Visiting Sleeping Beauties: Reawakening Fashion?

You must join the virtual exhibition queue when you arrive. If capacity has been reached for the day, the queue will close early.

Learn more

Perspectives Nature

Shorelines, 1977—A Short Film by Al Jarnow

Aug 21, 2020 3 MINUTES
Let Al Jarnow’s entrancing short film take you to the beach. Staging “natural souvenirs”—seashells, stones, sticks, strands of seaweed—in hypnotic, gently pulsing animations, this film is a paean to magical hours spent idly on the shore: imaginary kingdoms and elaborate games, abandoned when the tide rolls in. “Instead of showing the sea itself,” wrote William Costanzo in Film Library Quarterly, “the camera evokes the sounds, smells, shapes and textures of ocean life with a playful and imaginative assembly of sea-spawned memorabilia.”

To learn more about Al Jarnow—including his extraordinary “beachworks”—please visit: http://protozone.net/AJ/Jarnow.html

As part of The Met’s 150th anniversary in 2020, each month we will release three to four films from the Museum’s extensive moving-image archive, which comprises over 1,500 films, both made and collected by the Museum, from the 1920s onward. This includes rarely seen artist profiles and documentaries, as well as process films about art-making techniques and behind-the-scenes footage of the Museum.

New films every week: https://www.metmuseum.org/150/from-the-vaults

Subscribe for new content from The Met: https://www.youtube.com/user/metmuseum?sub_confirmation=1

#FromtheVaults #TheMet #FilmFridays #MetFilmArchive

© 2020 The Metropolitan Museum of Art

More from From the Vaults

An image of two young figures sitting on the branch of a birch tree. The top and bottom portions of the image are blurred, drawing attention to the in-focus face of the figure on the left.

“Birches” by Robert Frost: An Optical Poem, 2024 | From the Vaults

Fasanella, 1992

Berenice Abbott: A View of the 20th Century, 1992

From the Vaults

See all
GIF of eighties version of Met logo, animated architecture zooming out to reveal computerized Met Fifth Avenue building

Articles