[Skip to content] [Skip to main navigation] [Skip to quick links] [Go to accessibility information]

Art UK
Menu
SIGN IN
Search
Shop
  • About
  • Discover
  • Learn
  • Stories
  • Donate Donate

Main menu

Close
  • Home
  • Search form

    • Discover

      • Artworks
      • Artists
      • Topics
      • People
      • Art terms
      • Stories
      • Curations
    • Learn

      • Learning resources
      • The Superpower of Looking
      • Visual literacy
      • Write on Art
    • Participate

      • Tagger
      • Curate
      • Art Detective
    • Visit

      • Venues
    • Support us

      • Become a Patron
      • Our funders
    • About

      • What we do
      • Our impact
      • Who we are
      • Who funds us
    • For collections

      • Partner collections
      • Digital skills for collections
    • Shop

      • Prints
      • Art themes
      • Books
      • Gifts
      • About the shop
  • Sign in
  • Register

Remember me (uncheck on a public computer)

By signing up you agree to terms and conditions and privacy policy

Forgotten password?

Enter your email address below and we’ll send you a link to reset your password


Cancel

I agree to the Art UK terms and conditions and privacy policy

Sign up to the Art UK newsletter, a weekly edit of insightful art stories


Finding Art UK useful? Support us to keep it free.

Donate Finding Art UK useful? Support us to keep it free.

Topics

Film and photography

  • Summary
French Silent Cinema Audience
© the copyright holder. Image credit: The Cinema Museum

French Silent Cinema Audience

Eugène Forel (active 1886–1930)

The Cinema Museum

The invention of photography in the mid-nineteenth century changed the story of art. Painting no longer had to accurately record real life; it could experiment with non-representation. Perhaps it was inevitable that painting seldom depicted photography itself. Frederick Daniel Hardy’s The Young Photographers is a rare illustration of an early travelling photographer at work.


Read more

Photography did, however, influence the composition, subject matter and techniques of painting. Impressionists such as Degas adopted the hard cropping of photography to create a fresh new viewpoint in their paintings. Pop Art reflected the glossy and stylised photographic images of popular culture, especially the stars of film and music, and Photorealism copies the impersonal detail of photographs to comment on the process of painting itself.

Artworks

  • Peret Insulting the Priest
    Peret Insulting the Priest Roger Westwood (b.1936)
    Arts Council Collection, Southbank Centre
  • The Young Photographers
    The Young Photographers Frederick Daniel Hardy (1827–1911)
    The Amelia
  • At the Café Châteaudun
    At the Café Châteaudun Edgar Degas (1834–1917)
    The National Gallery, London
  • At the Café
    At the Café Edgar Degas (1834–1917)
    The Fitzwilliam Museum
  • In the Tuileries, Woman with a Parasol
    In the Tuileries, Woman with a Parasol Edgar Degas (1834–1917)
    The Burrell Collection
  • Woman Ironing
    Woman Ironing Edgar Degas (1834–1917)
    Walker Art Gallery
  • Reece Pemberton
    Reece Pemberton Josef Herman (1911–2000)
    Southampton City Art Gallery
  • 59 more

Stories

  • 1884/1886, oil on canvas by Georges Seurat (1859–1891), Art Institute of Chicago
    Lights, camera, paintings: art in the movies

    Molly Tresadern

  • The W. A. Green Collection: a glimpse into the north of Ireland's history

    Victoria Millar

  • 1974, photograph by James Barnor (b.1929)
    From Ghana to London: how photographer James Barnor captured two societies in transition

    Siham Ali

  • Snow Hill Square, Birmingham, 14th September to 13th October 2022
    Seven questions with Anthony Luvera

    Gemma Briggs

  • Yevonde: photographing a galaxy of goddesses

    Clare Freestone

  • Art in the movies: the sequel

    Molly Tresadern

  • 'Jason and the Argonauts' at 60: revisiting Ray Harryhausen's masterpiece

    Connor Heaney

  • Installation view of 'Faces of Fame' at the Watts Gallery
    Faces of fame: Simon Frederick at the Watts Gallery

    Emily Burns

  • 'Mrs Lowry & Son' will be released nationwide from 30th August 2019
    Timothy Spall on portraying L. S. Lowry

    Lydia Figes

  • Top artist biopics

    David Ekserdjian

  • The cinematic and artistic genius of Ray Harryhausen

    Connor Heaney

  • Alasdair Gray: artist, author and Glasgow Recorder

    Greg Thomas

  • Brian 'Freddy' Foskett: photographing jazz legends

    National Jazz Archive

  • 1654, oil on panel by Carel Fabritius (1622–1654)
    Carel Fabritius: pupil of Rembrandt, painter of 'The Goldfinch'

    India Lewis

  • Alice Hawkins: the female gaze in Hartlepool

    Angela Thomas

  • Maud Sulter at her exhibition 'Jeanne Duval: A Melodrama', National Galleries of Scotland, 2003
    Passionate and political: centring black women in Maud Sulter's 'Zabat'

    Susannah Thompson

  • Untitled, May, 1997
    Hannah Starkey: contemplating womanhood through photography

    P. L. Henderson

  • Art Matters podcast: how Alfred Hitchcock created artful suspense

    Ferren Gipson

  • Zanele Muholi: championing black and queer visual narratives

    Siham Ali

  • Mahtab Hussain: photographing Muslim communities in Britain

    Chris Boot

  • Still of Cate Blanchett as Elizabeth I in 'Elizabeth' (1998)
    Art Matters podcast: fashion from the canvas to the silver screen

    Ferren Gipson

  • Capturing Northern Ireland's dynamic shipbuilding history

    Jade King

  • ain't I a woman?
    Ain't I a woman? New truths and meanings at Cyfarthfa Castle Museum & Art Gallery

    Steph Roberts

  • Folio 4 from 'Très Riches Heures du Duc de Berry'
    Art Matters podcast: the art of Disney animation

    Ferren Gipson

  • Autograph x Art UK partnership brings photographs of Britain's diverse communities online  

    Art UK

Learning resources

  • rachel-kandlhofer-2021-49-1-thumbnail-1.jpg
    Lesson plan
    Rachel Maclean: modern life, make-believe and monsters
    • KS4 (ENG)
      KS5 (ENG)
      KS4 (NI)
      KS5 (NI)
      CfE L4 (SCO)
      CfE Sen. (SCO)
      KS4 (WAL)
      KS5 (WAL)
  • super-sculpture-animation-1.png
    Activity
    Super stop-animation sculpture
    • KS2 (ENG)
      KS3 (ENG)
      KS4 (ENG)
      KS5 (ENG)
      KS2 (NI)
      KS3 (NI)
      KS4 (NI)
      KS5 (NI)
      CfE L2 (SCO)
      CfE L3 (SCO)
      CfE L4 (SCO)
      CfE Sen. (SCO)
      PS3 (WAL)
      KS3 (WAL)
      KS4 (WAL)
      KS5 (WAL)
  • le-abp-ldaut-pr-2761-rfk-001-1.jpg
    Lesson plan
    Seeing differently: learning together through photographs
    • KS3 (ENG)
      KS3 (NI)
      CfE L3 (SCO)
      KS3 (WAL)
      KS4 (ENG)
      KS4 (NI)
      CfE L4 (SCO)
      KS4 (WAL)
      KS5 (ENG)
      KS5 (NI)
      CfE Sen. (SCO)
      KS5 (WAL)
  • N1_CRH_S128-010.jpg
    Lesson plan
    'Hitchcock's Reel' and the art of film
    • KS3 (ENG)
      KS3 (NI)
      CfE L3 (SCO)
      KS3 (WAL)
      KS4 (ENG)
      KS4 (NI)
      CfE L4 (SCO)
      KS4 (WAL)
  • pbpa-boty-colourherblonde-1.jpg
    Lesson plan
    Pauline Boty and Pop Art
    • KS3 (ENG)
      KS3 (NI)
      CfE L3 (SCO)
      CfE L4 (SCO)
      KS3 (WAL)
  • sulter-preview-1.jpg
    Lesson plan
    Maud Sulter and the subversive portrait
    • KS4 (ENG)
      KS5 (ENG)
      KS4 (NI)
      KS5 (NI)
      CfE L4 (SCO)
      CfE Sen. (SCO)
      KS4 (WAL)
      KS5 (WAL)
  • Splendour
    Lesson plan
    Artist and client: responding to a brief
    • KS3 (ENG)
      KS3 (NI)
      CfE L3 (SCO)
      KS3 (WAL)
      KS4 (ENG)
      KS4 (NI)
      CfE L4 (SCO)
      KS4 (WAL)
  • sculpture-near-you-hitchcock-s-reel-1.jpg
    Video
    Sculpture near you: 'Hitchcock's Reel'
    • KS3 (ENG)
      KS3 (NI)
      CfE L3 (SCO)
      KS3 (WAL)
      KS2 (ENG)
      KS2 (NI)
      CfE L2 (SCO)
      PS3 (WAL)
      SEND (ENG)
      SEND (NI)
      ASN (SCO)
      SEND (WAL)

Do you know someone who would love this resource?
Tell them about it...

https://artuk.org/discover/topics/film-and-photography Copy
Link copied to clipboard!
  • bloomberg
  • dlb foundation
  • Supported by

    Arts CouncilArts Council
  • heritage fund
® is a registered trade mark of the Public Catalogue Foundation.
Art UK is the operating name of the Public Catalogue Foundation, a charity registered in England and Wales (1096185) and Scotland (SC048601).

Follow us

    • Join us on Facebook
    • Follow us on YouTube
    • Top
  • Subscribe to newsletter
  • Donate to Art UK

Quick links

  • Contact us
  • FAQ
  • Terms of use
  • Privacy policy
  • AI policy
  • Use of cookies
  • Copyright notice
  • Accessibility
  • Shop
  • Disclaimer
  • Jobs
  • Website credits
® is a registered trade mark of the Public Catalogue Foundation.
Art UK is the operating name of the Public Catalogue Foundation, a charity registered in England and Wales (1096185) and Scotland (SC048601).