Film Categories
Art Periods
- 1.Early Cultures
- 2.First Civilizations
- 3.Africa
- 4.Pre-Columbian America
- 5.Romanesque and Gothic
- 6.Renaissance and Mannerism
- 7.Northern Renaissance
- 8.Rembrandt
- 9.Baroque and Rococo
- 10. Neo-classicists and Romantics
- 11. The Victorians
- 12. Impressionists and Post-Impressionists
- 13. Art Nouveau
- 14. Expressionism
- 15. Cubism and Futurism
- 16. Into Abstraction
- 17. The Bauhaus and De Stijl
- 18. Dada and Surrealism
- 19. Modern Masters
- 20. Modern and Contemporary Sculptors
- 21. Contemporary Painters
- 22. New Directions New Dimensions
- 23. Modern Architecture and Design
Films to Buy
- American Abstraction
- Abstraction: The Experience
- Expressionism*
- Re/Visions: Mexican Mural Painting*
- Die Brücke (The Bridge)
- Edvard Munch: The Restless Years*
- Edvard Munch: The Frieze of Life*
- Käthe Kollwitz
- 'I'm Mad, I'm Foolish, I'm Nasty'*
- Emil Nolde
- Part of the Struggle*
- Contemporary Expression
- Kokoschka
- The Reality of Karel Appel*
- Antonio Saura: Confessions*
- Francis Bacon*
- Francis Bacon: Paintings 1944-62*
Francis Bacon: Paintings 1944-62
11 minutes, color, age range: 17 - adult, #599A

Francis Bacon Person Writing Reflected in the Mirror
The film opens with images that recur in Francis Bacon's paintings - Muybridge photographs of animals in motion, stills from Eisenstein's The Battleship Potemkin, a Rembrandt self-portrait, and Pope Innocent X by Velázquez. The remainder of the film presents Bacon's interpretation of such images during the period 1944-62. There is no commentary, but through a combination of music, camera movement and editing, the film accentuates the violence and menace of the paintings, and gives an impression of their emotional power.
Credits
Director/Writer: David Thompson
Music: Elizabeth Lutyens
Arts Council of Great Britain:
Channel on blinkx: embed free previews into courses,
promotions, blogs, web sites, and distance learning.
© 2008 The Roland Collection. Site optimised for Internet Explorer 7 and 1024 x 768 screen. Previews play on Mac and PC, full films only on PC.