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David Lynch tribute display

by Anna Walsh on 2025-01-29T17:47:00+00:00 | 0 Comments

Book and DVD display on David Lynch

Book and DVD display on the director David Lynch at Aldgate library

 

After hearing of the sad death of the acclaimed film director David Lynch, we put together a display of books and DVDs in Aldgate library in tribute. 

The DVD collection did not have all his classics, but you can instead watch many of them on demand through BOB (Box of Broadcasts) by going to the link through the library webpages (scroll down to BOB). Click the link, and if you haven't done so already, you will be prompted to make an account (only available to subscribed institutions), where you can watch the likes of the Elephant Man, Blue Velvet, The Directors, Twin Peaks, Mulholland Drive and many more.

Bridgeman education (also available through the library catalogue) is great for film stills as well as other types of images (free to use for educational use), so have a browse and see what else you can find. 

As well as books you can find journal articles and more in JSTOR (log in via the library catalogue), including such titles as Blue Velvet: An Interview with David Lynch from Cinéaste, Vol. 15, No. 3 (1987), or From Irony to Narrative Crisis: Reconsidering the Femme Fatale in the Films of David Lynch from Cinema Journal, Vol. 52, No. 1 (Fall 2012).

 

As well as physical books you can also find e-books in the catalogue, including the following relevant titles, which you can read online using your London met login details:

Cover ArtDavid Lynch by Justus Nieland
ISBN: 9780252094057
Publication Date: 2012-04-15
A key figure in the ongoing legacy of modern cinema, David Lynch designs environments for spectators, transporting them to inner worlds built by mood, texture, and uneasy artifice. We enter these famously cinematic interiors to be wrapped in plastic, the fundamental substance of Lynch's work. This volume revels in the weird dynamism of Lynch's plastic worlds. Exploring the range of modern design idioms that inform Lynch's films and signature mise-en-scène, Justus Nieland argues that plastic is at once a key architectural and interior design dynamic in Lynch's films, an uncertain way of feeling essential to Lynch's art, and the prime matter of Lynch's strange picture of the human organism.   Nieland's study offers striking new readings of Lynch's major works (Eraserhead, Blue Velvet, Wild at Heart, Mulholland Dr., Inland Empire) and his early experimental films, placing Lynch's experimentalism within the aesthetic traditions of modernism and the avant-garde; the genres of melodrama, film noir, and art cinema; architecture and design history; and contemporary debates about cinematic ontology in the wake of the digital. This inventive study argues that Lynch's plastic concept of life--supplemented by technology, media, and sensuous networks of an electric world--is more alive today than ever.
 
Cover ArtThe architecture of David Lynch by Richard Martin
ISBN: 9781474293952
Publication Date: 2014
Home to some of the most remarkable spaces in contemporary culture, the cinema of David Lynch demonstrates an acute awareness of architecture. From the urban wastelands of Eraserhead to the eerie Red Room in Twin Peaks, Lynch's architecture is anxious, absurd and utterly distinct
 
 
 
Cover ArtThe Film Paintings of David Lynch by Allister Mactaggart
ISBN: 9781841503875
One of the most distinguished filmmakers working today, David Lynch is a director whose vision of cinema is firmly rooted in fine art. He was motivated to make his first film as a student because he wanted a painting that "would really be able to move." Most existing studies of Lynch, however, fail to engage fully with the complexities of his films' relationship to other art forms. The Film Paintings of David Lynch fills this void, arguing that Lynch's cinematic output needs to be considered within a broad range of cultural references. Aiming at both Lynch fans and film studies specialists, Allister Mactaggart addresses Lynch's films from the perspective of the relationship between commercial film, avant-garde art, and cultural theory. Individual Lynch films--The Elephant Man, Blue Velvet, Twin Peaks, Lost Highway, The Straight Story, Mulholland Drive, Inland Empire--are discussed in relation to other films and directors, illustrating that the solitary, or seemingly isolated, experience of film is itself socially, culturally, and politically important. The Film Paintings of David Lynch offers a unique perspective on an influential director, weaving together a range of theoretical approaches to Lynch's films to make exciting new connections among film theory, art history, psychoanalysis, and cinema.

 

 

 

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