Pages that link to "Douglas Gordon"
The following pages link to Douglas Gordon:
View (previous 50 | next 50) (20 | 50 | 100 | 250 | 500)- Close-Up on Hitchcock (BBC2, 1997) (← links)
- Sight and Sound (1999) - Under the spin (← links)
- New England Review (2007) - Hitchcock and the Picture in the Frame (← links)
- American Cinematographer (1995) - Foreign Correspondent: The Best Spy Thriller of All (← links)
- Sight and Sound (2010) - Reviews: Film of the Month: Being Alfred Hitchcock: "Double Take" (← links)
- Artforum (2011) - Pop Before Pop: Welles, Sirk, Hitchcock (← links)
- Camera Obscura (2011) - Vertigo and the Vertiginous History of Film Theory (← links)
- The Independent (30/Apr/2010) - Hitchcock's forgotten silent films restored (← links)
- The Lancet (1999) - The influence on art of the master of suspense (← links)
- The Guardian (20/Jul/1999) - Hitch and run tactics (← links)
- Contemporary Literature (2012) - The Lady Vanishes: Don DeLillo's Point Omega (← links)
- Hitchcock Annual (2011) - Dial "M" for Museum: The Hitchcock of Contemporary Art (← links)
- Financial Times (24/Jul/1999) - Vertiginous dealings with the master of suspense (← links)
- The Independent (30/Mar/2012) - Dial H for Hitchcock, the star of the Cultural Olympiad (← links)
- "The Vestiges of Vertigo in Contemporary Art: Cindy Bernard, David Reed and Douglas Gordon" - by Christine Sprengler (← links)
- Film History (2013) - Severed Objects: Spellbound, Archives, Exhibitions, and Film's Material History (← links)
- Film Comment (2012) - Hitchcock Olympiad (← links)
- Film Comment (2006) - Perpetual motion (← links)
- Douglas Gordon (actor) (← links)
- 24 Hour Psycho (1993) (← links)
- Financial Times (24/Jul/1999) - Vertiginous dealings with the Master of Suspense (← links)
- Vertigo (Artangel 99003, 1999) (← links)
- Cinema Journal (2012) - Remembering Cinema "Elsewhere": From Retrospection to Introspection in the Gallery Film (← links)
- Critique: Studies in Contemporary Fiction (2015) - Media Violence, Catholic Mystery, and Counter-Fundamentalism: A Post-9/11 Rhetoric of Flexibility in Don DeLillo's "Point Omega" (← links)