LIving Colour movie poster

LIving Colour

January 1, 1961 0h 6m

Originally released in 1961. LIving Colour is a documentary film. directed by Gösta Werner. At just 6 minutes, it's a tight, focused story.

Synopsis

During the 1960s, artist Eric Olson embarked on a series of works under the title Optochromi. The vast majority of these were plexiglass objects: most were sculptures although a few are formally closer to paintings. From a cinematic point of view one could describe the Optochromi sculptures as metaphysical colour animations frozen in time – so much so that modern composer Jan Wilhelm Morthenson made his film Interferences (1966), a tribute to 1920s abstraction à la Richter, with the use of Olson’s works. Gösta Werner did something similar five years earlier with Levande färg – only that he mainly circles the sculptures, and contemplates them more than he interacts with them. A respectfully curious distance is always kept.

Quick Facts

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Release Date January 1, 1961 65 years ago
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Runtime 0h 6m 6 minutes total
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Language English Original language

Production Details

Status
Released
Original Language
EN

Frequently Asked Questions

What is LIving Colour about?

During the 1960s, artist Eric Olson embarked on a series of works under the title Optochromi. The vast majority of these were plexiglass objects: most were sculptures although a few are formally cl...

Who directed LIving Colour?

LIving Colour was directed by Gösta Werner.

How long is LIving Colour?

LIving Colour has a runtime of 0 hours and 6 minutes (6 minutes total).

When was LIving Colour released?

LIving Colour was released on January 1, 1961 in theaters.