Carlos Saura: Vanished Spain

Hardback

Main Details

Title Carlos Saura: Vanished Spain
Physical Properties
Format:Hardback
Pages:256
Dimensions(mm): Height 290,Width 250
Category/GenreIndividual film directors and film-makers
ISBN/Barcode 9783869309118
ClassificationsDewey:791.430233092
Audience
General
Illustrations Illustrated in tritone throughout

Publishing Details

Publisher Steidl Publishers
Imprint Steidl Verlag
Publication Date 18 April 2016
Publication Country Germany

Description

When the great filmmaker Carlos Saura was a young man, he desired to create a book about his native Spain that would transgress the propaganda imagery of the Franco regime. He strove to depict his country as seen through his camera when he set out on a journey through Andalusia and central Spain in his Fiat 600 in the late 1950s. The trip left a deep impression on his first documentary film, "Cuenca" (1958). Since his youth Saura has been fascinated not only by the process of photographing but also by its technology, as demonstrated by his museum-quality collection of hundreds of historical and self-made cameras. Torn between the two media at the beginning of his career, Saura eventually chose to become a filmmaker but has continued to take photographs. Vanished Spain offers a comprehensive insight into Saura's photography with a focus on his black-and-white work of the 1950s: compelling images of landscapes, villages, bullfights and people of another era. Photographs of Saura's diploma film project, "La Tarde de Domingo" (1957), are also present in the book, making it the definitive representation of his photographic oeuvre.

Author Biography

Carlos Saura, born in Huesca in 1932, is one of the most important European filmmakers. His more than forty films include "Los Golfos" (1959), "La Caza" (1965), "Peppermint Frappe" (1967), his Flamenco Trilogy comprising the films "Bodas de Sangre" (1981), "Carmen" (1983) and "El amor brujo" (1986), as well as the dance documentaries "Flamenco" (1995) and "Tango" (1998).