
1952
Belgian art historian and filmmaker Paul Haesaerts (1901–1974) made a significant contribution to the promotion of modern Flemish art. In the late 1940s, he started experimenting with the medium of film to practice a new form of lens-based art criticism. The understudied documentary "Quatre peintres belges au travail" (1952) presents Belgian artists Edgar Tytgat, Albert Dasnoy, Jean Brusselmans and Paul Delvaux at work in their studio. On a large sheet of glass placed in front of the camera, they each paint one of the seasons that also represent a stage in a person’s life. A close reading of this Kodachrome color film sheds light on the context of mid-century art reproductions, mass media and post-war Flemish culture. It also examines in what way this film operates as Haesaerts’s concept of cinéma critique, while raising questions as to the way Haesaerts attempted to reconcile the spatial art of painting with the temporal medium of film.

Edgard Tytgat
Self

Albert Dasnoy
Self

Jean Brusselmans
Self

Paul Delvaux
Self

A Portrait of N. B.

The Conclave and Election of Pope Pius XII

The Fashion Side of Hollywood

Ganga

Rambling 'Round Radio Row #1

Jimmy Dorsey and His Orchestra

Severo

Cesta za tancem

Breakdowns of 1938

The Screen Writer

The Future of Cities

Flowers in the Garden

White Earth

The Méliès Mystery

Imprint in Clay

In einer chinesischen Stadt

Prestaties

The Apprentice

Open signalen

Weegee's New York