THE COLLECTION
Fernand Léger (French, 1881–1955)
Ballet mécanique
- Date:
- 1924
- Medium:
- 35mm film, black and white, silent
- Duration:
- 12 min.
- Credit Line:
- Film in the permanent collection of The Museum of Modern Art, New York
- MoMA Number:
- 38724
- Copyright:
- © 2013 Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York / ADAGP, Paris
Circulating Film Library Catalogue, New York: The Museum of Modern Art, 1984, p. 167
This film remains one of the most influential experimental works in the history of cinema. The only film made directly by the artist Fernand Léger, it demonstrates his concern during this period—shared with many other artists of the 1920s—with the mechanical world. In Léger's vision, however, this mechanical universe has a very human face. The objects photographed by Dudley Murphy, an American photographer and filmmaker, are transformed by the camera and by the editing rhythms and juxtapositions. In Ballet méchanique, repetition, movement, and multiple imagery combine to animate and give an aesthetic raison d'être to the clockwork structure of everyday life. The visual pleasures of kitchenware—wire whisks and funnels, copper pots and lids, tinned and fluted baking pans—are combined with images of a woman carrying a heavy sack on her shoulder, condemned like Sisyphus (but through a cinematic sense of wit) to climb and reclimb a steep flight of stairs on a Paris street. The dynamic qualities of film and its capacity to express the themes of a kinetic 20th-century reach a significant level of accomplishement in this early masterpiece of modern art.
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