Throughout the history of art, there have been various movements which counteracted the other in response to their style. The topic would question what cultural reasons were behind this.
Maybe give an example of what you had in mind? This is kind of a broad topic, because you really could say that all art challenges the movement before it, and that it's supposed to! – samcel10 years ago
This article would be a survey of how people have exploited social media in a way that connects high concepts with popular culture. Twitter accounts like KimKierkegaardashian, and comedy posts for Buzzfeed such as "47 Thoughts Everyone Has While Crossing The Rubicon To Invade Rome" are a couple examples off the top of my head. The article would display how different social media platforms work as a gallery for digital art and commentary.
For example, A Pure Formality written and directed by Giuseppe Tornatore would make an awesome play. And I was hoping that someday the film 'The Breakfast Club' would be adapted into a play.
I think you would want to focus on either novels OR movies. Including both might make this article a bit busy. – jzalz1910 years ago
I agree with the above comment, I can imagine that it'll be fun to do both, but I would advise doing two separate articles. I'd be interested to see what you do with this and also the reasoning behind it. – Aliya Gulamani10 years ago
I would also add that you may want to narrow your focus to either plays OR musicals OR operas...all three have different conventions. I think an article discussing what movies could be turned into plays would be interesting. – Kewalder10 years ago
For some insights, you might want to delve into films/novels and their respective musical/play adaptation as their had been many-- Billy Elliot, Lion King, Wicked, A Christmas Story-- and delve into why they received the movie/book to stage treatment and how the general audience embraced them. – AvaKane10 years ago
Curiosity behind the such contractual agreements such as a flat fee, commission, residuals, or franchise profits, etc. It would be interesting to know who requests what and if it benefits them financially, socially or is it a humanitarian motivation.
Unique topic, not one many have discussed. Would you be looking for specific examples? Maybe, the article could compare some actors who always take big cheques to those willing to take scale to get the work done e.g. Bruce Willis for Expendables 3 compared to Jonah Hill agreeing to take minimum for Wolf of Wall Street. – Thomas Munday10 years ago
Some items that help to make the film successful is the timing of the release of the film, the public relations campaign, and tours of talks shows to promote the film. Can the cultural climate affect the politics of films that win awards, such as wars, religion, and challenged legislations?
A very ambitious article, and one that has the potential to be very insightful and interesting. With a topic this broad though, it might be better to either focus on specific movie or director examples, or to focus on certain events that have had significant impact. However, if you plan on writing this yourself, you may have much more information at hand that I can mull over at a glance. Perhaps if you decide not to write this, a conversation with whomever picks it up could do this topic the most justice. Good luck! – Matt Collazo10 years ago
Nice topic! Timing is everything when it comes to a film meeting deadlines for film festivals. Over the years, there's been several films that met with controversy. A video that may help this article is an interview of Peter Bart, and bribes are implied that affect how the members of the Academy vote. Good luck! – Amanda Dominguez-Chio10 years ago
Cool article, hope it gets picked up. Are you hoping to cover everything PR and media related or just specific things? It might be cool to either cover every aspect of the journey from Film Festival to Oscar night or specific films known for playing the PR card AKA The Artist for pushing the gimmick to the finish line to get bigger profits post Oscars? – Thomas Munday10 years ago
Timely article, with the recent award season. Be interesting if you highlight how different award shows have different politics? – Aliya Gulamani10 years ago
Georgia O’Keeffe’s flower series are detailed magnifications of countless plants that force the observer to notice common subjects in a way that enhances their wonder. However, today her paintings are synonymous with the female reproductive organ and little else. It is challenging to deny that there is no sensuality in her flowers, as the subject itself is sensuous and beautiful, but it is important to understand the origin and context of that interpretation.
During her career, O’Keeffe moved from pure abstraction, abstraction of recognizable subjects, to representation. This change in methodology may have occurred after the characterization of her work as overtly sexual. The promotion of her art by Alfred Stieglitz and the predominance of men in the art world portrayed her work as first and foremost a female creation. Stieglitz called her art “the expression of a sexually liberated woman” and said she “receives the World through her Womb.”
Even though she painted a subject matter that her male colleagues would have deemed appropriate for a woman, she was still chastised for her innovations, which they said had “promiscuous qualities.” This was not lost on O’Keeffe herself who once stated, “The men like to put me down as the best woman painter. I think I’m one of the best painters.”
This post will explore the development of Georgia O’Keeffe’s art throughout her lifetime and the way it was received by Stieglitz and the men in the art world who felt threatened by it.
There is a lot of information at the Santa Fe museum regarding Ms. O'Keeffe and her history from New Mexico to New York to Arizona. There were short films and a great deal of literature that could help with research material for this article. – Venus Echos10 years ago
Technology has created a television giving viewers a roadmap towards every detail of the actor's skin and hair. Lace front wigs are no longer undetectable, and the thick theater style makeup looks blatant. Actors are typically vein, how is the hair and makeup industry dealing with new television technology?
Ooo this could be intersting, be sure to try and find some facts about how make-up and hair that looks awful now was received at the time - did it seem good then? Phillipa Boyens ( i think) made a comment on the Two Towers commentry about them deliberately trying to keep the pores and mud on thier actors (except the elves, of course) Also, 'vain' – Francesca Turauskis10 years ago