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Walter Ruttmann (28 December 1887 – 15 July 1941) was a German and , an important German experimental film , along with Hans Richter, and . He is best known for directing the semi- 'city symphony' , with orchestral score by , in 1927, . His audio montage Wochenende (Weekend) (1930) is considered a major contribution in the development of and .


Biography
Ruttmann was born in Frankfurt am Main, the son of a wealthy mercantilist. He graduated from high school in 1905 and began architectural studies in Zürich in 1907. In 1909 Ruttmann began painting in , where he befriended and , and he would later paint in .

Ruttmann was conscripted into the army in 1913, first serving in Darmstadt, and shortly after the outbreak of World War I he was sent to the Eastern Front, where he served as an artillery lieutenant and a gas defense officer. After spending 1917 in a hospital for post traumatic stress disorder, he began making films. Ruttmann had the financial means to work independently of the major German studios of the time. He founded Ruttmann-Film GmbH in Munich and patented an animation table, in June 1920.

His first productions were the first fully animated German cartoons and abstract animated films. Lichtspiel: Opus I, produced between 1919 and 1921, premiered on 27 April 1921 at the , and released for German theatrical distribution in 1922, is the "oldest fully abstract motion picture known to survive, using only animated geometric forms, arranged and shown without reference to any representational imagery". Opus I and Opus II, were experiments with new forms of film expression, and the influence of these early abstract films can be seen in some of the early work of Oskar Fischinger. Ruttmann and his colleagues of the avant garde movement enriched the language of film as a medium with new formal techniques.

In 1926 he worked with Julius Pinschewer on Der Aufsteig, an experimental film advertising the in Düsseldorf.

In 1926, Ruttmann licensed a Wax Slicing machine from to create special effects for The Adventures of Prince Achmed, an animated fairy tale film, for , making the moving backgrounds and magic scenes.

(1970). 9780713422863, BT Batsford. .

Ruttmann was a prominent exponent of both avant-garde art and music. His early abstractions played at the 1929 Baden-Baden Festival to international acclaim despite their being almost eight years old. Together with , he worked on the film Melody of the World (1929), though he is best remembered for ( Berlin: Symphony of a Metropolis, 1927).

Weekend (Wochenende), commissioned in 1928 by Berlin Radio Hour, and presented on 13 June 1930, is a pioneering work of musique concrète, a montage of sound clips, recorded using film optical sound track from the process. Ruttmann recorded the streets sounds of Berlin with a camera, but without images, this was before . Hans Richter called it “a symphony of sound, speech-fragments, and silence woven into a poem.”

A pacifist, he traveled to Moscow in 1928 and 1929. During the Nazi period he was replaced by as director of the documentary which eventually became Triumph of the Will (1935), supposedly because Ruttmann's editing style was considered too "Marxist" and Soviet influenced. He died in 15 July 1941 due to an embolism after leg amputation.


Culture and Media
Segments from Ruttmann's experimental films Lichtspiel: Opus II (1923) and Lichtspiel: Opus IV (1925) are used in the credits of the German television series .


Select filmography
  • Lichtspiel: Opus I (1920)

  • Der Sieger (1922)
  • Das Wunder (1922)
  • Lichtspiel: Opus II (1922)

  • Lichtspiel: Opus III (1924, with Lore Leudesdorff)Heinz Steike in Film als Film 1910 bis Heute, Kölnischer Kunstverein, 1977

  • Lichtspiel: Opus IV (1925, with Lore Leudesdorff)

  • Das wiedergefundene Paradies (1925)
  • Der Aufstieg (1926)
  • Spiel der Wellen (1926)
  • Dort wo der Rhein... (1927)
  • (1927)
  • Melody of the World ( Melodie der Welt) (1929)
  • (1930) an
  • Feind im Blut (1931)
  • In der Nacht (1931)
  • Steel (1933)
  • Blut und Boden - Grundlagen zum neuen Reich
  • Altgermanische Bauernkultur (1934)
  • Metall des Himmels (1935)
  • Schiff in Not (1936)
  • (1937)
  • Henkel, ein deutsches Werk in seiner Arbeit (1938)
  • Waffenkammern Deutschlands (1940)
  • (1940)
  • Krebs (1941)


Further reading
  • Cowan, Michael. Walter Ruttmann and the Cinema of Multiplicity: Avant-garde-Advertising-Modernity. Amsterdam, NL: Amsterdam University Press, 2014.
  • Dombrug, Adrianus van. Walter Ruttmann in het beginsel. Purmerend, NL: J. Muusses, 1956.
  • Goergen, Jeanpaul. Walter Ruttmann: Eine Dokumentation. Berlin: Freunde der deutschen Kinemathek, 1989.
  • Rogers, Holly and Jeremy Barham The Music and Sound of Experimental Film. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2017.
  • Quaresima, Leonard, editor. Walter Ruttmann: Cinema, pittura, ars acustica. Calliano (Trento), Italy: Manfrini, 1994.


External links

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