Cornelia Parker Trailers
War Paint: Women at War TrailerDecoding Turner TrailerGaga for Dada: The Original Art Rebels Trailer
War Paint: Women at War TrailerDecoding Turner TrailerGaga for Dada: The Original Art Rebels Trailer
Total trailers found: 10
26 March 2025
Shining a light on the trailblazing role of women war artists, on the front lines round the world, championing the female perspective on conflict through art and asking: when it's life or death, what do women see that men don't?
01 January 2019
Left, Right and Centre shows the interior of the House of Commons during the 2017 election campaign. Newspapers are piled on the benches and blow around the chamber when they are caught in an unexpected breeze.
01 January 2015
War Machine shows the production of Remembrance Day poppies in a slow reveal, the mechanical process reminiscent of old film reels.
01 January 2017
In 2017, Cornelia Parker became the UK’s first female official Election Artist. She followed the campaigns with daily observations in over 1,500 images and films on her Instagram feed, which turned into Election Abstract.
14 July 2022
FLAG is filmed in a factory in Cardiff that makes Union Jacks. “We filmed them making one from beginning to end and then we run it backwards.
01 January 2016
The four-channel projection American Gothic, shot on iPhones in New York in October 2016, focuses on the street Halloween celebrations and a rally outside Trump Tower a few days before Donald Trump’s election.
01 January 2018
A spotlight tracks around a statue of Margaret Thatcher that stands in the Houses of Parliament in Westminster.
01 January 2012
Made in Bethlehem is a subtle response to the complexities of politics in the Middle East. On a visit to Palestine just before Easter in 2012, Parker filmed a Muslim man, Muhammad Hussein Ba-our and his son weaving crowns of thorns for Christian pilgrims.
21 September 2016
To celebrate the 100th anniversary of the birth of the surreal art movement, comedian Jim Moir (a.k.a.
01 September 2023
JMW Turner's paintings are world famous, but what if they're not what they seem? This revealing documentary film could change the way we interpret some of Turner's most familiar works as two plucky enthusiasts, joined by art historians and academics, reveal the startling hidden codes they believe are woven into his paintings.