Manifesto Das Sete Artes Ricciotto Canudo.pdf -

The manifesto called for the unification of seven distinct art forms: music, poetry, painting, sculpture, dance, theater, and cinema. Canudo argued that these art forms were not mutually exclusive, but rather interconnected and interdependent. He envisioned a new era where artists would no longer be confined to a single medium, but would instead be free to experiment and combine different forms to create something entirely new.

Cinema as the “seventh art” according to Ricciotto Canudo Manifesto Das Sete Artes Ricciotto Canudo.pdf

Canudo makes a crucial distinction regarding the audience's experience. He contrasts the "sensory" emotion of theater with the "intellectual" emotion of cinema. The manifesto called for the unification of seven

Published in 1912, this manifesto was a clarion call to artists, filmmakers, and intellectuals to join forces and challenge the status quo. Canudo's vision was nothing short of radical: he sought to break down the barriers between the traditional arts – music, dance, sculpture, painting, literature, theater, and cinema – and forge a new, unified artistic language. Cinema as the “seventh art” according to Ricciotto