Shop > Artists' Books

#01889

Feature Film

Artist
Douglas Gordon
Price
$62.00
Format
Artists' Books
ISBN
1-902201-05-1
Size
24 × 19 × 1.2 cm
Length
Description

Published in parallel to Gordon’s film ‘Feature Film’ that is based on the music from Alfred Hitchcock’s film Vertigo. The book reproduces selected movie stills from both Feature Film and Vertigo, along with a CD, which contains probably the most complete recording of Bernard Hermann’s score to date.

  1. Feature Film
 

Related Items

  1. Double-Cross: The Hollywood Films of Douglas Gordon
  2. Ian Hamilton Finlay, Douglas Gordon, and Ross Sinclair: Northern Grammar
  3. Piercing Brightness | Shezad Dawood
  4. Douglas Gordon
  5. Douglas Gordon: Glasses (set of 4 gin glasses)
  6. Philip Monk: Double-Cross: The Hollywood Films of Douglas Gordon
  7. Douglas Gordon: Through a Looking Glass
  8. Fortner Anderson, Fabrizio Gilardino, and Ellie de Lacy: 100 Loglines
  9. Christian Jankowski: This I Played Tomorrow
  10. Jimmy Limit: A lack of almost everything
  11. Dan Gilsdorf: Repo Man
  12. I was happy then
  13. Sven Augustijnen: Spectres
  14. Jacob Fabricius: Yours Truly
  15. Daniel Young and Christian Giroux: a-book-that-is-a-website-for-a-film-that-is-a-sculpture.cgdy.com
  16. Noor Abed: Stars at Midday –نجوم الضُهر
  17. G.B. Jones (Signed)
  18. Where is the Friend’s House?
  19. Gordon Foster: Ten Lessons Every Artist Should Learn (and other trite sayings).
  20. Michael Lee: Cinepolitans: Inhabitants of a Filmic City (exhibition catalogue)
  21. Jessa Fuller and Alex Fuller: Red, Green or Christmas
  22. Banu Cenetoglu: Scary Asian Men (re-updated and expanded)
  23. Rosa Barba: Printed Cinema #3, Accidental Suspension
  24. Roger Bywater, Richard Edson, and Louis Ford: Movie Life
  25. Hans Schabus : Hans Schabus: Transport
  26. G.B. Jones
  27. David Campany: Rich and Strange
  28. Luca Antonucci: Because You Watched Vol. 1
  29. Prospekt 80/2: Canada
  30. Tony Oursler: The Influence Machine
  31. Paul McCarthy: Rebel Dabble Babble
  32. Michael Riedel: Oskar