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Date: 27 March 2014
Title: Seraphine
Director: Martin Provost
Date: 2008
Language: French (English Subtitles)
Duration: 125 minutes
Time: 7:00 pm
Location: Mouawad Museum (Beirut, Lebanon)
Link to IMDB: Click Here
Trailer from YouTube: Click Here
New York Times: Click Here
The Guardian: Click Here
Alt Film Guide: Click Here
Synopsis: (Adapted from Wikipedia: Click Here)
The film is based on the true story of Seraphine Louis, a French painter. (See images of actual paintings below). The film follows the life of a middle-aged housekeeper, Séraphine Louis, who has a remarkable talent for painting. Untaught and following what she regards as religious inspiration she finds great appreciation in the beauty found in nature, especially her daily walks to work where she proudly and humbly stops to gaze at trees. In the beginning, it is noted that she stops to collect soil from plants as well as some blood from a dead pig. Later, in her small home lit by candles she is seen using these same ingredients while creating her art. At one point when her art begins to be seen, she is asked how she achieves the unusual effect in her "rouge" (reds). She replies that she prefers to keep that a secret.
Uhde, a noted art critic, encounters her first as a housekeeper and then sees one of her paintings, which he regards as very promising. Séraphine feels she is just a housekeeper and no one will take her seriously, but Uhde firmly assures her she has a talent and that he will look after her and promote her work. He kindly tells her to follow her gift, but he is a German and has to flee France and leave Séraphine when the 1914 war begins. However, she continues to do her paintings. In 1927, Uhde encounters Séraphine again and considers her work to have greatly improved. He begins buying her pictures and encouraging her to do nothing but paint. But prosperity upsets the woman's balance, she buys an expensive bridal gown even though she has no suitor, and claims to have received an important message from the angels. As the Great Depression gets under way, Uhde can no longer sell her paintings and is forced to disappoint Séraphine, who has begun to regard herself as a woman of means. She is mentally affected by the setback.
After she rouses the town while wearing her bridal gown, she is put into a lunatic asylum and eventually stops painting. Uhde visits but is advised not to make contact since this would deeply upset her, even to be told that he has finally sold some of her artworks. He decides to care for her well-being and secures her a room in the institution which enables her to go outside, where she begins to enjoy the beauties of nature again. It is revealed that she died in 1942 and that her art became famous and respected.
Martin Provost: (From Wikipedia: Click Here)
Provost a French film director, writer and actor. He wrote and directed such films as Séraphine and Le ventre de Juliette. His upcoming film Violette has been selected to be screened in the Special Presentation section at the 2013 Toronto International Film Festival.
Seraphine's Paintings