Keep That Image Burning: Digital Kříženecký, Color Veil, and the Cinema That Never Stops Ending
The result's identifiers
Result code in IS VaVaI
<a href="https://www.isvavai.cz/riv?ss=detail&h=RIV%2F00216208%3A11210%2F20%3A10422865" target="_blank" >RIV/00216208:11210/20:10422865 - isvavai.cz</a>
Result on the web
<a href="https://verso.is.cuni.cz/pub/verso.fpl?fname=obd_publikace_handle&handle=sUhNt0r6dF" target="_blank" >https://verso.is.cuni.cz/pub/verso.fpl?fname=obd_publikace_handle&handle=sUhNt0r6dF</a>
DOI - Digital Object Identifier
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Alternative languages
Result language
angličtina
Original language name
Keep That Image Burning: Digital Kříženecký, Color Veil, and the Cinema That Never Stops Ending
Original language description
The digitization of all the surviving films of the Czech cinema pioneer Jan Kříženecký (made between 1898 and 1911) gave birth to media artefacts with uncertain ontological and aesthetic status. While the digitized films benefit from the crystal-clear 4K image quality, their material deformations have not been retouched but made all the more visible. This problem is only highlighted in some of the most distorted films, in which the intrinsic technological properties of the Lumière film stock and apparatus interfere significantly into the figurative dimension of the image, even at the risk of evaporating it entirely. Thus, two central questions arise: What do such extreme archival artefacts bring to the ongoing debates about the "death of cinema" in the digital age, or, more broadly, about the ontology of the inevitably transforming moving image? How do they affect the fragile relationship between figuration and materiality, and, consequently, our understanding of this tension within the archival footage itself? To propose an answer to these questions, materialist film theory preoccupied with the ever-changing ontology of film will need to join forces with the contemporary theory of archival practice, as well as with experimental films that appropriate archival footage. A case study of the film Grand Consecration of the Emperor Franz I Bridge (1901, digitized nitrate print) will demonstrate how a specific material-technological quality (in this case a yellowish-orange color layer with unclear origin) can pre-filter the figurative universe through the hybrid matter composed of analog and digital, external and internal, human and non-human entities. Such exercise will enable us to think ontology and aesthetics of digitized archival footage and, by extension, the hybrid moving image itself, together.
Czech name
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Czech description
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Classification
Type
J<sub>imp</sub> - Article in a specialist periodical, which is included in the Web of Science database
CEP classification
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OECD FORD branch
60405 - Studies on Film, Radio and Television
Result continuities
Project
<a href="/en/project/EF16_019%2F0000734" target="_blank" >EF16_019/0000734: Creativity and Adaptability as Conditions of the Success of Europe in an Interrelated World</a><br>
Continuities
P - Projekt vyzkumu a vyvoje financovany z verejnych zdroju (s odkazem do CEP)
Others
Publication year
2020
Confidentiality
S - Úplné a pravdivé údaje o projektu nepodléhají ochraně podle zvláštních právních předpisů
Data specific for result type
Name of the periodical
The Moving Image
ISSN
1532-3978
e-ISSN
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Volume of the periodical
20
Issue of the periodical within the volume
1+2
Country of publishing house
US - UNITED STATES
Number of pages
33
Pages from-to
123-155
UT code for WoS article
000728071200008
EID of the result in the Scopus database
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