EOS: Sargent & Fashion (12A)

Exhibition On Screen

EOS: Sargent & Fashion (12A)

Location:

Connaught Cinema

Tickets:

This event has now passed

Age Guidance:

12A - See more about BBFC ratings here.

Director:

David Bickerstaff

Top Billed Cast:

TBC

Duration:

110 minutes (Inc. adverts and trailers).

  • Description

Exhibition on Screen presents....

Exhibition On Screen returns for another outstanding series of films - their eleventh season. With over five million tickets sold worldwide, these films that go behind the scenes of major exhibitions or explore the work of esteemed artists are truly exemplary. They provide unprecedented access to art and artists from all over the world.

About the film
John Singer Sargent was known as the greatest portrait artist of the late 19th century. Aside from his immense talent, what made his portraits truly remarkable was his choice and depiction of fashion and the complex messages these choices conveyed. His sitters assume elegant stances with the fabric of their dress richly depicted in broad, sensuous strokes.

Sargent brought his subjects to life, but he did much more than simply record what appeared before him. He often chose what his sitters wore and, even if they arrived in his studio dressed in the latest fashions, he frequently simplified and altered the details. Exploiting dress was an integral part of his artistry.

Filmed at the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston and the Tate Britain, London, this superb film from Exhibition on Screen details how the exhibition explores the artist’s complex relationship with his often-influential clients, their clothes and their public image. Alongside 50 paintings by Sargent, several stunning clothes and accessories worn by his sitters appear next to the paintings, drawing the audience into 19th century society and shedding new light on the relationship between fashion and this beloved artist’s creative practice.

The exhibition reveals Sargent’s power over his sitters’ images, expressing distinctive personalities, power dynamics and gender identity during this fascinating period of cultural reinvention. This film explores the relationship between artist and subject, examining the hidden meanings simmering beneath the surface of the late Victorian portrait.

BBFC Insight: Not yet rated but expected to be no higher than 12A
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