Friday, 8 May 2009

some of the things I've been looking at



Bill Viola

Ocean Without a Shore, 2007

Using a mix of the oldest, black and white surveillance  filming and the newest HD cameras with a sheet of pouring water the person begins in black and white then breaks through the water barrier into full colour and detail.

The Reflecting Pool, 1977

Playing with the reflections in the pool and the tension/suspense of a person jumping and being frozen in mid air- suspended above the water. Then the activity continues only in the reflection and eventually a person does emerge again from the water.












Viewer
People watching, people watching, Who is watching, who is being watched..










Threshold to the Kingdom, 2000

Filming international arrivals at the airport, slowed down as people move through the doors an d then as doors in the background close the image fades into the next group of people entering, Links between Customs and the emotions or judgement people have there with the religious idea of Confession,



Filmed himself reading religious scripture backwards while treading on the bottom of escalators in the underground. The whole film is then played in reverse so that the words are fairly audible but distorted. Ends with him "floating" back up the escalators as if going to heaven. 
























Dance or Exercise on the Perimeter of a Square (Square Dance) 1967

Some other studio experiments



"Nauman's "Clown Torture" is a shattering spectacle of color, motion, and sound. Displayed at high volume, the audio level of the five simultaneously occurring videos is an assault on the senses. Heard long before it's viewed, one must bravely enter into an enclosed, darkened room in order to see where all the noise is coming from. Once inside, two pairs of stacked monitors and two wall projections come into view. Immediately one senses that something is awry, as only two of the four televisions are oriented right side up. With one monitor turned upside-down and the other placed on its side, the images become abstracted and disorienting. The videos playing on the monitors record clowns in unnerving or difficult situations. In one sequence, a clown screamsat an unseen antagonist. In another, a clown repeats the elliptical story "Pete and Repeat were sitting on a fence. Pete fell off; who was left? Repeat. Pete and Repeat were sitting on a fence." Recited with a variety of expressions (happy, scared, mad, etc.), the clown can't help but hide a growing frustration at not being able to finish the story or have it make sense. Two videos show clowns trying balance objects - goldfish bowls and buckets of water - with little success. The final video resembles a scene from a closed-circuit security camera, only it's a disconcerting image of a clown using a public toilet.

Nauman's "Clown Torture" makes its artifice obvious, from the caked makeup of the clowns' faces to the many power cords that run across the ceiling, walls, and floor. With activity occurring from nearly every angle, the viewer - like the clown - is the subject of experimentation and interrogation. While it's easy to tell that these clowns are only acting-out traumas, it is nevertheless difficult to watch and purposefully so. "Clown Torture" makes the viewer question his or her own participation in the events on screen. Alluding to difficult subjects such as insanity, political torture, and surveillance, the work makes complex connections between theater, media, and apathy The makeup, hair, and costume of each clown act as a disguise for the actor or person underneath. Anonymous victims and inciters of brutality and pranks, these scared and scary clowns seem simultaneously real and unreal."

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