Watch: 4-Minute Video Essay Explores The Ambiguity Of Art In Luchino Visconti’s Films
An auteur of many mediums — film, theater, and opera — Luchino Visconti was born into an aristocratic family and boasted a rather infamous roster of friends (Coco Chanel, Giacomo Puccini, and Jean Renoir to name a few) before he developed his own spotlight in neorealist Italian cinema. And though his film repertoire is small, his style exudes knowledge and talent without question.
READ MORE: The Essentials: The 8 Best Luchino Visconti Films
In “Death in Venice,” his eleventh film based on the novella by Thomas Mann, Visconti explores not only the themes of underlying sexuality found in the original text, but the significance of ambiguity in art. His protagonists debate the importance of this, declaring that the artist cannot be ambiguous, but that art cannot help to be.
In his new video essay, Pasquale Iannone uses footage from Visconti’s “White Nights,” another novella adaptation (this time from the archetypal novelist Fyodor Dostoevsky), with dialogue from “Death...