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Home » For and about students » Techne Community » Techne alumni list » Gillian McIver

 

Dr Gillian McIver

Former AHRC Techne funded doctoral student

Between realism and the sublime: History in Cinema and Painting

University of Roehampton, London

Year of enrolment: 2015 -  


Supervisor: Dr Michael Witt

 Art and the Historical Film: Between Realism and the Sublime (Bloomsbury Press 2022)  

 

Art and the Historical Film: Between Realism and the Sublime examines the dialogue between the painterly and the cinematic in historical films. The book examines how art-historical images affect historical films by exploring the ways in which filmmakers use art-historical images to shape our understanding of the past. The book also examines how historical films can be used to make sense of our present, offering fresh insights into the intersection of art and history.

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There is no end. There is no beginning. There is only the infinite passion of life - Federico Fellini

 

Dr. Gillian McIver | Author, Art History for Filmmakers (Bloomsbury 2016) | Researcher, Art History and Cinema Studies 

www.gillianmciver.org | www.arthistoryfilm.org | www.theartraveller.com

 

Gillian McIver received her PhD from Roehampton University in the Media Culture and Languages department, specialising in Art History and Cinema Studies. Her area of research addresses the relationships between cinema, material culture and art history in visual culture and retinal communication. Her current research looks at Egyptian cinema, and she is working on the idea of abstraction as visual language in cinema practices.

Her PhD examined the historical film and its relationship to art history and visual storytelling. ‘When investigating the artistic representation of historical events. I noticed the tension between the accepted rhetorical mode for history (accurate, neutral and detached) and art’s passionate and emotive accounts. We can call these two approaches the realist and the sublime. My research demonstrates how art and cinema use this tension to engage audiences but also to pass on values and ideological positions.’

Gillian McIver is the author of Art History for Filmmakers: The Art of Visual Storytelling (Bloomsbury 2016).

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