31/08/2020

Friends, Lovers, & Lunatics (1989)

Daniel Stern plays artist Mat

The artist Mat being fired from his office job while wearing sunglasses
Mat making a stalkery artwork from an old love letter from his ex-girlfriend.
Here we see him blowing up the letter using a photocopier

Mat the artist in his studio cutting up the photocopies he has made from his ex's letter to make his art
Mat's ex arrives home with her new boyfriend and they discover Mat's artwork in the fridge
(all the food wrapped in her love letter)

Mat's ex girlfriend also discovers he has made a paper sheet for her bed using her old love letter


Friends, Lovers, & Lunatics on IMDB

24/08/2020

As Good as It Gets (1997)

Greg Kinnear plays artist Simon Bishop

Greg Kinnear as Simon Bishop
Simon Bishop painting
Simon Bishop's 'Wonder Wheel' painting
Simon Bishop's painting in the background
The bedroom studio set up for Simon

As Good as It Gets on IMDB
A single mother and waitress, a misanthropic author, and a gay artist form an unlikely friendship after the artist is assaulted in a robbery.
Melvin Udall is a misanthropic best-selling romance novelist in New York City, whose obsessive–compulsive disorder has him avoiding stepping on sidewalk cracks while walking through the city, and eating breakfast at the same table in the same restaurant every day. He takes an interest in his waitress, Carol Connelly, the only server at the restaurant who can tolerate his uncouth behavior.
One day, Simon Bishop, a homosexual artist who is Melvin's apartment neighbor, is assaulted and nearly killed during a robbery. Melvin is intimidated by Simon's agent, Frank Sachs, into caring for Simon's dog, Verdell, while Simon is hospitalized.

Simon's paintings for the movie were created by the artist Billy Sullivan

17/08/2020

Maze (2000)

Rob Morrow plays artist Lyle Maze













Maze on IMDB

Maze is a 2000 romance film about a New York painter and sculptor—Lyle Maze (Rob Morrow)—with Tourette syndrome (TS) and obsessive–compulsive disorder (OCD),[1] who falls in love with Callie (Laura Linney), the pregnant girlfriend of Maze’s best friend Mike (Craig Sheffer) while Mike is away on a long stay in Africa as a doctor.
read more on Wikipedia

10/08/2020

The Shape of Things (2003)

Rachel Weisz plays artist Evelyn Ann Thompson












The Shape of Things on IMDB

When Adam, an English Literature major at Mercy College, a fictitious Midwestern college, meets Evelyn, an attractive graduate art student, at the local museum where he works, his life takes an unexpected turn. Never having had success with women, he is flattered when Evelyn shows an interest in him and, at Evelyn's suggestion, begins regular exercise regiment, eats healthier foods, and purchases contact lenses. These initial changes regarding Adam's physical appearance are well-received by Adam's friend Phillip and erstwhile love interest Jenny. Later however, Evelyn cajoles Adam into undergoing plastic surgery and succeeds in persuading him to cut himself off from Phillip and Jenny.
In the penultimate scene Adam learns that he has been part of Evelyn's MFA thesis project, a topic often touched on in conversation throughout the film but never fully explained. Evelyn relates that she had been instructed to "change the world" by her graduate adviser, but that she has chosen to change "someone's world", her academic work ultimately consisting of "sculpting" Adam into a more attractive human being. She presents Adam before an audience of students and faculty as her creation. Accordingly, none of the feelings she has shown him throughout the film are genuine; at no stage in their "relationship" does she fall in love with him; her videotaping of their lovemaking is just a part of the project's documentation. In fact, she announces before a live audience at her gallery opening that she is not going to marry him and the engagement ring he offers her is simply one of the exhibits of her art installation, albeit the "capper to my time at Clarkson."
Publicly humiliated and devastated, Adam confronts Evelyn, demanding an explanation for her actions. She responds by saying that he should in fact be grateful to her, claiming that, objectively speaking, she has been a positive influence on his life, making him a more attractive and interesting person in the eyes of society.
In the final moments of the film, Adam stands alone, surrounded by the remnants of his life before Evelyn. Moving to a camcorder, he watches a section of a tape recorded earlier in the film, a moment in which Evelyn had whispered in his ear what she described as the one "true" thing of their relationship. The film ends as Adam watches and continuously rewinds the tape, listening to Evelyn's truth over and over again.
read more on Wikipedia




03/08/2020

Stealing Beauty (1996)

Donal McCann plays sculptor Ian


One of  Ian's sculptures dotted around his garden
Donal McCann as Ian the sculptor


Stealing Beauty on IMDB

'Lucy Harmon, an American teenager is arriving in the lush Tuscan countryside to be sculpted by a family friend who lives in a beautiful villa there. Lucy visited there four years earlier and exchanged a kiss with an Italian boy with whom she hopes to become reacquainted. Lucy's mother has committed suicide since then, and she also hopes to discover the identity of her father, whom her mother hinted was a resident of the villa. Once she arrives, Lucy meets and befriends a variety of eccentric locals who were companions of her mother, and begins to form relationships and connections with each of them. Lucy has decided to lose her virginity and becomes an object of intense interest to the men of the household, but the suitor she finally selects is not the initial object of her affection.'
read more on Wikipedia

All of the sculptures in the film were made by the artist Matthew Spender