensual nature of some scenes of the film.

FEMININITY IN ALL ITS FORMS

A section focused on films who carry feminist message could not be missing: from the silent yet expressive incarnation created by Renée Falconetti in The Passion of Joan of Arc – redesigned by the designer of Chinese origins Zi Xu – up to the performance by Salma Hayek in the role of Frida, in which the Mexican painter Frida Kahlo is gently revised through pastel shades from Le Nevralgie Costanti.

Following are some representative works of the recent goals achieved by films where women play roles of fundamental importance: starting from two films directed by Greta Gerwig such as Little Women – which inspired the Los Angeles artist Nan Lawson – and Barbie – extraordinary box office record from whose scenography was born the work that the English illustrator George Townley dedicates to the film – up to Poor Things, a tale of female self-determination enriched by the interpretation of Emma Stone, here also producer, protagonist of the surreal work of Milanese artist Matteo Costa.

NOUVELLE FEMME

A male gaze that has been able to enhance the female figure in cinema is offered by Jean-Luc Godard: three of his films characterized by female characters capable of leaving their mark such as Jean Seberg in Breathless and Anna Karina in Vivre sa vie and La femme est une femme. Adam Juresko dedicates three graphic works expressed in images with different colors and grains thanks to different printing techniques.

HOLLYWOOD WOMEN

Finally, a deepening is reserved for the representation of women within an important cinematographic movement such as New Hollywood. Among the others, Quentin Tarantino has been able to return complex characters, at the same time powerful and vulnerable: among them the one entrusted to Pam Grier in Jackie Brown, a film tribute to the work of digital artist Ellie Lees and the American designer Aaron Lea.

Ridley Scott has three films that offer a new conception of women: Alien – with the works of Prenzy and Max DaltonBlade Runner – with the works of Max Dalton and French artist Guillaume Morellec and Thelma & Louise, with an emblematic work of storyteller Justin Froning. By the Coen brothers there will be True Grit, in which the character of Mattie Ross, played by Hailee Steinfield, plays a role as central as (if not more) True Grit himself.

NO COUNTRY FOR WOMEN

Finally, a survey is dedicated to the cinema of the Coen brothers, full of violence and poetry at the same time, on the occasion of the release in cinemas on March 7 of Drive-Away Dolls, written and edited by Ethan Coen together with his wife Tricia Cooke and characterized by a female cast in which the protagonists Margaret Qualley and Geraldine Viswanathan stand out.

The collaboration between the Coen brothers and Tricia Cooke has deep roots, starting from their third film, MILLER’S CROSSING, to which the American graphic designer Maxwell Joseph Hargreaves dedicated a highly immersive work. In addition to masterpieces such as The Big Lebowski and Fargo, the exhibition also includes films less known to the general public such as Blood Simple, the Coens’ debut film starring a young and lethal Frances McDormand.

INFO

SOGGETTIVA GALLERY

Via Pasquale Sottocorno 5/A, 20122 Milano

3357722437 – 3458463222

info@soggettivagallery.com 

www.soggettivagallery.com 

Opening hours:

Tuesday – Friday 10 – 20.30
Saturday and Sunday 10-13.30 // 16-19.30

From 5 March to 7 April Soggettiva Gallery presents Cinematic Women, an exhibition focused on the importance of women in Cinema. The graphic works on display illustrate a path of self-determination culminating with Poor Things,  awarded with the Golden Lion, starring and produced by Emma Stone

On the one hand, Marilyn Monroe in The Misfits – a film that ended her brief and dazzling ascent – is the protagonist alongside Clark Gable in the dreamy work of Cristina Stifanic; on the other, Adam Juresko pays homage to Jane Fonda, unforgettable space explorer with costumes designed by a young Paco Rabanne in Barbarella, role rejected by Virna Lisi and Brigitte Bardot for the sensual nature of some scenes of the film.

Foto alternative movie poster de Povere creature | Matteo Costa | Yorgos Lanthimos | Soggettiva Gallery Milano

FEMININITY IN ALL ITS FORMS

A section focused on films who carry feminist message could not be missing: from the silent yet expressive incarnation created by Renée Falconetti in The Passion of Joan of Arc – redesigned by the designer of Chinese origins Zi Xu – up to the performance by Salma Hayek in the role of Frida, in which the Mexican painter Frida Kahlo is gently revised through pastel shades from Le Nevralgie Costanti.

Following are some representative works of the recent goals achieved by films where women play roles of fundamental importance: starting from two films directed by Greta Gerwig such as Little Women – which inspired the Los Angeles artist Nan Lawson – and Barbie – extraordinary box office record from whose scenography was born the work that the English illustrator George Townley dedicates to the film – up to Poor Things, a tale of female self-determination enriched by the interpretation of Emma Stone, here also producer, protagonist of the surreal work of Milanese artist Matteo Costa.

Alternative movie poster I Tenenbaum (Margot) | Wes Anderson |  Shannon Bonatakis | Soggettiva Gallery Milano

NOUVELLE FEMME

A male gaze that has been able to enhance the female figure in cinema is offered by Jean-Luc Godard: three of his films characterized by female characters capable of leaving their mark such as Jean Seberg in Breathless and Anna Karina in Vivre sa vie and La femme est une femme. Adam Juresko dedicates three graphic works expressed in images with different colors and grains thanks to different printing techniques.

Foto alternative movie poster del film Questa è la mia vita | Vivre Sa Vie (coral) | Adam Juresko | Jean-Luc Godard | Soggettiva Gallery Milano

HOLLYWOOD WOMEN

Finally, a deepening is reserved for the representation of women within an important cinematographic movement such as New Hollywood. Among the others, Quentin Tarantino has been able to return complex characters, at the same time powerful and vulnerable: among them the one entrusted to Pam Grier in Jackie Brown, a film tribute to the work of digital artist Ellie Lees and the American designer Aaron Lea.

Ridley Scott has three films that offer a new conception of women: Alien – with the works of Prenzy and Max DaltonBlade Runner – with the works of Max Dalton and French artist Guillaume Morellec and Thelma & Louise, with an emblematic work of storyteller Justin Froning. By the Coen brothers there will be True Grit, in which the character of Mattie Ross, played by Hailee Steinfield, plays a role as central as (if not more) True Grit himself.

NO COUNTRY FOR WOMEN

Finally, a survey is dedicated to the cinema of the Coen brothers, full of violence and poetry at the same time, on the occasion of the release in cinemas on March 7 of Drive-Away Dolls, written and edited by Ethan Coen together with his wife Tricia Cooke and characterized by a female cast in which the protagonists Margaret Qualley and Geraldine Viswanathan stand out.

The collaboration between the Coen brothers and Tricia Cooke has deep roots, starting from their third film, MILLER’S CROSSING, to which the American graphic designer Maxwell Joseph Hargreaves dedicated a highly immersive work. In addition to masterpieces such as The Big Lebowski and Fargo, the exhibition also includes films less known to the general public such as Blood Simple, the Coens’ debut film starring a young and lethal Frances McDormand.

INFO

SOGGETTIVA GALLERY

Via Pasquale Sottocorno 5/A, 20122 Milano

3357722437 – 3458463222

info@soggettivagallery.com 

www.soggettivagallery.com 

Opening hours:

Tuesday – Friday 10 – 20.30
Saturday and Sunday 10-13.30 // 16-19.30

Categories
News

MURUGIAH ON THE DUNE

MURUGIAH ON THE DUNE

The exhibition entrance is free of charge

21 February 2024

Soggettiva Gallery presents from Tuesday, February 27th the new exhibition
“Murugiah on the Dune”
with posters by Murugiah and other artists inspired by the film saga with Timothée Chalamet and Zendaya, in conjunction with the release of Dune: Part 2

Soggettiva Gallery now focuses on one of the most anticipated film releases of 2024, namely “Dune: Part Two”, the second chapter of the saga directed by Denis Villeneuve starring Timothée Chalamet and Zendaya and many others terrific actors.

Warners Bros has already announced the third chapter of the saga: English artist (originally from Sri Lanka) Murugiah – whose work will be exhbiited in Italy for the frist time – will pay tribute to Dune, together with a selection of artists including Adam Juresko, who has created two versions of a work inspired by Dune: Part Two.

The exhibition will also feature works dedicated to the first cinematic chapter, the version directed by David Lynch and the novel by Frank Herbert, a source of inspiration for all film adaptations.

From 27th February until 24th March 2024

“MURUGIAH ON THE DUNE”

Soggettiva Gallery presents, from Tuesday 27 February 2024, the new exhibition MURUGIAH ON THE DUNE, the first Italian solo exhibition ever dedicated to London based artist Murugiah.

THE PSYCHEDELIC ART OF MURUGIAH

Having studied as an architect, Murugiah has an absolutely personal way of understanding space: through the skilful use of a very wide range of color hues the artist manages to overcome the two-dimensional nature imposed by the paper support, creating colorful and almost psychedelic universes.

This does not prevent him from representing science fiction or even dystopian films (including The Holy Mountain, Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness, 2001: A Space Odyssey and A Clockwork Orange) and, above all, the splendid work dedicated to the desert future and inhospitable of Dune (directed by Denis Villeneuve), whose second chapter will arrive in Italian cinemas from 28 February.

The wait for this movie – starring Timothée Chalamet flanked by Zendaya, Josh Brolin, Charlotte Rampling and Javier Bardem and others – it’s such that Villeneuve, with Warner Bros, has already announced the third chapter of the saga.

NOT JUST DUNE

Other iridescent works of Murugiah on display include Death on the Nile and a work dedicated to the Cosplay universe. Finally the world of music will be honored with an illustration by Murugiah celebrating the first time Pink Floyd played live, on 21 January 1972, an album intended to make history, namely The Dark Side of the Moon, perfectly captured in its psychedelic elements.

DUNE IN EVERY SHAPE AND COLOR

Also on display works by other artists inspired both by the Frank Herbert novel which generated the movie adaptations – as in the case of the poster created by Nate Moon Life, designer of Baltimore -, than the first film adaptation by David Lynch, by the Polish artist Przemek Dêbowski. There will be works inspired by the two most recent chapters directed by Denis Villeneuve, respectively re-interpreted by artists such as Kirk Moffatt, creative and Northern Irish illustrator, by the London designer Kris Miklos and once again by Adam Juresko, who, making an imaginative effort, has realized an extraordinary representation of Dune – Part 2 that the public will appreciate even before the film comes out in theaters.

INFO

SOGGETTIVA GALLERY

Via Pasquale Sottocorno 5/A, 20122 Milano

3357722437 – 3458463222

info@soggettivagallery.com 

www.soggettivagallery.com 

Opening hours:

from Tuesday to Friday 10 – 20.30
Saturday and Sunday 10-13.30 and 16-19.30

Foto alternative movie poster del film Dune | Murugiah | Denis Villeneuve | Soggettiva Gallery Milano
Foto alternative movie poster del film Arancia meccanica | Murugiah | Stanley Kubrick | Soggettiva Gallery Milano
Foto alternative movie poster del film Dune | Murugiah | Denis Villeneuve | Soggettiva Gallery Milano
Foto alternative movie poster de THE DARK SIDE OF THE MOON | Murugiah | Pink Floyd | Soggettiva Gallery Milano
Foto alternative movie poster del film DUNE | Kirk Moffatt | Denis Villeneuve | Soggettiva Gallery Milano
Foto alternative movie poster del film Dune: Parte Due | Adam Juresko | Denis Villeneuve | Soggettiva Gallery Milano
Foto alternative movie poster del film Dune di David Lynch | Przemek Debowski | Soggettiva Gallery Milano

Soggettiva Gallery now focuses on one of the most anticipated film releases of 2024, namely “Dune: Part Two”, the second chapter of the saga directed by Denis Villeneuve starring Timothée Chalamet and Zendaya and many others terrific actors.

Warners Bros has already announced the third chapter of the saga: English artist (originally from Sri Lanka) Murugiah – whose work will be exhbiited in Italy for the frist time – will pay tribute to Dune, together with a selection of artists including Adam Juresko, who has created two versions of a work inspired by Dune: Part Two.

Foto alternative movie poster del film Dune | Murugiah | Denis Villeneuve | Soggettiva Gallery Milano

The exhibition will also feature works dedicated to the first cinematic chapter, the version directed by David Lynch and the novel by Frank Herbert, a source of inspiration for all film adaptations.

From Tuesday 27th February 2024

“MURUGIAH ON THE DUNE”

Soggettiva Gallery presents, from Tuesday 27 February 2024, the new exhibition MURUGIAH ON THE DUNE, the first Italian solo exhibition ever dedicated to London based artist Murugiah.

Foto alternative movie poster del film Arancia meccanica | Murugiah | Stanley Kubrick | Soggettiva Gallery Milano

THE PSYCHEDELIC ART OF MURUGIAH 

Having studied as an architect, Murugiah has an absolutely personal way of understanding space: through the skilful use of a very wide range of color hues the artist manages to overcome the two-dimensional nature imposed by the paper support, creating colorful and almost psychedelic universes.

This does not prevent him from representing science fiction or even dystopian films (including The Holy Mountain, Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness, 2001: A Space Odyssey and A Clockwork Orange) and, above all, the splendid work dedicated to the desert future and inhospitable of Dune (directed by Denis Villeneuve), whose second chapter will arrive in Italian cinemas from 28 February.

Foto alternative movie poster del film DUNE | Kirk Moffatt | Denis Villeneuve | Soggettiva Gallery Milano

The wait for this movie – starring Timothée Chalamet flanked by Zendaya, Josh Brolin, Charlotte Rampling and Javier Bardem and others – it’s such that Villeneuve, with Warner Bros, has already announced the third chapter of the saga.

Foto alternative movie poster de THE DARK SIDE OF THE MOON | Murugiah | Pink Floyd | Soggettiva Gallery Milano

NOT JUST DUNE

Other iridescent works of Murugiah on display include Death on the Nile and a work dedicated to the Cosplay universe. Finally the world of music will be honored with an illustration by Murugiah celebrating the first time Pink Floyd played live, on 21 January 1972, an album intended to make history, namely The Dark Side of the Moon, perfectly captured in its psychedelic elements.

Foto alternative movie poster del film Dune | Murugiah | Denis Villeneuve | Soggettiva Gallery Milano

DUNE IN EVERY SHAPE AND COLOR

Also on display works by other artists inspired both by the Frank Herbert novel which generated the movie adaptations – as in the case of the poster created by Nate Moon Life, designer of Baltimore -, than the first film adaptation by David Lynch, by the Polish artist Przemek Dêbowski. There will be works inspired by the two most recent chapters directed by Denis Villeneuve, respectively re-interpreted by artists such as Kirk Moffatt, creative and Northern Irish illustrator, by the London designer Kris Miklos and once again by Adam Juresko, who, making an imaginative effort, has realized an extraordinary representation of Dune – Part 2 that the public will appreciate even before the film comes out in theaters.

Foto alternative movie poster del film Dune: Parte Due | Adam Juresko | Denis Villeneuve | Soggettiva Gallery Milano

SOGGETTIVA GALLERY

Via Pasquale Sottocorno 5/A, 20122 Milano

3357722437 – 3458463222

info@soggettivagallery.com 

www.soggettivagallery.com 

Opening hours:

from Tuesday to Friday 10 – 20.30
Saturday and Sunday 10-13.30 and 16-19.30

Foto alternative movie poster del film Dune di David Lynch | Przemek Debowski | Soggettiva Gallery Milano
Categories
News

CINEMA: LOVE WITHOUT BOUNDARIES

CINEMA: LOVE WITHOUT BORDERS

FREE-ENTRANCE EXHIBITION

6 February 2024

Soggettiva Gallery presents
“CINEMA: LOVE WITHOUT BORDERS”
with posters inspired by the greatest love films ever.

Soggettiva Gallery presents, from 13 February until 3 March 2024, the new exhibition CINEMA: LOVE WITHOUT BORDERS. A day before Valentine’s Day, in via Sottocorno 5a, Milan opens the exhibition focused on the noblest feeling of the human soul.

Employing the magnifying glass offered by the Cinema, the exhibition will propose a series of Alternative Movie Posters that investigate love in all its cinematic forms, reinterpreting the films that most of all have been able to stage this mood in an original and capable of leaving its mark in our imagination.

HOLLYWOD LOVING

Within the exhibition it will be possible to identify some narrative nuclei: dealing with love films would have been unthinkable not to include the Hollywood production: among the works on display Casablanca by Michael Curtiz with the stellar pair Bogart-Bergman, revised in pop-art style by a Master of the Polish Poster School as Andrzej Krajewski; another unforgettable diva with Audrey Hepburn is the protagonist of Breakfast at Tiffany’s represented with an unusual horizontal format by Max Dalton, multifaceted artist who divides himself between Buenos Aires and Berlin. The progenitor of all contemporary love stories, Titanic (directed by James Cameron), redesigned by Dalton in a minimalist style, is a must. The golden color that characterizes the beautiful photograph of Days of Heaven by Terrence Malick is taken by Olivier Courbet, French artist moved to California, in the elegant work dedicated to the film.

The Grease and La La Land posters, by James Rheem Davis (graphic designer from San Francisco) and Patrick Connan, illustrator and art director from Paris, move to the rhythm of music. Two other Hollywood films such as The Misfits – which was the last performance for both Clark Gable and Marilyn Monroe – and The Age of Innocence by Martin Scorsese – with a sweet Michelle Pfeiffer – were re-imagined for Soggettiva Gallery respectively by Cristina Stifanic, eclectic artist who loves to experiment with digital, and Stefania Gagliano, who thanks to refined printing techniques creates unique and unmistakable works.

OUR ARTISTS


Two other artists with whom Soggettiva Gallery collaborated to create exclusive works are Adam Juresko, designer originally from Virginia, USA and Silvia Cocomazzi, Milanese illustrator and former student of the School of Comics in Milan. The first will feature five works, all inspired by great cinematic loves: from Drive, in which the shadows of Ryan Gosling and Carey Mulligan meet in a tender kiss, up to the Shakespearean love of Wild at Heart by David Lynch taken by Juresko with bright colors; from American Beauty, where in the shades of red is mentioned the famous scene of the movie characterized by a shower of roses, up to Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind, romantic hymn to love win omnia, translated by the artist thanks to elegant graphic signs. Finally, Juresko paid a photographic tribute to the Nouvelle Vague classic À bout de souffle.

Silvia Cocomazzi instead focused on a unique and iconic director, namely Wong Kar-wai, a director from Hong Kong who became famous for a film that mentions love since its very title: we are talking about In the Mood for Love, film can evoke this feeling with the sole use of the soundtrack. In addition to In the Mood for Love, Cocomazzi has represented five other films by the director, from Happy Together to Hong Kong Express, from Fallen Angels to As Tears Go By and Days of Being Wild.

LOVE IS IN THE SPACE

A separate chapter is dedicated to all those films characterized by an “extra-ordinary” love, whether it is comic-inspired films or science fiction settings: To represent the love between superheroes will be Spiderman – that the Californian designer Anthony Petrie portrays while holding, in a sort of revisited Pietà, the lover who lost by his own fault -, and the couple Batman / Catwoman (directed by Tim Burton), represented by the Californian illustrator Steven Luros Holliday in a new and almost “fetish” look. The world of science fiction is presented instead under the guise of works inspired by film-manifesto of an unusual but very contemporary love, that man-machine: Her was re-intepreted by the Oregon artist Raphael Kelly, Blade Runner from French artist Guillaume Morellec while Ex Machina was redesigned from Scottish Rapscallion Art.

Finally, a small section will focus on France, the romantic country par excellence: on display posters of two films such as Amélie – rethought by UK-based graphic artist Ruben Ireland and Polish artist Leszek Żebrowski – and Portrait of a Lady on Fire (directed by Céline Sciamma), to whom the self-taught artist Nan Lawson dedicates a poignant graphic work.

INFO

SOGGETTIVA GALLERY

Via Pasquale Sottocorno 5/A, 20122 Milano

3357722437 – 3458463222

info@soggettivagallery.com 

www.soggettivagallery.com 

Opening hours:

Tuesday – Friday 10 – 20.30
Saturday and Sunday 10-13.30 // 16-19.30

Soggettiva Gallery presents, from Tuesday 13 February 2024, the new exhibition CINEMA: LOVE WITHOUT BORDERS. A day before Valentine’s Day, in via Sottocorno 5a, Milan opens the exhibition focused on the noblest feeling of the human soul.

Employing the magnifying glass offered by the Cinema, the exhibition will propose a series of Alternative Movie Posters that investigate love in all its cinematic forms, reinterpreting the films that most of all have been able to stage this mood in an original and capable of leaving its mark in our imagination.

HOLLYWOOD LOVING

Within the exhibition it will be possible to identify some narrative nuclei: dealing with love films would have been unthinkable not to include the Hollywood production: among the works on display Casablanca by Michael Curtiz with the stellar pair Bogart-Bergman, revised in pop-art style by a Master of the Polish Poster School as Andrzej Krajewski; another unforgettable diva with Audrey Hepburn is the protagonist of Breakfast at Tiffany’s represented with an unusual horizontal format by Max Dalton, multifaceted artist who divides himself between Buenos Aires and Berlin. 

The progenitor of all contemporary love stories, Titanic (directed by James Cameron), redesigned by Dalton in a minimalist style, is a must. The golden color that characterizes the beautiful photograph of Days of Heaven by Terrence Malick is taken by Olivier Courbet, French artist moved to California, in the elegant work dedicated to the film.

The Grease and La La Land posters, by James Rheem Davis (graphic designer from San Francisco) and Patrick Connan, illustrator and art director from Paris, move to the rhythm of music. Two other Hollywood films such as The Misfits – which was the last performance for both Clark Gable and Marilyn Monroe – and The Age of Innocence by Martin Scorsese – with a sweet Michelle Pfeiffer – were re-imagined for Soggettiva Gallery respectively by Cristina Stifanic, eclectic artist who loves to experiment with digital, and Stefania Gagliano, who thanks to refined printing techniques creates unique and unmistakable works.

OUR ARTISTS

Two other artists with whom Soggettiva Gallery collaborated to create exclusive works are Adam Juresko, designer originally from Virginia, USA and Silvia Cocomazzi, Milanese illustrator and former student of the School of Comics in Milan.

The first will feature five works, all inspired by great cinematic loves: from Drive, in which the shadows of Ryan Gosling and Carey Mulligan meet in a tender kiss, up to the Shakespearean love of Wild at Heart by David Lynch taken by Juresko with bright colors; from American Beauty, where in the shades of red is mentioned the famous scene of the movie characterized by a shower of roses, up to Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind, romantic hymn to love win omnia, translated by the artist thanks to elegant graphic signs. Finally, Juresko paid a photographic tribute to the Nouvelle Vague classic À bout de souffle.

Silvia Cocomazzi instead focused on a unique and iconic director, namely Wong Kar-wai, a director from Hong Kong who became famous for a film that mentions love since its very title: we are talking about In the Mood for Love, film can evoke this feeling with the sole use of the soundtrack. In addition to In the Mood for Love, Cocomazzi has represented five other films by the director, from Happy Together to Hong Kong Express, from Fallen Angels to As Tears Go By and Days of Being Wild.

LOVE IS IN THE SPACE

A separate chapter is dedicated to all those films characterized by an “extra-ordinary” love, whether it is comic-inspired films or science fiction settings: To represent the love between superheroes will be Spiderman – that the Californian designer Anthony Petrie portrays while holding, in a sort of revisited Pietà, the lover who lost by his own fault -, and the couple Batman / Catwoman (directed by Tim Burton), represented by the Californian illustrator Steven Luros Holliday in a new and almost “fetish” look. The world of science fiction is presented instead under the guise of works inspired by film-manifesto of an unusual but very contemporary love, that man-machine: Her was re-intepreted by the Oregon artist Raphael KellyBlade Runner from French artist Guillaume Morellec while Ex Machina was redesigned from Scottish Rapscallion Art.

Finally, a small section will focus on France, the romantic country par excellence: on display posters of two films such as Amélie – rethought by UK-based graphic artist Ruben Ireland and Polish artist Leszek Żebrowski – and Portrait of a Lady on Fire (directed by Céline Sciamma), to whom the self-taught artist Nan Lawson dedicates a poignant graphic work.

INFO

SOGGETTIVA GALLERY

Via Pasquale Sottocorno 5/A, 20122 Milano

3357722437 – 3458463222

info@soggettivagallery.com 

www.soggettivagallery.com 

Opening hours:

Tuesday – Friday 10 – 20.30
Saturday and Sunday 10-13.30 // 16-19.30

Categories
News

MY NEIGHBOR MIYAZAKI AND THE FAR EAST

MY NEIGHBOR MIYAZAKI AND THE FAR EAST

The Exhibition entrance is free

22 December 2023
Foto alternative movie poster de Il mio vicino Totoro (Miyazaki) | Stanley Chow | Hayao Miyazaki | Soggettiva Gallery Milano

Soggettiva Gallery presents from Wednesday, January 3 the new exhibition “My Neighbour Miyazaki and the Far East”

with posters inspired by the films of the Japanese master, in conjunction with the release of his new, highly anticipated work “The Boy and the Heron”.

Soggettiva Gallery opens on Wednesday, January 3 with a tribute to Hayao Miyazaki, one of the greatest masters of animation cinema of all time, whose latest effort by Studio Ghibli “The Boy and the Heron” will be released in Italian cinemas on January 1, 2024, distributed by Lucky Red.

From January 16, the exhibition will be enriched thanks to a deepening linked to the East in a broad sense, a world still far away that never ceases to fascinate us in every aspect, from calligraphy to iconic images such as “The Great Wave of Kanagawa” by Hokusai.

From Wednesday, January 3 2024

“MY NEIGHBOR MIYAZAKI AND THE FAR EAST”

Soggettiva Gallery presents, from Wednesday, January 3, 2024, the new exhibition MY NEIGHBOR MIYAZAKI AND THE FAR EAST, a tribute to the extraordinary filmography of the Japanese director, co-founder of Studio Ghibli, wide-world reference point for for animation film lovers.

THE ARTWORKS

The exhibition collects – in conjunction with the release at the cinema of “The Boy and the Heron”, the new film by Miyazaki that has beaten every record by earning, in its first weekend, more than 11 million dollars in Japan and almost 13 million dollars in the United States – the Alternative Movie Posters of international artists and illustrators who see the Japanese master as a fundamental source of inspiration for their artistic production.

STUDIO GHIBLI ONE LOVE

The works on display will throw new light on the great titles by Studio Ghibli such as “Spirited Away” – huge commercial success with more than 400 million dollars earned –, reinterpreted through the garish shades of blue, red and light blue by the Belgian artist Mainger and through metaphysical atmospheres by the American architect Bailey Race. “Ponyo” is represented by the kaleidoscope and whirlwind work by Chris Koeler, while Zi Xu presents us “Princess Mononoke“, a choral portrait of magical creatures and masks typical of the Japanese tradition.

Among Miyazaki’s films to which the public is most attached is “My Neighbor Totoro“: on display there will be Jordan Bolton‘s versions, in the highly detailed and obsessive version dedicated to the “props” and the one by Le Nevralgie Costanti, which offers a sweet and iridescent representation of Totoro exclusively for Soggettiva Gallery.

THE DISCREET CHARM OF THE FAR EAST

From 16 January the exhibition will be expanded thanks to a rich selection of works that refer to the myth of the East, the gravitational center of a poetics that is still today the object of great fascination on the part of the Western public, also for its ability to reflect a an image that is often far from the West’s perception of itself.

Two clear examples are Miyazaki’s films such as “Porco Rosso” and “Howl’s Moving Castle“: the work by Fabiocs, which portrays the protagonist on board his airplane – Miyazaki’s father was an aeronautical engineer – is emblematic of the former, while of the second, two dreamy versions by the famous engraver Dan Grissom will be exhibited.

A BITTER-SWEET MIX 

Among the elements that most attracted the attention of the artists on display were the different and highly sought-after oriental handwritings. In fact, there are various Alternative Movie Posters that combine the imagery of great classics of Western cinema with the use of words written with Chinese, Japanese or Korean alphabets.

Among the most representative works of this genre are those created by the American collective Rucking Fotten, known for the very limited periods with which it makes its works available: 8 titles by them will be exhibited, including “A Clockwork Orange“, “Warriors of the Night” ” and “Rosemary’s Baby.”

WHEN JAWS MEETS HOKUSAI

Another trend is to create a mix, and therefore a short circuit, between Western and Eastern imagery: among the works on display “Ninja Star Wars” by Steve Bialik, the version of “Jaws” reinterpreted by Mark Bell – in which the shark merges with one of the most famous images in the world, the woodcut by the Japanese painter Hokusai entitled “The Great Wave off Kanagawa” -, or even the works of Jed Henry, a fine illustrator who uses only handmade Japanese paper: his two versions of “Star Wars” and “Spirited Away”.

JAPANESE MONSTERS AND WHERE TO FIND THEM

Also on display are masterpieces of Japanese animation and comics that have been revisited and transformed into Alternative Movie Posters: this is the case of “Godzilla“, seen through the eyes of Max Dalton and, exclusively for Soggettiva Gallery, of Francesco Casolari from Bologna; The refined works of renowned artists such as the Van Orton and the American Anthony Petrie, fascinated by topographies and maps, are dedicated to “Akira“.

THE CLASSICS AT LAST

Finally, we could not miss the classical Japanese cinema such as Akira Kurosawa (on display a work by BRVM inspired by “Drunken Angel“) and Yasujiro Ozu (the Frenchman Tom Haugomat focused on “Tokyo Story“) but also more recent masters of oriental cinema: the illustrator Silvia Cocomazzi has worked for Soggettiva Gallery on Wong Kar-wai’s films, while other artists have chosen to rework the films of South Korean directors such as Bong Joon-ho (Parasite”, “The Host”, “Memories of a Murderer”“) and Park Chan-Wook (“Oldboy“).

INFO

SOGGETTIVA GALLERY

Via Pasquale Sottocorno 5/A, 20122 Milano

3357722437 – 3458463222

info@soggettivagallery.com 

www.soggettivagallery.com 

Opening hours:

dal Tuesday to Friday: 10 –20.30
Saturday and Sunday 10-13.30 / 16-19.30

Foto alternative movie poster de La città fantasma (group) | Bailey Race | Hayao Miyazaki | Soggettiva Gallery Milano

Soggettiva Gallery opens on Wednesday, January 3 with a tribute to Hayao Miyazaki, one of the greatest masters of animation cinema of all time, whose latest effort by Studio Ghibli “The Boy and the Heron” will be released in Italian cinemas on January 1, 2024, distributed by Lucky Red.

From January 16, the exhibition will be enriched thanks to a deepening linked to the East in a broad sense, a world still far away that never ceases to fascinate us in every aspect, from calligraphy to iconic images such as “The Great Wave of Kanagawa” by Hokusai.

Alternative movie poster di Totoro (Rainbow) | Hayao Miyazaki | Le Nevralgie Costanti | Soggettiva Gallery Milano

From Wednesday, January 3 2024

“MY NEIGHBOR MIYAZAKI AND THE FAR EAST”

Soggettiva Gallery presents, from Wednesday, January 3, 2024, the new exhibition MY NEIGHBOR MIYAZAKI AND THE FAR EAST, a tribute to the extraordinary filmography of the Japanese director, co-founder of Studio Ghibli, wide-world reference  for animation film lovers.

THE ARTWORKS

The exhibition collects – in conjunction with the release at the cinema of “The Boy and the Heron”, the new film by Miyazaki that has beaten every record by earning, in its first weekend, more than 11 million dollars in Japan and almost 13 million dollars in the United States – the Alternative Movie Posters of international artists and illustrators who see the Japanese master as a fundamental source of inspiration for their artistic production.

Foto alternative movie poster de Il mio vicino Totoro (Objects) | Jordan Bolton | Hayao Miyazaki | Soggettiva Gallery Milano

STUDIO GHIBLI ONE LOVE

The works on display will throw new light on the great titles by Studio Ghibli such as “Spirited Away” – huge commercial success with more than 400 million dollars earned –, reinterpreted through the garish shades of blue, red and light blue by the Belgian artist Mainger and through metaphysical atmospheres by the American architect Bailey Race. “Ponyo” is represented by the kaleidoscope and whirlwind work by Chris Koeler, while Zi Xu presents us “Princess Mononoke“, a choral portrait of magical creatures and masks typical of the Japanese tradition.

Foto alternative movie poster de Porco Rosso (Glasses) | Fabiocs | Hayao Miyazaki | Soggettiva Gallery Milano

Among Miyazaki’s films to which the public is most attached is “My Neighbor Totoro“: on display there will be Jordan Bolton‘s versions, in the highly detailed and obsessive version dedicated to the “props” and the one by Le Nevralgie Costanti, which offers a sweet and iridescent representation of Totoro exclusively for Soggettiva Gallery.

Foto alternative movie poster de Il Castello Errante di Howl | Dan Grissom | Hayao Miyazaki | Soggettiva Gallery Milano

THE DESCREET CHARM OF THE FAR EAST

From 16 January the exhibition will be expanded thanks to a rich selection of works that refer to the myth of the East, the gravitational center of a poetics that is still today the object of great fascination on the part of the Western public, also for its ability to reflect a an image that is often far from the West’s perception of itself.

Two clear examples are Miyazaki’s films such as “Porco Rosso” and “Howl’s Moving Castle“: the work by Fabiocs, which portrays the protagonist on board his airplane – Miyazaki’s father was an aeronautical engineer – is emblematic of the former, while of the second, two dreamy versions by the famous engraver Dan Grissom will be exhibited.

Foto alternative movie poster de Arancia meccanica | Rucking Fotten | Stanley Kubrick | Soggettiva Gallery Milano

A BITTER-SWEET MIX

Among the elements that most attracted the attention of the artists on display were the different and highly sought-after oriental handwritings. In fact, there are various Alternative Movie Posters that combine the imagery of great classics of Western cinema with the use of words written with Chinese, Japanese or Korean alphabets.

Among the most representative works of this genre are those created by the American collective Rucking Fotten, known for the very limited periods with which it makes its works available: 8 titles by them will be exhibited, including “A Clockwork Orange“, “Warriors of the Night” ” and “Rosemary’s Baby.”

Foto alternative movie poster del film Lo squalo regia di Steven Spielberg | Mark Bell | Soggettiva Gallery Milano

WHEN JAWS MEETS HOKUSAI

Another trend is to create a mix, and therefore a short circuit, between Western and Eastern imagery: among the works on display “Ninja Star Wars” by Steve Bialik, the version of “Jaws” reinterpreted by Mark Bell – in which the shark merges with one of the most famous images in the world, the woodcut by the Japanese painter Hokusai entitled “The Great Wave off Kanagawa” -, or even the works of Jed Henry, a fine illustrator who uses only handmade Japanese paper: his two versions of “Star Wars” and “Spirited Away”.

Foto alternative movie poster di Godzilla di Ishiro Honda

JAPANESE MONSTERS AND WHERE TO FIND THEM

Also on display are masterpieces of Japanese animation and comics that have been revisited and transformed into Alternative Movie Posters: this is the case of “Godzilla“, seen through the eyes of Max Dalton and, exclusively for Soggettiva Gallery, of Francesco Casolari from Bologna; The refined works of renowned artists such as the Van Orton and the American Anthony Petrie, fascinated by topographies and maps, are dedicated to “Akira“.

Foto alternative movie poster di Viaggio a Tokyo (Tokyo Story) di Yasujirō Ozu | Tom haugomat

THE CLASSICS AT LAST

Finally, we could not miss the classical Japanese cinema such as Akira Kurosawa (on display a work by BRVM inspired by “Drunken Angel“) and Yasujiro Ozu (the Frenchman Tom Haugomat focused on “Tokyo Story“) but also more recent masters of oriental cinema: the illustrator Silvia Cocomazzi has worked for Soggettiva Gallery on Wong Kar-wai’s films, while other artists have chosen to rework the films of South Korean directors such as Bong Joon-ho (Parasite”, “The Host”, “Memories of a Murderer”“) and Park Chan-Wook (“Oldboy“).

Foto alternative movie poster del film L'angelo ubriaco di Akira Kurosawa | BRVM | Soggettiva Gallery Milano

INFO

SOGGETTIVA GALLERY

Via Pasquale Sottocorno 5/A, 20122 Milano

3357722437 – 3458463222

info@soggettivagallery.com 

www.soggettivagallery.com 

Opening hours:

Tuesday – Friday: 10 – 20.30
Saturday and Sunday 10-13.30 / 16-19.30

Categories
Non categorizzato

…BEFORE CHRISTMAS

…BEFORE CHRISTMAS
25 November 2023
Alternative movie poster Nightmare Before Christmas | Tim Burton | Jeff Kepler | Soggettiva Gallery Milano

Soggettiva Gallery presents from Friday, December 1, 2023 the new exhibition:
…BEFORE CHRISTMAS

with alternative movie posters inspired by Christmas and augmented reality works regarding Diabolik by Cristina Stifanic

The exhibition brings together the films that the public most loves to see and re-watch during the Christmas holidays: from the Harry Potter saga to “Frankenstein Junior”, from “Ghostbuster” to the recent media phenomenon represented by Greta Geerwig’s “Barbie”, from “The Wizard of Oz” to “Home Alone”.


In addition, some “anthological” posters dedicated to icons such as Supermario, the films of the 80s and 90s and the Advent Calendar, as well as works in augmented reality that Cristina Stifanic dedicates to Diabolik, the timeless comic thief created by the Giussani sisters.

From Friday 1st December 2023 

“…BEFORE CHRISTMAS”

The exhibition … BEFORE CHRISTMAS,  from December 1st, presents a series of works inspired by the typical Christmas movies, from the magic of the “Harry Potter” films, represented by Ape Meets Girl, to the supernatural “Ghostbusters” reinterpreted by Max Dalton, as well as a holiday classic like “Mom I missed the plane” or a Christmas institution like the Advent Calendar, reworked in the form of Alternative Movie Poster.

HARRY POTTER AND THE ALTERNATIVE MOVIE POSTER

For those born in the 1990s, the Harry Potter film saga, inspired by J.K. Rowling’s novels, represented love “at first sight”. The adventures of Harry, Ron and Hermione have marked an entire generation, poised between magic and ordinariness.

BILL MURRAY FOR PRESIDENT

Two films starring Bill Murray such as “Ghostbusters” and “Groundhog Day” can not go missing in a hypothetical playlist of movies to be reviewed when the first lights of Christmas appear on the street. What film would you be willing to watch endlessly if your day repeated itself all over again in a continuous cycle like in the Harold Ramis film? 

IT…COULD…WORK!

YOUNG FRANKENSTEIN is the most famous film by Mel Brooks. Entered by right into the collective memory, also and especially for his flashing jokes and for the character of the hunchback assistant Igor, played by a sublime Marty Feldman, the film is a reinterpretation of classic horror, and its hidden meaning in the staging of the deformed, the different. The posters of Conor Langton and Cranio Dsgn pay homage to this classic: what better Christmas gift?

DIABOLIK WHO ARE YOU?

To celebrate the 60th anniversary of the birth of Eva Kant, as well as the release of “Diabolik Who Are You?”, the third and final chapter of the cinematographic saga directed by Manetti Bros, Cristina Stifanic exhibits at Soggettiva Gallery some works dedicated to the famous comic thief created by the Giussani sisters.

Two of these, the portrait of Lady Kant and “Back to Paradise”, present an absolute novelty: augmented reality, which mixes two universes, ours and the virtual one, to create unique, innovative and multisensory experiences.

INFO

SOGGETTIVA GALLERY

Via Pasquale Sottocorno 5/A, 20122 Milano

3357722437 – 3458463222

info@soggettivagallery.com 

www.soggettivagallery.com 

OPENING HOURS: Tuesday / Friday  10 – 20.30
Saturday and Sunday 10-13.30 e 16-19.30

Foto alternative movie poster del film Ghostbuster (Stay Puft) | Max Dalton | Ivan Reitman | Soggettiva Gallery Milano
Foto alternative movie poster Se questa è la loro idea del Natale... | Xander Lee | Soggettiva Gallery Milano
Foto alternative movie poster de Harry Potter e il calice di fuoco | Mike Newell | Ape Meets Girl | Soggettiva Gallery Milano
Foto alternative movie poster di Diabolik | Cristina Stifanic | Soggettiva Gallery Milano
Foto alternative movie poster di Ricomincio da capo | Chris McGuire | Soggettiva Gallery
Foto alternative movie poster de Frankenstein Junior | Mel Brooks | Cranio Dsgn | Soggettiva Gallery Milano
Foto alternative movie poster del film Ghostbuster (Stay Puft) | Max Dalton | Ivan Reitman | Soggettiva Gallery Milano

The exhibition brings together the films that the public most loves to see and re-watch during the Christmas holidays: from the Harry Potter saga to “Frankenstein Junior”, from “Ghostbuster” to the recent media phenomenon represented by Greta Geerwig’s “Barbie”, from “The Wizard of Oz” to “Home Alone”.

In addition, some “anthological” posters dedicated to icons such as Supermario, the films of the 80s and 90s and the Advent Calendar, as well as works in augmented reality that Cristina Stifanic dedicates to Diabolik, the timeless comic thief created by the Giussani sisters.

Foto alternative movie poster Se questa è la loro idea del Natale... | Xander Lee | Soggettiva Gallery Milano

From Friday 1st December 2023 

“…BEFORE CHRISTMAS”

The exhibition … BEFORE CHRISTMAS,  from December 1st, presents a series of works inspired by the typical Christmas movies, from the magic of the “Harry Potter” films, represented by Ape Meets Girl, to the supernatural “Ghostbusters” reinterpreted by Max Dalton, as well as a holiday classic like “Mom I missed the plane” or a Christmas institution like the Advent Calendar, reworked in the form of Alternative Movie Poster.

Foto alternative movie poster de Harry Potter e il calice di fuoco | Mike Newell | Ape Meets Girl | Soggettiva Gallery Milano

HARRY POTTER AND THE ALTERNATIVE MOVIE POSTER

For those born in the 1990s, the Harry Potter film saga, inspired by J.K. Rowling’s novels, represented love “at first sight”. The adventures of Harry, Ron and Hermione have marked an entire generation, poised between magic and ordinariness.

Foto alternative movie poster di Ricomincio da capo | Chris McGuire | Soggettiva Gallery

BILL MURRAY FOR PRESIDENT

Two films starring Bill Murray such as “Ghostbusters” and “Groundhog Day” can not go missing in a hypothetical playlist of movies to be reviewed when the first lights of Christmas appear on the street. What film would you be willing to watch endlessly if your day repeated itself all over again in a continuous cycle like in the Harold Ramis film? 

Foto alternative movie poster de Frankenstein Junior | Mel Brooks | Cranio Dsgn | Soggettiva Gallery Milano

IT…COULD…WORK!

YOUNG FRANKENSTEIN is the most famous film by Mel Brooks. Entered by right into the collective memory, also and especially for his flashing jokes and for the character of the hunchback assistant Igor, played by a sublime Marty Feldman, the film is a reinterpretation of classic horror, and its hidden meaning in the staging of the deformed, the different. The posters of Conor Langton and Cranio Dsgn pay homage to this classic: what better Christmas gift?

Foto alternative movie poster di Diabolik | Cristina Stifanic | Soggettiva Gallery Milano

DIABOLIK WHO ARE YOU?

To celebrate the 60th anniversary of the birth of Eva Kant, as well as the release of “Diabolik Who Are You?”, the third and final chapter of the cinematographic saga directed by Manetti Bros, Cristina Stifanic exhibits at Soggettiva Gallery some works dedicated to the famous comic thief created by the Giussani sisters.

Two of these, the portrait of Lady Kant and “Back to Paradise”, present an absolute novelty: augmented reality, which mixes two universes, ours and the virtual one, to create unique, innovative and multisensory experiences.

INFO

SOGGETTIVA GALLERY

Via Pasquale Sottocorno 5/A, 20122 Milano

3357722437 – 3458463222

info@soggettivagallery.com 

www.soggettivagallery.com 

OPENING HOURS: Tuesday / Friday  10 – 20.30
Saturday and Sunday 10-13.30 e 16-19.30

CHRIS BRAKE

Prima di passare al cinema, Chris ha lavorato come illustratore, esponendo spesso nelle rinomate gallerie d’arte della cultura pop di Los Angeles “Hero Complex Gallery” e “Gallery 1988”, producendo opere d’arte ufficiali per 20th Century Fox, Joss Whedon, Joe Dante e Roger Corman. Successivamente ha lavorato come assistente del dipartimento artistico per clienti come Virgin Media, Now TV, Little Mix e Jamie T. Il suo primo cortometraggio “Nest” è stato semifinalista al “Berlin Student Film Festival”, dove è stato nominato per il Premio della Giuria. 

Before moving on to film, Chris worked as an illustrator, often exhibiting in the renowned Los Angeles pop culture art galleries “Hero Complex Gallery” and “Gallery 1988”, producing official artwork for 20th Century Fox, Joss Whedon, Joe Dante and Roger Corman. He later worked as an assistant in the art department for clients such as Virgin Media, Now TV, Little Mix and Jamie T. His first short film “Nest” was a semifinalist at the “Berlin Student Film Festival”, where he was nominated for the Jury Prize.

STEPHEN LUROS HOLLIDAY

Da ragazzo Steven era un fan dei fumetti. Ha iniziato prendendo lezioni di illustrazione del fumetto presso la Heron Art School di Indianapolis. Fu solo al college presso la School Of The Art Institute di Chicago che scoprì il suo amore per la serigrafia. Ha disegnato di tutto, dalla fan art, alle stampe dei film con licenza ufficiale, ai poster per i concerti.  Il suo lavoro è stato esposto in diverse mostre collettive dedicate a vari temi cinematografici.

As a boy Steven was a fan of comics. He started by taking comic illustration classes at the Heron Art School in Indianapolis. It was only in college at the School Of The Art Institute in Chicago that he discovered his love for screen printing. He’s drawn everything from fan art, to prints of officially licensed films, to concert posters. His work has been exhibited in several collective exhibitions dedicated to various film topics. 

MAX DALTON

Max Dalton, illustratore, pittore e musicista e scrittore occasionale. Crea spesso illustrazioni per poster, libri, riviste, giornali, pubblicità e prodotti.Ha partecipato a molte mostre collettive e personali a New York, San Francisco, Los Angeles, Arizona, Parigi, Seoul e altro ancora. Il suo lavoro è apparso in molte riviste come The New Yorker, Monocle e O, The Oprah Magazine.

Max Dalton is an illustrator, painter, musician and writer. He often designs for posters, books, magazines, newspapers, advertisements and products. He has participated in many group and solo shows in New York, San Francisco, Los Angeles, Paris, Seoul and elsewhere. His work has appeared in magazines such as The New Yorker, Monocle and O, The Oprah Magazine.

OLIVIER COURBET

Olivier Courbet è un creativo multidisciplinare francese con sede a Los Angeles, California. Lavora con marchi, agenzie, studi cinematografici e startup di tutto il mondo tra cui Dreamworks, Paramount, Disney, Mattel, Will.I.AM e NBA. Ha vinto numerosi premi e il suo lavoro è stato descritto in vari libri e pubblicazioni di design tra cui Computer Arts, Logology, SXSW.

Olivier Courbet is a multidisciplinary French creative artist based in Los Angeles, California. He works with brands, agencies, film studios and start-ups around the world including Dreamworks, Paramount, Disney, Mattel, Will.I.AM and NBA. He has won numerous awards and his work has been featured in various books and design publications including Computer Arts, Logology, SXSW.

LAN LAWSON

Nan Lawson è un’artista e illustratrice con sede a Los Angeles. Si è laureata in regia cinematografica alla Syracuse University, ma dopo la laurea ha perseguito la sua passione per l’illustrazione. Ora ha unito il suo amore per il cinema e l’arte per dedicarsi alla cultura pop e alla locandina. Lavora nell’editoria e nell’industria dell’intrattenimento; crea libri illustrati e copertine di libri, oltre a opere d’arte e manifesti per film e televisione.

Ha lavorato con clienti tra cui Harper Collins, Audible, Random House, Hachette, Amblin Entertainment e Warner Bros.