36,000 YEARS OF MODERN ART
Director | Manuelle Blanc |
Writer | Manuelle Blanc |
Original score |
Stéphanie Blanc & Jérôme Levatois |
Image | Julien Pamart, Paolo Rapalino |
Sound | Sylvain Delecroix, Antoine Rodet, Fabio Viana Cogglola |
Editing | Julie Martinovic’ |
Length | 52′ |
Format | HDCam, 16/9e |
Versions | French |
Copyrights | Folamour – ARTE France – Centre Pompidou – 2019 |
Broadcaster | ARTE France |
Awards :
Arte Non Stop Film Festival of Buenos Aires:
- Best Film Award
- Best Editing Award
Protagonists :
- Guiseppe PENONE, sculptor
- Miquel BARCELÓ, painter
- Raphaël DALLAPORTA, photographer
- Cécile DEBRAY, Director of the Orangery Museum
- Rémi LABRUSSE, Professor, University Paris Nanterre
- Carole FRITZ, archaeologist
- Jean-Paul JOUARY, philosopher
- François JEUNE, Professor, Vincennes-Saint Denis University
The discovery of the first caves – Altamira in 1879, Lascaux in 1940 – took place simultaneously with the great revolutions of modern art, revolutionizing the chronology of art history itself. This documentary film shows how much cave art has inspired the greatest artists of the 20th century, bringing out from the depths of the ages and the caves works of astounding aesthetic and technical skill.