Picture Cycle
- 272 pages
- 10 hours of reading
A multigenre investigation of the personal and cultural annals of memory, identity, and spectatorship, both on and off the screen.
Masha Tupitsyn is a writer, critic, and multimedia artist whose work delves into the depths of cinematic history and storytelling. Through her extensive media projects, such as essay films and film-based collections, she explores the nature of love, sound, and time within cinema. Her approach is a synthesis of literary analysis and visual art, crafting unique and immersive experiences for both viewers and readers. Tupitsyn's creations offer a thought-provoking examination of how film shapes our understanding of human emotion and collective memory.



A multigenre investigation of the personal and cultural annals of memory, identity, and spectatorship, both on and off the screen.
Exploring themes of love and identity in the digital age, this book serves as a multi-media blog that blends art, philosophy, and personal reflection. Inspired by Roland Barthes, it reinterprets traditional narratives through a modern lens, presenting a unique take on relationships and female subjectivity. As the second installment in a series of immaterial writing, it combines elements of a love manifesto and philosophical exploration, pushing the boundaries of literary forms and engaging with contemporary modes of expression.
Masha Tupitsyn's Beauty Talk & Monsters is a debut collection of stories told through the movies. Equally influenced by Brian De Palma and Kathy Acker, Tupitsyn revisits the ruins of a childhood and youth nurtured on the fringe of the glittering lower Manhattan art world and the Atlantic haven of Provincetown in the 1980s. Moving fluidly through space, time, and a range of cinematic frameworks, Tupitsyn cuts through the cynical glamour and illusion of Hollywood to a soft, secret heart.Her narrator, a female loner and traveler, is caught in the maelstrom of films and images, where life is experienced through the eye of a camera lens and seen through the light on the screen. In a precise and elegant style, Beauty Talk & Monsters embraces and confronts a lineage of familiar myths and on- and off-screen cinematic excess in order to challenge the silver screen's century of power over our dreams and ideals. Intimate and intellectual, Tupitsyn's stories play with the cinema's most popular icons and images.