Man Ray - Prophet of the Avant-Garde (American Masters)

Man Ray - Prophet of the Avant-Garde (American Masters)


Starring:American Masters
Studio: Winstar
Product Type: DVD

Editorial Review:
Amazon.com
As part of the PBS American Masters series, Man Ray: Prophet of the Avant-Garde covers the life and artwork of this innovative modern artist with both clips of interviews and archival footage of the times he lived in. Born in Brooklyn as Emanuel Radnitsky, he grew discouraged by the New York art world of the early 1900s, changed his name to Man Ray, and moved to Paris. He was embraced by the Dadaists, many of whom later became Surrealists. Although painting was his main love, he took up photography, making portraits of famous people such as Ernest Hemingway, James Joyce, and Henri Matisse. He developed a new technique, the rayograph, in which he placed objects directly onto paper and exposed them to light. He even made an avant-garde film with this technique. Whether creating Dada sculptures, such as his famous iron with a row of tacks enigmatically entitled Le Cadeau, The Gift, innovative photographs, films, or sculptures, Man Ray always managed to surprise. In order to earn a living, he turned fashion photography into art. After living in California and New York during World War II, he returned to live and work in Paris after the war. Included in this program are wonderful shots of his Paris studio and home. Just under an hour long, this program presents a good look at a remarkable artist. The DVD format also includes an essay by Neil Baldwin, his biographer and author of the script, which underlines the influence of the women in his life. The crispness of the images and the intelligent insights into the ideas of the avant-garde make viewing a great pleasure. --Anne Barclay Morgan
Man Ray - Prophet of the Avant-Garde (American Masters)
Average customer rating: 5 out of 5 stars
  • A Valuable Documentary Of A Highly Self-Conscious Artist Who Cannily Promotes Himself.
  • A good start
  • Great history
  • Introduction to Man Ray
Man Ray - Prophet of the Avant-Garde (American Masters)
Starring: Stockard Channing
Director: Mel Stuart
Manufacturer: Winstar
ProductGroup: DVD
Binding: DVD

BiographyBiography | Documentary | Genres | DVD | Video
GeneralGeneral | Documentary | Genres | DVD | Video
Art & ArtistsArt & Artists | Special Interests | Genres | DVD | Video
Channing, StockardChanning, Stockard | ( C ) | Actors & Actresses | Stores | DVD | Video
Stuart, MelStuart, Mel | ( S ) | Directors | Stores | DVD | Video
American Masters CollectionAmerican Masters Collection | Wellspring Home Video | Studio Specials | Stores | DVD | Video
Used DVDsUsed DVDs | Stores | DVD | Video | Action & Adventure | African American Cinema | Animation | Anime & Manga | Art House & International | Classics | Comedy | Cult Movies | Documentary | Drama | Educational | Fitness & Yoga | Gay & Lesbian | Horror | Kids & Family | Military & War | Music Video & Concerts | Musicals & Performing Arts | Mystery & Suspense | Science Fiction & Fantasy | Special Interests | Sports | Television | Westerns
DVDs Under $14.99DVDs Under $14.99 | Today's Deals in DVD | Special Features | DVD | Video
( M )( M ) | Titles | Features | DVD | Video
Similar Items:
  1. American Masters - Alfred Stieglitz: The Eloquent Eye
  2. Max Ernst - A Film by Peter Schamoni
  3. The Adventure of Photography
  4. Masters of Photography - Diane Arbus
  5. Annie Leibovitz

ASIN: 1572525657
Release Date: 2000-02-22

Amazon.com

As part of the PBS American Masters series, Man Ray: Prophet of the Avant-Garde covers the life and artwork of this innovative modern artist with both clips of interviews and archival footage of the times he lived in. Born in Brooklyn as Emanuel Radnitsky, he grew discouraged by the New York art world of the early 1900s, changed his name to Man Ray, and moved to Paris. He was embraced by the Dadaists, many of whom later became Surrealists. Although painting was his main love, he took up photography, making portraits of famous people such as Ernest Hemingway, James Joyce, and Henri Matisse. He developed a new technique, the rayograph, in which he placed objects directly onto paper and exposed them to light. He even made an avant-garde film with this technique. Whether creating Dada sculptures, such as his famous iron with a row of tacks enigmatically entitled Le Cadeau, The Gift, innovative photographs, films, or sculptures, Man Ray always managed to surprise. In order to earn a living, he turned fashion photography into art. After living in California and New York during World War II, he returned to live and work in Paris after the war. Included in this program are wonderful shots of his Paris studio and home. Just under an hour long, this program presents a good look at a remarkable artist. The DVD format also includes an essay by Neil Baldwin, his biographer and author of the script, which underlines the influence of the women in his life. The crispness of the images and the intelligent insights into the ideas of the avant-garde make viewing a great pleasure. --Anne Barclay Morgan

Customer Reviews:

5 out of 5 stars A Valuable Documentary Of A Highly Self-Conscious Artist Who Cannily Promotes Himself........2005-11-21

This well-edited work's text is written by Neil Baldwin, author of a definitive biography, MAN RAY: AMERICAN ARTIST, and is sturdily narrated by Stockard Channing as it depicts, in a generally linear manner, many aspects of a versatile and influential Surrealist's career, a man who refused to be ignored, born Emmanuel Radnitzky in 1890 Philadelphia, growing up in the Williamsburg section of Brooklyn, and dying in 1976 in the Left Bank Parisian district of Montparnasse, a long life during which he was responsible for disturbing a sense of order held by many high-minded aesthetes. This documentary stresses that the days of his youth were filled with the sap of rebellion. Following his early fascination with Emma Goldman's brand of anarchism (Ray contributed illustrated covers for her periodical Mother Earth), the callow artist took groundbreaking photographer Alfred Stieglitz as mentor, a significant early influence, but after the notorious 1913 Armory Show astonished New York City's followers of trends in art, Ray adopted Cubism and Expressionism as metiers until, three years after, Tristan Tzara's Dada movement found in him an enthusiastic disciple, and one who began a lifelong friendship at that time with fellow Dada acolyte Marcel Duchamp, creator of NUDE DESCENDING A STAIRCASE, No. 2 that became the cardinal cause celebre at the Armory. A failed marriage and a shortage of monetary reward from his art drove Ray from New York and to Paris where Dadaism was being blended into Surrealism, and where Kiki of Montparnasse became his essential muse. It is from this period that viewers are shown a remarkable photograph of Marcel Proust upon his death bed, as well as wonderful examples of "Rayogrammes", works made by a process wherein no camera is utilized, subjects instead being placed directly upon photographic paper and then developed. This documentary's noteworthy reproductions of several of these pieces are representative of the signal care all round that marks the American Masters (WNET) production. We hear from the absorbing narration a mention that Ray was a "subsidized pet of French nobility", but Paris was also accountable for the presence of the striking Lee Miller in his existence, this former model of photographer Edward Steichen having a lasting impact upon the natively talented Ray, whose best efforts followed her appearance and were stimulated by Miller's fashion background, he in turn sharply altering the state of fashion photography. From approximately this time a viewer sees his "Obstruction", an exhibited entanglement of clothes hangers that anticipate the mobiles of Alexander Calder. Due to war in Europe, Ray left Paris in 1940, soon settling in Hollywood at an apartment on Vine Street near Sunset Boulevard where he resided for 20 years before returning to his beloved Montparnasse for his last decade and one half. When asked if he is ahead of his time he replies "I'm of my time; it's the others who are behind the times" (sic). Man Ray became a photographer as means of achieving a regular income, and while his preference for artistic endeavour was always painting, his unique photographic compositions are his most valued legacy to the world. Oddly, this creative individual's pronouncements are, for the most part banal, his most telling statement in this film being "I wanted to be accepted, not understood". An excellent DVD version includes candid film footage made by Man Ray and a hitherto unseen videotaped interview of him that was located within a storage area of the Boijmans Van Beuningen Museum in Rotterdam, and also archival drawings from his school days that had remained unseen for 90 years.

4 out of 5 stars A good start.......2005-10-09

If you'd like to know something about Man Ray, this competent if occasionally flat-footed made-for-TV documentary is a good place to start. And if you aren't curious about Man Ray, maybe you ought to be. You've probably seen many of the images and objects shown here -- whether presented straight, appropriated, hommage'd, parodied, or otherwise -- without realizing Man Ray was the originator.

This documentary tracks the artist's long, varied, and interesting life and career, using photographs, film clips, paintings, drawings, and works in other media, as well as interviews with surviving friends and associates, such as painter Dorothea Tanning and photographer Naomi Savage, Man Ray's niece and protégée. It also intersperses bits of several interviews that Man Ray himself gave toward the end of his life, allowing him comment in his own voice, often quite amusingly, on the events described. This, incidentally, reveals that the great man and life-long expatriate still spoke with a distinct Brooklyn accent -- as in, "a woik of art". The film describes Man Ray's posthumous ascent into the high-art firmament (his stuff now sells for a truckload of money), but oddly gives short shrift to his impact on the popular arts, which is arguably a more significant, if perhaps largely unintentional, accomplishment.

The script for this film was written by Neil Baldwin, author of the only comprehensive biography of Man Ray to date. Actress Stockard Channing narrates.

The DVD version offers virtually nothing in the way of extras. All that's here is a short written essay on Man Ray's colorful romantic life and its influence on his art, a subject that was already covered better in the film itself.

Finally, a couple of notes on other reviews here, to avoid confusion: 1.) There is no particular reason for those interested in Dora Maar to seek out this film. Although Man Ray was friendly with Maar and made some nice portraits of her, Maar was already an accomplished artist and photographer when she met Man Ray and never worked as his assistant. Perhaps the reviewer is partially confusing Maar with one or both of Man Ray's female assistants who became world famous photographers themselves: Lee Miller and Berenice Abbott. 2.) The documentary on Man Ray filmed in 1961, for French television, is not this one but something entirely different. That film is current available on VHS under the title "Montparnasse Revisited: A Life in the Day of Man Ray" and is also worth a look if this one whets your appetite.

5 out of 5 stars Great history.......2004-10-29

Yes, there are some things missing but overall I would say this is a must have for fans of Dora Maar so that you can see her early influences as she worked for Man Ray, then later became enchanted with Picasso. I enjoyed stepping into the timeline of artist influence in this.

5 out of 5 stars Introduction to Man Ray.......2003-01-24

Filmed in 1961, the documentary follows Man Ray into his Paris studio where notable artists and others drop in to reminisce. The studio is filled with his paintings, photos and assemblage sculpture reminding us that he was a multi media artist, although he made his living as a photographer. It is through that medium that he became well known and sought after, particularly as a portraitist, and he photographed some of the most famous personalities of our times.
Tristin Tsara calls on his friend and they play chess using a set that Man Ray designed. Patrick Waldberg (writer), drops by and situates Man Ray in the movements of Dada and Surrealism, exemplified in his paintings and assemblages. Merit Oppenheimer also visits. Herself a Surrealist artist, she also posed for many of Man Ray's photos. Artists Max Ernst and Giaccometti, John Weiner, musician, Philippe Soupault, writer, and Bill Copley, a gallery owner, each stops in to offer annecdotes. The documentary touches on Man Ray's famous Rayographs, and there is a clip from a film he did.
A bit dated stylistically and contrived with the flow of guests, the film's main acheivement is as an introduction to Man Ray and his overall oevre. We are left wanting to know more about his life, the breadth of his artistic works, and still more intimate detail about the company he kept, the most prominent personalities of his time and the modern art era.

DVD:

  1. William S. Burroughs - Commissioner of Sewers
  2. Sedona - The Spirit of Wonder (Large Format)
  3. NOVA: A Man, a Plan, a Canal - Panama
  4. ABC News: Tsunami - Wave of Destruction
  5. Notebook on Cities and Clothes
  6. The Remarkable 20th Century: The Astonishing Events and People That Have Shaped Our Modern World
  7. Desperately Seeking Seka
  8. Into the Thin Air of Everest - Mountain of Dreams, Mountain of Doom
  9. From a Whisper to a Scream - The Living History of Irish Rock
  10. Fiddlin' Man: The Life and Times of Bob Wills

DVD

DVD

DVD

Harakiri (1962) (Sub B&W)

Bells of St. Mary's

Star Trek: The Original Series, Vol. 5: What Are Little Girl

DVD: DVD-Fiddle For Kids #1

Ju-On: The Grudge 2