Velvet Curtains and Gilded Frames: The Art of Early European Cinema
By (Author) Vito Adriaensens
Edinburgh University Press
Edinburgh University Press
8th December 2025
United Kingdom
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
791.43094
Paperback
224
Width 156mm, Height 234mm
Velvet Curtains and Gilded Frames explores the intermedial context of early cinema. It tackles the first European feature films' intricate relationship with its sister arts to reveal that the period referred to by historians as the "long nineteenth century" was one in which Bourgeois Realism reigned supreme. The nineteenth-century rise of the middle class coincided with realism becoming the dominant artistic mode in both form and content, leading to a revival of genre painting in the art academies; the supremacy of the social melodrama on the stage; and the advent of Pictorialism in photography. In its quest for artistic legitimacy, European filmmakers sought to win over middle-class audiences with films based on popular works of art - the first "art films" - by employing similar visual and narrative strategies as its artistic counterparts.