Literatura académica sobre el tema "Lynch, David (1946-.... ; cinéaste) – Critique et interprétation"
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Tesis sobre el tema "Lynch, David (1946-.... ; cinéaste) – Critique et interprétation":
Dalleu, Estelle. "David Lynch, cinéaste de l'oralité". Thesis, Strasbourg, 2013. http://www.theses.fr/2013STRAC006.
Orality has a sound and visual recurrent existence in the work of David Lynch. It is the main thread in the relation between the sound and the image and probably constitutes the nodal point in the cinematic aesthetic of this American artist; so much so that he makes it an identity trait, an obsessive theme of his cinematographic creation. Coming from the Latin os, oris, the term orality allows to treat everything related to the mouth, the point of contact between the interior of the body and the external environment. Orality pertains to a human anatomical mechanism, but it is not limited to sound production - it is not only concerned with speech and the functional aspect of communication. It is also a visual motif represented by its other strategic location: the face (a term also derived from Latin os, oris). There is thus a visual/visible orality and a sound/audible orality. The exploration into orality in David Lynch's work takes the form of an anatomical and an organic journey leading from the mouth to the ear; from visual representation and sound matter to its perception/reception. What is important in the final count is to observe how orality manifests itself and envisages a creative whole which produces an encounter between the performance arts, the visual arts, and the sound material
Langendorff, Judith. "Le nocturne comme catégorie esthétique de l'image dans la photographie et le cinéma contemporains". Electronic Thesis or Diss., Sorbonne Paris Cité, 2018. https://books.openedition.org/pur/180789.
Based on a large corpus of colorist film directors and photographers who share a fascination for the nocturne, this thesis explores the different gradations and meanings of this one, from the more obvious to the more abstracts. The thesis endeavours to demonstrate how the nocturne reasserts the darkness values to turn them into colors, and how it illuminates, with a subtlety absent in diurnal vision, the more complex aspects of society as well as the human mind.The confrontation between picture and film sequences analysis, with a perspective articulating aesthetic, philosophy and art history, leads to three main concepts: Distortion, Sublimation and Transfiguration. Thereby it establishes the nocturne as an image’s aesthetic category in cinema and photography.The main corpus in cinema and photography, organised by externals criteria (nocturne, post-1960-1970 years color) and internals criteria (similar operating processes aesthetic), is established with the movie extracts of Stanley Kubrick (1928-1999), David Lynch (1946), Brian de Palma (1940), Francis Ford Coppola (1939) as well as the photographic series of Gregory Crewdson (1962), Bill Henson (1955), Rut Blees Luxemburg (1967) and Daniel Boudinet (1945-1990).The second is based on the photographic series of Darren Almond (1971), Jean-Christian Bourcart (1960), Nicolas Dhervillers (1981), Laurent Hopp (1974) and Chrystel Lebas (1966), as well as Antoine Barraud’s (1973) movie extracts. Finally, for the requirement of the demonstration, a Nic Pizzolatto (1975) and Justin Lin (1973) TV show
Bobée, Emmanuelle. "La musique et les textures sonores comme éléments du récit filmique dans l'œuvre de David Lynch, d'Eraserhead (1977) à Inland Empire (2006)". Rouen, 2015. http://www.theses.fr/2015ROUEL027.
This study aims to explore the universe and aesthetics of American director David Lynch (1946 -. . . ), focusing upon the musical and sonic aspects; it leans on a large corpus composed of the ten feature-films that he directed between 1977 and 2006. Since Eraserhead, which appears as a sonic matrix of Lynch's future works, music and sound design have been given a prominent place by the cineaste, in order to create a true osmosis between the visual and sonic components of the filmic narrative. Deeply involved in sound creation, as much as in the elaboration of original soundtracks and the choice of pre-existing music, he has also developed fruitful and recurrent collaborations, in particular with the sound engineer Alan Splet and the composer Angelo Badalamenti, along with occasional partnerships with various contemporary artists. Over the years, Lynch has developed a singular approach, at once fundamentally authorial and open to external interventions, chance and unforeseen; he has also set up original working methods based on experimentation, intuition, and the « process of action-reaction ». All the potentialities of the audible register and of the audio-visual combination are used to interact with the spectator, arousing either the adhesion to the fictional world —especially by mechanisms of subjectivisation —, or the disorientation and detachment by a highlighting of the filmic representation. This constant deployment of opposite forces contributes to feed the feeling of uncanniness which emanates from Lynchean narratives, reinforced or induced by some techniques such as the use of pre-existing pop songs of the 60s, the resort to lip-synch and the integration of sung or choreographed scenes, or the implementation of musico-narrative strategies inspired by dream mechanisms or by the repetition principle
Langendorff, Judith. "Le nocturne comme catégorie esthétique de l'image dans la photographie et le cinéma contemporains". Thesis, Sorbonne Paris Cité, 2018. http://www.theses.fr/2018USPCA085.
Based on a large corpus of colorist film directors and photographers who share a fascination for the nocturne, this thesis explores the different gradations and meanings of this one, from the more obvious to the more abstracts. The thesis endeavours to demonstrate how the nocturne reasserts the darkness values to turn them into colors, and how it illuminates, with a subtlety absent in diurnal vision, the more complex aspects of society as well as the human mind.The confrontation between picture and film sequences analysis, with a perspective articulating aesthetic, philosophy and art history, leads to three main concepts: Distortion, Sublimation and Transfiguration. Thereby it establishes the nocturne as an image’s aesthetic category in cinema and photography.The main corpus in cinema and photography, organised by externals criteria (nocturne, post-1960-1970 years color) and internals criteria (similar operating processes aesthetic), is established with the movie extracts of Stanley Kubrick (1928-1999), David Lynch (1946), Brian de Palma (1940), Francis Ford Coppola (1939) as well as the photographic series of Gregory Crewdson (1962), Bill Henson (1955), Rut Blees Luxemburg (1967) and Daniel Boudinet (1945-1990).The second is based on the photographic series of Darren Almond (1971), Jean-Christian Bourcart (1960), Nicolas Dhervillers (1981), Laurent Hopp (1974) and Chrystel Lebas (1966), as well as Antoine Barraud’s (1973) movie extracts. Finally, for the requirement of the demonstration, a Nic Pizzolatto (1975) and Justin Lin (1973) TV show
Libros sobre el tema "Lynch, David (1946-.... ; cinéaste) – Critique et interprétation":
Nochimson, Martha. Passion of David Lynch: Wild at Heart in Hollywood. University of Texas Press, 1997.