The Orsay murder club : a criminartistic investigation

Fiche technique

Format : Broché
Nb de pages : 237 pages
Poids : 560 g
Dimensions : 15cm X 21cm
Date de parution :
ISBN : 978-2-84742-403-4
EAN : 9782847424034

The Orsay murder club

a criminartistic investigation

de

chez le Passage

Collection(s) : Beaux arts

Paru le | Broché 237 pages

Tout public

22.00 Disponible - Expédié sous 4 jours ouvrés
Ajouter au panier

Quatrième de couverture

The Orsay murder club

Welcome to the Orsay, a former train station turned into a sumptuous museum. It is from here that Christos Markogiannakis invites you to embark on a very special journey-a journey through history and mythology, crossing paths with mass murderers, stalkers, cursed families, cannibals and serial killers. Murder is present on every floor, in every corner, exposing itself through numerous masterpieces as a gruesome form of art ! Applying the principles of criminology and art history, The Orsay Murder Club investigates and interprets a choice of some 30 works of art through a « criminartistic » lens. Created by prestigious artists such as Moreau, Cézanne, Carpeaux and Rodin, they all have a thing in common : they represent murder.

Each work will be treated as a crime scene and will lead to a fascinating investigation inspired by the principles of legal and forensic experts. Into what category does the murder fall ? What are the factual and historical issues ? Who are the victims ? What portrait can be drawn of the perpetrator(s) ? What is their profile, their background, their motive ? Reaching our final destination - the truth - will depend on the often unexpected answers found for these questions.

Also by Christos Markogiannakis, The Louvre Murder Club (Le Passage, 2017).

Biographie

Christos Markogiannakis was born in 1980 in Heraklion. He studied law and criminology in Athens and Paris and worked for several years as a criminal lawyer. Author of crime novels and « Criminartistic » installations, mixing art and crime, he currently lives in Paris where he conducts research on the representation of murder in art.

Du même auteur : Christos Markogiannakis