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Fashion in Film Festival: If Looks Could Kill will open at New York's Museum of the Moving Image on May 4th 2012. Find out more here.

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Full programme for Fashion in Film Festival 2012 in New York released. Find out more here.

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Fashion in Film's Kinoscopes available to tour. Find out more about their London and UK installations.

Kinetoscope

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Limited edition catalogue
The 2nd Fashion in Film Festival If Looks Could Kill limited edition catalogue is selling out fast. Available online, and in store at Tate Modern book shop, BFI Southbank Film Store and Cinéphilia.

2008

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Texts now published online
All texts from our first catalogue (now sold out) are now available here.

2006

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Hemline: the Moving Screen
   

Somerset House
1 - 12 December 2010

Fashion in Film is proud to present Hemline: the Moving Screen, a newly commissioned artwork by the award-winning artist collective Jason Bruges Studio. The captivating installation on show at Somerset House is our joint homage to the pioneering innovations of the belle époquedancer Loïe Fuller whose hugely influential costume and spectacle sorcery encapsulates some of the spirit behind the festival’s third edition.

Fuller became an iconic figure in late-19th century Europe and America for her breathtaking performances in which she would manipulate large volumes of fabric and produce dazzling visual effects using coloured lights, magic lantern slides and other optical devices, transforming herself into various ethereal guises such as butterflies, orchids, fairies or fire.

Jason Bruges Studio have created a light sculpture that uses a three-dimensional volume as a ‘moving screen’ to approximate the swirling movements of fabric in a serpentine dance. The perpetual state of change inherent in the projected moving image is doubled by that of the equally mercurial ‘screen’. The sculpture is responsive and transforms as a result of the number and proximity of visitors in the exhibition space.

Hemline: the Moving Screen embraces Fuller’s work as a pre-cinematic showcase of two fundamental properties of film, movement and light. Like Fuller’s complex visual effects, Hemline goes beyond and extends the traditional forms of cinema.

www.jasonbruges.com
www.somersethouse.org.uk

Jason bruges studio logo somerset house logo

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light sculpture by Jason Bruges Studio
Jason Bruges Studio, Study for Hemline: the Moving Screen. © the artists.

Loie Fuller
Postcard of Loie Fuller, publ. Reutlinger, late-19th century. © V&A Images/Victoria and Albert Museum, London.

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