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1-50 of 58
- Two brothers and a sister witness the disappearance of their childhood memories when they must relinquish the family belongings to ensure their deceased mother's succession.
- The final sixty-seven days of Van Gogh's life are examined.
- In this war drama blurring the lines between documentary and fiction, the working class and the bourgeoisie of 19th century Paris are interviewed and covered on television, before and during a tragic workers' class revolt.
- A little boy and his baby-sitter inhabit the same imaginary world: through their adventures they are followed by a strange red balloon.
- April 15, 1874, boulevard des Capucines, Paris. In the studio of their friend, the photographer Nadar, some thirty young painters were preparing to present over one hundred and fifty of their works to the public.
- Impressionism was one of the most revolutionary movements of the XIX century. Monet, Renoir, Cezanne, Degas and Pissarro among other shook the foundations of artistic practice, and here we learn who they really were.
- A retelling of the life of Auguste Escoffier, a chef who invented contemporary gastronomy.
- This movie is a docudrama relating the early history of the Eiffel Tower: From the planning to its first military use.
- An exchange of memories spanning over 250 years interweaves everything from the philosophy of Empedocles to excerpts from Madame Bovary, to extant paintings by Cézanne, to the buildings of the artists' village at Mont Sainte-Victoire.
- Director Sandra Paugam makes Edgar Degas' unique approach to art, governed by touch and seeing, understandable but also sensitive.
- In 1880, at the end of his life, Edouard Manet, the painter of 'Olympia' and 'The Luncheon on the Grass', is still both famous (for the scandals he created) and misunderstood. Things change at last when the Galerie de la Vie Moderne gives him the opportunity to show an overview of his whole career, thus allowing visitors to appraise his production in terms of artistic value, not basing themselves on hearsay.
- A haunted and poetic walk through the paths and tombs of Father Lachaise, where statues and traces live on the walls and where the worlds never cease to cross.
- Attractive and subversive, Hervé Guibert, who died of AIDS, made an impression by staging the last moments of his life. An intimate portrait
- In the Gilded Age artist Anders Zorn (1860 - 1920) became the society painter of Swedish royalty and American presidents. While his modern portraits filled his coffers it was Zorn's deeply felt and excellently executed oil paintings of everyday Swedish life along with his studies of female nudes in nature that would win him a lasting international reputation as Sweden's premier painter.
- An exploration of nature told through human perception, inviting the audience to inhabit the liminal space between the material and phenomenological world. In this video art vision, the viewer embraces an altered state of consciousness.
- In Laurent Grasso's Parisian studio, we discover the various stages of creation of Artificialis (2020), through his own research, his exchanges with Grégory Quenet, professor of environmental history, and his work sessions with Warren Ellis.