movie art

Movie art

As a seminal abstract painting, Composition VIII exemplifies Wassily Kandinsky’s drive to use color and form to evoke emotion and emancipate art from depicting the material world. Without recognizable figures or objects, the interplay between fiery hues, geometric shapes, and fluid lines pulls the viewer into an abstract realm where vision is felt and the inner resounds outward here.

This abstract masterpiece marked a turning point in Kandinsky’s career, moving from his earlier, more fluid forms to a more geometric style. It’s considered a seminal work developing modern abstract art, demonstrating the emotional and aesthetic possibilities of shape, color, and line.

In total, El Greco made at least seven copies of the oil painting “Christ Carrying the Cross”, which testifies both to the importance of this work for the artist himself and to its incredible popularity during the artist’s lifetime. El Greco focused primarily not on the divine, but on the humanity of Christ. Today, this masterpiece of art is kept at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York.

Movie art

Transform your home theater, family room, or any living space into a cinematic haven with eye-catching wall art inspired by the movies you love. Whether you’re a fan of classic westerns, thrilling sci-fi, or spine-chilling horror, movie wall art adds personality and flair to your space, making it a reflection of your unique tastes. Choose from a wide selection of high-quality poster prints, featuring iconic movie scenes, memorable moments, or beloved characters. Looking for something extra? Explore photographic prints that capture legendary movie stars, iconic vehicles, or unforgettable props from your favorite films. These pieces go beyond décor; they let you relive the magic of the big screen every time you walk into the room. From timeless classics to modern blockbusters, there’s wall art to match every fan’s passion. Let your walls tell a story—your story—through the movies that have left a lasting impression on your heart. Elevate your space today with movie-themed wall art that brings your fandom to life!

empire of the sun artwork

Transform your home theater, family room, or any living space into a cinematic haven with eye-catching wall art inspired by the movies you love. Whether you’re a fan of classic westerns, thrilling sci-fi, or spine-chilling horror, movie wall art adds personality and flair to your space, making it a reflection of your unique tastes. Choose from a wide selection of high-quality poster prints, featuring iconic movie scenes, memorable moments, or beloved characters. Looking for something extra? Explore photographic prints that capture legendary movie stars, iconic vehicles, or unforgettable props from your favorite films. These pieces go beyond décor; they let you relive the magic of the big screen every time you walk into the room. From timeless classics to modern blockbusters, there’s wall art to match every fan’s passion. Let your walls tell a story—your story—through the movies that have left a lasting impression on your heart. Elevate your space today with movie-themed wall art that brings your fandom to life!

Movie posters, wall art, and movie artwork were staples in every room during the ’90s. They captured the essence of a film in a single image, showing visitors what you’re about and the type of movies you love. Movie canvas art was always used for this purpose. In our collection of movie paintings, you can find a horror film poster with dark themes or a comedy poster featuring bright colors and humorous imagery to set a light-hearted tone.

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We have artist and designer sections with info on more than 13,000 posters. Check out the great work by Drew Struzan, Saul Bass and Luigi Martinati, for example.If you are an artist or design company and want to be listed on CineMaterial don’t hesitate to contact us!

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Empire of the Sun artwork

These works led me to attempt to create this photographic book, using the notion of the map as a clue to the future and to question the whereabouts of my spirit. Discarded memorial photographs, a farewell note, kamikaze pilots – the illusions of various maps that emerge are to me like a discussion with the devil. The stains are situated as a key image of the series by drawing a future stratum and sealing the history, the nationality, the fear and anxiety of destruction and prosperity. It was almost a metaphor for the growth and the fall.

“This is one of the first episodes of mass tourism in the history of the world,” explains Baker. “There were 300 million postcards sent from the western front, for instance by people visiting the places where their relatives had died. And the photographers had to make these incredible compromises: making photographs of places that weren’t there anymore.”

Conflicts from around the world and across the modern era are depicted, revealing the impact of war days, weeks, months and years after the fact. The works are ordered according to how long after the event they were created: images taken weeks after the end of the American Civil War are hung alongside those taken weeks after the atomic bombs fell on Japan in 1945. Photographs from Nicaragua taken 25 years after the revolution are grouped with those taken in Vietnam 25 years after the fall of Saigon. The exhibition concludes with new and recent projects by British, German, Polish and Syrian photographers which reflect on the First World War a century after it began.

“From the seconds after a bomb is detonated to a former scene of battle years after a war has ended, this moving exhibition focuses on the passing of time, tracing a diverse and poignant journey through over 150 years of conflict around the world, since the invention of photography.

Cinematic artwork

This 1986 classic provides quite a different museum scene. During their self-inaugurated day off, Ferris, Cameron and Sloane head to the Art Institute of Chicago. Across a few shots, the museum’s extensive collection is seen on screen. Soon, the characters themselves become art-like, posing in perfect alignment with the rules of perspective.

With their minimalism, geometrical stripped-down simplicity, and heightened steeliness, Edward Hopper’s paintings have served as palettes for filmmakers multiple times. Wenders, one of the countless filmmakers to have been influenced by Hopper, hosts heavy Hopper-esque imagery in numerous works, from his very first US production Hammett in 1982 to The American Friend (1977); Paris, Texas (1984); and Don’t Come Knocking (2006); among others. In The End of Violence (1997), Wenders included an extended recreation of Nighthawks, sequencing out the painting in multiple shots to augment the storyline, not just the frame.

Wes Anderson’s films are known for their distinctive color palettes, which have inspired many contemporary painters. The soft pastels and symmetrical compositions in Anderson’s movies are reflected in the works of artists like Wayne Thiebaud, whose paintings of everyday objects are imbued with a similar nostalgic and whimsical feel. Additionally, the bold, contrasting colors used by filmmakers like Pedro Almodóvar have influenced painters to use vibrant, emotionally charged palettes in their works.

Alongside such noteworthy instances, Efendi also notes some lesser-known, obscure, and arcane parallels like the painting Lamentation of Christ (1475-90) by Andrea Mantegna in the film The Return (2003) by Andrey Zvyaginstev and painting Over the Town (1918) by Marc Chagall in the film Sexy Beast (2000) by Jonathan Glazer, that are much newer discoveries or analyses.

The most bodacious example of the employment of Hopper’s frames in film is in Gustav Deutsch’s 2013 singular work Shirley: Visions of Reality, which recounts the life of a fictional actress named Shirley through thirteen paintings by Edward Hopper. There is a specific lack of narrative flow in Deutsch’s film, owing to its heavily constructed nature, but what catches the eye is the interplay of the discernible color scheme, the blocking, and the lighting (that is peculiar to Hopper), creating a cinematic space where the characters on screen remain ensconced in an embrace of emptiness, wrapped in “the loneliness thing.”

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