
A sweeping manifesto from the early 1920s, this work treats motion pictures as a genuine visual art, worthy of the same critical rigor applied to sculpture, painting, and architecture. Written for museum curators, university scholars, and creative practitioners, it argues that the cinema is not merely entertainment but a cultural institution that shapes and reflects modern life. The author draws on a deep background in fine‑arts education, weaving references to Egyptian hieroglyphics, classic myths, and contemporary design to illustrate how film fits into a broader artistic lineage.
The book maps out a detailed framework for analyzing movies, from action‑driven narratives to intimate, lyrical sequences, and even explores the “splendor” of crowd, patriotic, and religious imagery on screen. It also examines how the moving image interacts with other media—sculpture, painting, furniture, and architecture—suggesting that each can become a character in its own right. Readers will find a passionate call to treat the cinema as a living museum, encouraging fresh ways of seeing both the medium and the world it portrays.
Language
en
Duration
~6 hours (364K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2004-07-26
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
Subjects

1879–1931
An energetic American poet and performer, he helped make poetry feel like something heard as much as read. Best known for vivid, rhythmic pieces such as "The Congo," he brought chant, music, and public recitation into modern literary life.
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