Whether you’re walking around the city or driving through the suburbs, odds are good that you’ve seen signage reminding you to wear a mask. But billboards and subway posters aren’t the only places you’ll find those instructions — a new exhibit at New York’s IFC Center, Mask Up, offers a trip through cinema history that doubles as a foray into all the ways you can wear a mask.
The exhibit was assembled in partnership with the poster shop Posteritati, whose Gallery Manager, Stan Oh, talked us through the collection. He cited Georges Franju’s 1960 film Eyes Without a Face as a standout. “The film and the poster are personal favorites.”
The films represented in the exhibit cover a wide array of genres, including horror, crime dramas and irreverent comedies. “Most of them were either medical dramas/comedies — Young Doctors in Love was a General Hospital spoof — or they were rather dark movies about people who hid their faces due to some misfortune that had befallen them,” Oh said.
They’re also a timely and unexpected reminder that even now, masking up is still important to halting the spread of the pandemic.
Whether you’re walking around the city or driving through the suburbs, odds are good that you’ve seen signage reminding you to wear a mask. But billboards and subway posters aren’t the only places you’ll find those instructions — a new exhibit at New York’s IFC Center, Mask Up, offers a trip through cinema history that doubles as a foray into all the ways you can wear a mask.
The exhibit was assembled in partnership with the poster shop Posteritati, whose Gallery Manager, Stan Oh, talked us through the collection. He cited Georges Franju’s 1960 film Eyes Without a Face as a standout. “The film and the poster are personal favorites.”
The films represented in the exhibit cover a wide array of genres, including horror, crime dramas and irreverent comedies. “Most of them were either medical dramas/comedies — Young Doctors in Love was a General Hospital spoof — or they were rather dark movies about people who hid their faces due to some misfortune that had befallen them,” Oh said.
They’re also a timely and unexpected reminder that even now, masking up is still important to halting the spread of the pandemic.
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