The Flying Train (1902) | MoMA FILM VAULT SUMMER CAMP - Invidious

"The Flying Train" depicts a ride on a suspended railway in Germany in 1902. The footage is almost as impressive as the feat of engineering it captures. #FlyingTrain #FilmVaultSummerCamp #MoMAFilm #MoMAVirtualViews #art #museumofmodernart #moma #museum #modernart

https://yewtu.be/watch?v=2Ud1aZFE0fU

The Flying Train (1902) | MoMA FILM VAULT SUMMER CAMP

"The Flying Train" depicts a ride on a suspended railway in Germany in 1902. The footage is almost as impressive as the feat of engineering it captures. For many years our curators believed our Mutoscope rolls were slightly shrunken 70mm film, but they were actually shot on Biograph’s proprietary 68mm stock. Formats like Biograph’s 68mm and Fox’s 70mm Grandeur are of particular interest to researchers visiting the Film Study Center because the large image area affords stunning visual clarity and quality, especially compared to the more standard 35mm or 16mm stocks. Learn more about Mutoscopes and the “first films” from curator Dave Kehr: https://youtu.be/BBNwiPgknn8 Subscribe for our latest videos, and invitations to live events: http://mo.ma/subscribe Explore our collection online: http://mo.ma/art Film at MoMA is made possible by CHANEL. Commit to art and ideas. Support MoMA by becoming a member today: https://moma.org/join The comments and opinions expressed in this video are those of the speaker alone, and do not represent the views of The Museum of Modern Art, its personnel, or any artist.  #FlyingTrain #FilmVaultSummerCamp #MoMAFilm #MoMAVirtualViews #art #museumofmodernart #moma #museum #modernart

The Museum of Modern Art | Invidious

Oooohh perfect pointillism!

RT @[email protected]

Paul Signac's portrait of Félix Fénéon is a Neo-Impressionist manifesto, a term Fénéon coined to describe a radical new technique: “Take two steps away and all these versicolored spots melt into undulating, luminous masses.” Explore #MoMAVirtualViews: http://mo.ma/feneon

🐦🔗: https://twitter.com/MuseumModernArt/status/1250952171224535040

Félix Fénéon : The Anarchist and the Avant-Garde—From Signac to Matisse and Beyond | MoMA

Exhibition. Explore the exhibition online. Who was Félix Fénéon? The first exhibition dedicated to this extraordinarily influential but little-known figure explores how he shaped the development of modernism. A French art critic, editor, publisher, dealer, and collector, Fénéon (1861–1944) championed the careers of young, avant-garde artists from Georges-Pierre Seurat and Paul Signac to Pierre Bonnard and Henri Matisse, among many others. He was also a pioneering collector of art from Africa and Oceania. A fervent anarchist during a period of gaping economic and social disparities, Fénéon believed in the potential of avant-garde art to promote a more harmonious, egalitarian world. This exhibition is currently being presented here as part of our Virtual Views series, as we “museum from home.” Explore Fénéon’s life and the art that inspired him through highlights from MoMA curator Starr Figura, along with art, audio, and video features below.