Studio, Stage, Screen: Performance and the Camera - Lynne Marsh in conversation with Sylvie Fortin

2014

“Studio, Stage, Screen: Performance and the Camera”
Lynne Marsh in conversation with Sylvie Fortin, Thursday 3 October, 2013
Agnes Etherington Art Centre, Kingston, Ontario

Internationally-acclaimed artist Lynne Marsh was in residence at the Art Centre from 1 October to 15 November 2013. Developed around three major public conversations, the first features Marsh and Curator of Contemporary Art Sylvie Fortin discussing the topic of performance and the camera.

Lynne Marsh’s presence as Visiting Artist in Residence at Queen’s University was developed and produced by the Agnes Etherington Art Centre in partnership with the Cultural Studies Program. We thank the Principal’s Development Fund, administered through the Office of Research Services, for their generous support of this initiative. Other collaborators include the Fine Art Program (Visual Art), the Film and Media Department, the School of Music and the Department of Languages, Literatures & Cultures (German) at Queen’s University, and local, national and international partners: Modern Fuel Artist-Run Centre, Kingston; Corridor Culture, Kingston; “Programme ICI: Intervenants Culturels Internationaux” at the Université du Québec à Montréal; and the School of Creative Arts, University of Hertfordshire, UK.

aeac.ca”Studio, Stage, Screen: Performance and the Camera”
Lynne Marsh in conversation with Sylvie Fortin, Thursday 3 October, 2013
Agnes Etherington Art Centre, Kingston, Ontario …

Autogenerated Transcript from YouTube (if available)

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0:04

linds residents here at queen’s was developed and produced by the agnes Etherington but in really important

0:10

partnership through the cultural studies program here at queen’s we thank the

0:15

principles development fund administered through the office of research services for their generous and crucial support

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other collaborators include the fine art program in visual art film and media

0:27

department the school of music and the Department of languages literature’s and cultures all here at queens and then in

0:35

addition local and international partners modern fuel artist-run center

0:41

here in Kingston corridor culture also in Kingston program I see i intervene on

0:46

cultural international at the université de quebec Mr Al and the School of

0:52

Creative Arts the University of hair pitcher at the UK so all of these groups have come together around this event to

0:59

make it possible for us to bring Lynn here I also have to thank my colleagues here at the Agnes Etherington Art Center

1:05

especially Pat Sullivan and Chantel Russo for their work he supported this event and a special thanks and

1:12

acknowledgement is due to Sylvie Horton for spearheading this initiative she suggested we pursue this I said oh I

1:20

don’t know we’ve never been able to do that and there’s so many things she pursued during her tenure here she just

1:26

went out and did it so a Bravo Sylvie as many of you will know she’s departing

1:32

soon and this will be her last public event with us she’s departing to be go

1:39

full-tilt as executive director of the Montreal biennial I have to thank her for her outstanding work here at the

1:45

Agnes during her tenure and wish her every success on the ambitious project she is now undertaking

1:52

Lynn Marsh I have to introduce Lynn Marsh she’s an internationally acclaimed

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artist whose practice lies at the intersection of moving image performance

2:03

and installation she investigates specific sites as we’ll see tonight on

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and architectures through location-based filming and behind-the-scenes views she

2:16

explores how the cameras performance reconfigures social space she’s had many

2:21

solo exhibitions i’ll list a few here they’ve been held at the concealer house atheneum berlin steve turner

2:28

contemporary los angeles the musée d’art contemporain montreal danielle arnaud

2:33

contemporary our london program berlin her works also been included in group

2:38

exhibitions and screenings at the palais des bizarre Russell’s construing Wolfsburg Germany the 10th annual

2:46

istanbul biennial centro cultural monterosso spain many art quebec city

2:53

oakville galleries in canada and 53 art museum china and the National Gallery of

3:00

Canada she lives in works between montreal berlin and london please

3:05

welcome Lynn Marsh

3:20

I’ll use this Mike everyone can hear me yet but thank you jan for that introduction and i’d also like to thank

3:28

silly for putting forth this proposal and the ideas eddington Arts Center in

3:33

partnership with the Cultural Studies program for bringing me here as visiting our in some residents I’d like to I look

3:41

forward to presenting a body of work over the next six weeks in this series of public presentations where I hope to

3:48

extend the dialogue and discourse outward generate discussions discover

3:54

crossover interests to reflect and to develop new ways forward for my practice

4:00

for the first presentation I’ve grouped together three projects a new video installation that I’m in the process of

4:06

working on titled Anna and the tower this is a co Commission with the goethe-institut Toronto and the Toronto

4:13

International Film Festival a recent video installation from the Phil himani project Bruckner Symphony number five

4:19

movements one and four completed in 2011 and too short early animation pieces

4:25

cowgirl and future stories and venus icy blue made in 1998 this grouping will

4:33

connect older animation work through to new work with a focus on an evolution in

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my practice in relation to performance screen based video installation it can

4:43

briefly be mapped as performance to the camera for video from a more traditional

4:49

trajectory in my early animations performance captured and Riaan scribed

4:55

by the camera creating a dialogue between documentary and performance in the film imani work and a kind of

5:02

combination of the two in the new work and on the tower where the performance is derived from a staged enactment of

5:08

one’s labor or profession so we’ll start with two clips from

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cowgirl and future stories and Venus icy blue they’re about two and a half minutes each

6:19

sell sell sell sell sell sell sell sell sell sell sell sell sell sell sell sell

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sell sell sell sell sell sell sell sell

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sell sell sell sell sell sell sell sell

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sell sell sell sell sell sell sell sell sell sell sell sell sell sell sell sell

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sell sell sell sell

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perfect ssssss ssssss ssssss ssssss

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ssssss ssssss ssssss

8:12

okay and hey

8:49

hi

9:48

Oh

10:00

you

10:44

cabron venas developed out of a process of negotiating my subjectivity in the world and out of a process of taking

10:51

hold of image culture and it’s inevitable presence and making a space to inhabit it on my own terms these

10:57

works are influenced by a traditional trajectory of performance to camera for video screen presentation while

11:04

responding to the situation of performance to video where the site was often the studio domestic space or white

11:11

wall my question was how could i displace the studio where could it go at

11:17

the time in 1997 the Pathfinder mission to Mars was prevalent in the media and a lot of digitally enhanced imaging was

11:24

being shown I became very interested in researching these and other NASA renderings as a backdrop for a set of

11:31

borrowed and invented and invented gestures the backgrounds are taken from

11:36

collected 3d animation footage i sourced from NASA and the Jet Propulsion Laboratory that were made from satellite

11:43

mapping data gathered by the Voyager and other NASA data collecting missions the

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camera in these works this is an image from another animation work but similar

11:57

set up the camera in these works is always central and fixed the camera

12:03

delineates the stage or image box and performance space in the studio I worked

12:08

within these parameters imagine imagining the audience through the camera in the final video sequence

12:14

instead of the camera instead of the camera I’m moving through the space in

12:20

the way that we normally experience 3d fly throughs the space and figure give the impression of constantly rushing

12:26

towards you yet the figure is almost always fixed at a distance from the

12:32

viewer the works are presented as large-scale floor-to-ceiling projections I was

12:40

interested in creating a virtual illusionary space rather than a cinematic one where you’re constantly

12:45

confronted with the seemingly advancing figure and landscape I was interested in

12:54

the kind of slip over of the virtual into the viewer space in the gallery or the illusionary feeling of the viewer

13:00

passing over into the virtual realm the double act of filming a filming of a

13:05

performance in this case a symphonic concert was the process for the next work i’ll show the fill himani project

13:12

Bruckner Symphony number five movement one and four this work was shot on site

13:17

at the berliner philharmoniker concert hall interestingly what brought me to

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the Philharmonic site was the camera system mateas one of the camera

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operators who had worked with previously on projects told me about the in-house remotely controlled camera system and an

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amazingly complex way in which a small technical team filmed live concerts for

13:42

broadcast for audiences online or in theaters from a small studio housed

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above the cot the hall the project consists of three separate video

13:53

installations today i’ll show you brooke the bruckner concert and the video adheres to the real-time performance

13:59

length of movements one and four so that’s about 50 minutes I’ll show you

14:06

about five minutes here this is the ends of events in your hands

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lon is nonsense yeah it was awesome 15 Ian rights in VF c aishwarya here sly

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the vigilance book by epsilon 0 62 fear

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and slicing and striding into zoom out and that it will slice yes yeah you know

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here are treasures fearful until you fazool income infer afternoon place to

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look for life on focusing on the field these eggs what’s all look smaller only

14:57

fear name here his woman out until again not center

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fighting the Iron Man suit on

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after Zuma away i commenced yet stay acknowledge it second

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I f ines fear I’m Sofia I’m taking phys

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Ahmad

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turf its police Tim swore like 10 zoo Martin Atkins visiting us

15:56

our participants Oh

16:05

Tyson blow me down that yeah

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business person from session fixation I I have two antique my answer

16:20

undetectable veg to view 15 yeah I’m trained Lipton 15 same other for the

16:28

luminal car till I miss a lot whereas of you

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but yet soon

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given 5 selection of human up into your shell

16:46

nothing that I guess some would just is exile on it yes sir I’m a scuba yes

16:51

you’re in transition no up hi it’s in focus often mine soon hello

17:02

Matt I Heinz my ions which was about future young try stay here 15 when I

17:08

fulsome do i switch off not that it’s I’m swathy can we get you from

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trying to achieve from 20 Obama joined a

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nice what he advances Hines 15 I’m taking flight in from sin and the tick

17:35

sure Chuck firm in traffic towards for small talk after photons woman in the

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camera is a garage off instrument yeah

17:50

yes yes yes

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yeah octa sponsors walls h2

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dude I see

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more important in stage two

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prices from filtration flood safe I’m tikva zoo lil I’ve invited on the

18:27

diffuse x + 4 20 miles excellent / slime Isaac sports for every sports worth

18:34

trapped in a food cart in business little yeah I underlies the farthest

18:39

point ah 15 just by Charlotte 15 it was a lot I ain’t sleep since I fear my

18:50

vision from rising vixen I feel ya Lex

19:01

mafia fun yeah fam I’m taking fizzled in the evil eye fish this is an installation shot from the presentation

19:08

at the plasters of in Montreal in collaboration with the museum Tampa Bay what was really great about this

19:14

presentation was that the piece was situated between the musée and the concert halls and the plasters of the

19:22

work is presented with tiered seating here made from stage risers where you can sit up a little higher and look down

19:28

into the image kind of mimicking an auditorium of course the technical team

19:33

are presented as the performative event in a reversal rather than the orchestra

19:38

the video image is split into four continuous unedited shots replicating

19:44

the multi-camera televisual displays systems used by the technicians this is

19:52

what the room looks like i’ll briefly explain the general process for filming

19:58

these concerts there filmed by a six remote controlled cameras that are installed in the concert hall so they’re

20:03

fixed in the concert hall and in this team there’s there’s a number of

20:09

different teams that film for the fill himani and they all have their own particular style of filming and their

20:14

own style I guess of working so in this

20:19

particular team we had the climb camera operator who is at the very end he’s operating all six cameras from a small

20:26

console kind of with a joystick and he can control the movement pan

20:31

zoomed focus beside him his his assistant and the co-director of this

20:36

team the camera assistant is calling out sets of numbers these are camera in the

20:41

cameras and the camera positions so 217 camera to position 17 465 camera for

20:49

position 65 this is the assistant is also giving instructions pan to the

20:55

center position 10 seconds for example in the middle we have the vision mixer

21:01

operator kind of vulgar and who sees the

21:07

camera feeds he he selects the camera that then goes live and he pushes the

21:13

button to go live closest to the camera listen to the table we have the team

21:20

member that I call the conductor and you can see there that he has a camera feed directly on that conductor and he’s

21:28

counting time he’s keeping time for the team he’s calling out the bars of music and his score is marked with the cues

21:35

for the camera he signals the exact moment of the change of shot now I

21:40

realize you don’t get all of this information explicitly in the work and I don’t translate the german language when

21:46

i present it although even if you understood german it’s a little bit hard to follow because it’s a very specific

21:53

coded language what was important for me

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was to relay the concentration coordination and gestures that i saw as

22:05

an alternative translation of the score a mediated construction of experience through the spectacle and a performance

22:12

of considerable virtuosity

22:18

the filming of the technical team is on the one hand observational and documentary in its presentation of the

22:25

real life activity however the placement of the cameras the tightly focused framing and limited view creates an

22:32

abstraction of the scene this abstraction who pulls into focus the coordinated gestures the apparatus of

22:39

job performativity the simultaneously recorded music is also in part

22:44

documentary the orchestra is playing the sound is piped into the studio and is

22:49

recorded as part of this activity yes at all yet it also functions as a kind of soundtrack adding intensity to the drama

22:57

already being conveyed by the scenario the third work i’ll present is the

23:04

newest project and on the tower it’s actually not quite finished I’m in the editing process and working out the

23:11

design for the installation however I wanted to bring it into the conversation so I’ll show you a preview clip here of

23:18

the third section it the pieces about 20 minutes and this is about five minutes

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sony a55 treat our identified

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so they are 553 traffic cessna skyhawk orbiting down 100 25 left

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saudia 553 continue approach will shake to 80 degrees 15 knots

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so they are 553 go around runway blocked I say again go round

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saudia 553 Roger climb fortitude 4,000 feet and turn left heading 300 for new

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approach

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saudia 553 continue approach your number to win check to 80 degrees 14 knots

25:42

your wings nano nano 7 severe thunderstorm warnings have been issued for 20 miles northwest of the airport

25:49

moving very fast to the east and winds up gusting 30 knots

26:07

few rings nine and an 07 how does it look out to the east do you need any

26:12

assistance your wings 9 and 9 07

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your wings nano nano 7 approved early frequency

26:41

our floor 268 Yankee identified

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airflow 268 Yankee we have a thunderstorm just northwest of the airport moving through the area now the

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wind is 0 70 degrees 15 knots gusting up 190 knots

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our floor 268 Enki we have a second part of the storm moving through the area now

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the wind is now a 300 degrees 15 knots gusting 190 knots with heavy rain at the

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airport

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our floor 26 a janky you turn right heading 250 vectors for the other sundays awesome right

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our floor 268 Yankee TURN RIGHT heading 020 maintain 1500 feet until established

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on the localizer cleared ILS conveys all seven right and then the tower was shot

28:59

at Magdeburg rushed at airport in the air traffic control tower the airport is a former Soviet Air Base located about

29:06

two hours outside of Berlin it was recently rebuilt and opened it in 2010

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as magdeburg quartet international at the time of my filming there were no

29:16

scheduled flights the airport and tower await an economy to come at some point

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in the near future the work features ana a young air traffic controller fresh out

29:29

of her training who works in the tower she recites a script of air traffic control dialogue that represents a

29:35

choreography of directions not unlike stage directions I encountered Anna

29:43

while researching this project I was interested in air traffic control as another example of job job

29:48

performativity relying on a very high degree of specificity with its own

29:55

phraseology I was making parallels between the technical team in the

30:00

philharmonia project and the behind-the-scenes work of air traffic controllers orchestrating movement

30:06

between air and ground after many attempts to get into an operating control tower which was really really

30:12

not easy we finally got a break at Magdeburg cost yet here I met a very

30:18

enthusiastic anna excited about her new profession radiating so much potential

30:23

and energy yet with nothing to control I was struck by the sense of latency of

30:30

waiting and of speculation in relation to this scenario I approached the tower

30:38

site as a studio as a kind of rehearsal space and as a stage where anna

30:44

practices and enacts the performative language of air traffic control i see

30:50

this as a kind of conjuring a hallucinatory narrative of flights imagined or to come

30:56

I also returned to a frontal fixed camera position where Anna performs

31:02

directly to the camera referring back again to a more traditional practice of performance to camera just to briefly

31:09

summarize before Sylvia and I have our conversation each of these works considers the physical and conceptual

31:15

frame of the stage interchangeably with the studio the stage can be understood

31:20

as a model of spectatorship in relation to the communal and the studio as a frame for a process of creation in

31:28

action in the final installation that these works the image plane can be seen

31:33

as an interface between the viewer and the stage where the spectators role is

31:39

active in interpreting and positioning themselves in relation to what is being

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presented I guess I’ll launch in and my first question is the question of the

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avatar I think that’s really important one when I Seon ah IC er as a scream she

31:56

is kind of empty and void and this time

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around I was thinking of the you know the work that feed behind on PA ave encino said I’ve been doing with an

32:09

anime that they purchased and I guess in the late 90s and have shared with a

32:15

number a number of artists to give her various form so from something that was

32:21

the most inexpensive enemy character that you could buy they have over

32:28

the last 15 years worked with her and given her and freed her and given her

32:35

personality and and more recently she became an actual figure in various

32:40

performances so I think it’s kind of a really interesting connection to think

32:46

of the early work when you’re conquering marcin missin various planets to this

32:54

new work so I don’t know if that makes any sense to you yeah I think there is

33:00

something I did really think about Anna in terms of an avatar what’s amazing is her ability to be very very present and

33:06

very absent at the same time and it was I think in a way a natural gesture that

33:12

I picked up on and not necessary that I directed her through is something that I that I found in her and she I don’t know

33:20

if this comes from like selfies in a way like just sort of this a generation

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being so comfortable with with with an image culture with a very flat image

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culture but she she was able to almost

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like see herself performing outside of herself she was able to be this kind of

33:42

avatar for the job that in a way I think that is about these sorts of aspirations

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and it is about a kind of projection into the future and a way to sort of allow I don’t know if the Avatar also

33:56

allows us to project on to them so the empty shell gets filled with our expectations with our desires with our

34:03

longings anyway and I think that Anna somehow is able to embody this just in

34:09

her in her stare and her fix gains back at us or through us or beyond us I can’t

34:16

quite tell the time I guess my other

34:22

question is you know you close your presentation by talking about the

34:27

and how you know the kind of projects that you put forth allow for the

34:35

audience to or require that yawns reactive in some kind of way and and I

34:41

guess our dialogue has been very much your work has really influenced me in thinking about exhibition and exhibition

34:47

making and the kind of experiences at

34:52

exhibitions about and and disabled and the way that we position and move

34:58

audiences to make your own performances so if we are thinking of the three types

35:05

of experience that you’ve presented tonight one is an immersive kind of

35:10

screen of an animation type so it’s your

35:16

embedded in this thing it’s much bigger than you and it’s very very surreal then we move to the brook the proposition and

35:25

your questions away from this image and it’s an image of control so it’s an

35:32

image where we have four men controlling something that we can’t see and then you’re putting us in a way in the same

35:38

position at some distance controlling them in some way and then with Anna New

35:45

York still working on the details but made it you know if you could talk to us about the way that you understand and in

35:52

the way that you think about what the audience will do or might do

35:58

kind of political notion of that mm-hmm well first I’ll start with with what I’m thinking about for this project I’ve

36:05

just shown you one section but the piece will be in three sections so it’ll be

36:11

three screens but they will not be playing simultaneously there’ll be one

36:17

one screen to screen three screens and I’m not sure the image will also move it

36:24

may it may not make sense now because I haven’t but there were a couple of images where we were in daylight and so

36:30

those are also video stills so we have the day we have the Twilight or the

36:36

magic hour and then we have the night time and the there’s three sort of

36:41

separate performative atmospheres I’d say that happened in that time and and

36:48

it’s really important for me that the image then shifts also I think that some

36:54

of those sequences are more or are intended to be more cinematic and read

36:59

as cinema and so the screen that I built so that image should reflect a kind of more cinematic screen and and for

37:07

example this piece I feel is much more video somehow I mean it’s all shot on

37:13

video but is much more video and so it should be presented in a different kind

37:18

of screen and I and I would like the viewer to be to have to navigate or I don’t think they’re going to move from

37:24

room to room but but move through some kind of construction of these different screens and yeah I think I’m a lot of my

37:35

work revolves around this notion of the spectacle and and end stages and so I

37:43

tried to replicate a relay some sort of relationship between stage audience also

37:50

in the installations and and whether that’s being kind of you know completely

37:55

closed up I remember maybe for the for the early work being influenced by God

38:03

lost mean a video King American where you had the bill viola

38:10

where you had that birthday party and you were like this close to this massive image of this you know which just became

38:18

this digital pix elated image so so in the only work I did push I think in I

38:26

was doing back projection so I pushed the screen really close and also you couldn’t interfere with the projection

38:34

at any time that’s so that why the back projection was really important in that work and you’ll see if you come to some

38:43

of the other talk some of the other installation models that I’ve used for the film on new project where there is

38:50

there is a kind of play with auditorium in a number of different ways so that again you you have that another kind of

39:00

setup which i think is you know that that sort of seating does suggest

39:05

communal it does sort of suggest this idea that your your collective even if you’re one or two that that you can

39:12

imagine the other spectators in that space or you or you understand the absence of those other spectators in

39:18

that space and so making room for more people than maybe a video installation would normally have in a gallery save is

39:25

a con was a conscious decision and and well we’ll see what happens with that in

39:32

the tower yeah and I guess I’ll one more

39:37

and then we’ll open to everyone because I’m sure you’re dying with fabulous questions so the I guess what was

39:45

interesting again this time around looking at the work is thinking about the kind of temporalities

39:51

in play so I’m thinking of the animation what you know what you have there is

39:59

kind of a past future so it was kind of

40:04

the future of the 60s that you’re pushing back and I think the kind of you

40:10

know roles that you’re playing with of course barbarella and a kind of a certain you know certain moment a

40:18

certain kind of image and finally with the rover we got to see what that thing actually looked like we’re no longer

40:23

just fantasizing and so you know there’s that moment so it’s it’s kind it’s like

40:29

our parents or grandparents future that you’re kind of catching up with and when

40:35

i’m looking at anna it’s a very different kind of temporality because it’s a future that is a fabrication that

40:42

will never come it’s the future that was constructed with the fall of the berlin

40:48

wall in 1989 it’s the neoliberal future it’s an airport that’s been created

40:54

there for I mean that you’re saying there’s no flights coming in there

40:59

probably will never be it doesn’t make any sense so it’s one of these just like

41:05

she is they’re very present with really empty the space that we’re surveying has

41:10

no function and probably never will so it’s it’s a space of expectation of

41:17

latency but it’s it’s kind of a an

41:22

expectation that will remain in expectation and there’s no kind of destination for the expectation so I

41:29

don’t know if you could talk about the notion of time and maybe you’re kind of

41:34

strategy as you’re filming this you know it’s a closed space

41:40

yeah yeah I think um well going back to

41:50

to to the early animation work I think there was a moment of utopia when we started you know with the Pathfinder

41:56

mission we were able to sort of see this new possible destination for habitation

42:01

you know like and there was that talk and I think it’s starting to emerge again a bit of a talk around you know

42:08

putting up you know sending people to live on Mars and so I kind of thought

42:15

all I wanted you know I want to conquer this I want to I want to be the first partisans days you know so the

42:26

temporality is like you say it’s sort of future looking in backward looking at the same time in a way and and and and

42:33

they are based on this it’s a based on desires of the time i remember in 1997

42:38

1998 I thought I’m never going to wear jeans again I’m going to wear plastic pants forever like like the whole club

42:46

clothes you know that there was a sec Tia and of course new went back to Jean but you know so it yeah I guess a lot of

42:56

these at like science fiction a lot of these kinds of projections are based on

43:02

on desires that are actually a little bit pre predated and that’s happening

43:07

certainly in the in the early work in the in the film imani project there is

43:13

in a funny way there’s there’s a nice link the former director of the phil

43:21

hartmani the berlin philharmonic orchestra was completely obsessed with

43:31

creating a filmic archive of his legacy

43:36

in a way so rather than having a monument or something set up outside of the the actual

43:44

architectural site he was obsessed with filming all of Beethoven’s symphonies

43:51

and he would spend months and years doing this so he’d start off in the

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orchestra with the orchestra in the hall filming a concert and then he’d bring you no specific instruments and

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musicians into studios and light them in certain ways and and and yeah so one of

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the reasons why the Berlin Philharmonic concert hall has this kind of up very I

44:18

mean the Mets doing it too but but the concert of the Berlin concert hall was one of the first to have one of these

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kind of state-of-the-art systems where they could capture and broadcast

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immediately online so like massive compression is happening and and so that’s one of the reasons why so there

44:37

so again there was this aspiration and again it links back to the past because it’s a kind of memorial or trying to

44:44

create a legacy in and the digital concert hall so all of these concerts get stored online in at something called

44:51

the digital concert hall you can call them up again and so again this kind of future past things and and in this work

44:58

I mean I was I was thinking about sort of the way that you no matta speculation

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and models work you know you build the model rather than the than the building

45:12

models around what’s actually happening in the world you you create a model and

45:18

you you know build and they will come kind of thing and I think that’s what’s happening and and and really this is

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really known for having a lot of those kinds of models actually where where

45:33

there’s a lot of contested side so it is a lot of possibilities

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and and and it takes a long time for things to move but they’re never quite sure in which direction to move and so

45:49

this airfield is really in the middle of nowhere it’s it’s still magdeburg is the

45:55

closest town but it’s still good you know I don’t know yeah okay I can’t

46:03

remember how many kilometers I don’t know if it’s that sort of 90 kilometers it’s still quite a way from magdeburg

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and there’s no transportation links so it’s a little bit like I don’t know if some of you are familiar with ryanair

46:14

you have to sort of be bused in from some other city for an hour or two hours and you land in this kind of empty space

46:22

and then and then you come out her and so um there is this speculation and and

46:29

and Anna’s kind of part of that she has this she know she has so much enthusiasm

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for what she does and she’s just she’s like dying for this thing to happen and

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and and I don’t know you know maybe it

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will but it doesn’t feel like I look up

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to questions that this is a very has been wonderfully enjoyable so and I’m

47:01

looking forward to watching all 55 50 minutes of the of the the middle work

47:08

that you showed I have two questions and one of them is just a fault well it’s

47:15

not really questions to comment that when I was watching her I was thinking about these things of the boredom and

47:21

expectation and the projection into the future and what do you do with empty space or empty time and how do you fill

47:28

that time when you’re young and you’re able-bodied and you’re fit and you’re

47:35

you know and you’ve got no one there to dance with so it made me think about in

47:43

actually semiotic SAT the kitchen and market rossler’s pc and at a very

47:50

different kind of effect but nonetheless this similar kind of space of aboard Amendment and isolation and so

47:57

how anyway that’s a comment but I wonder if you could talk about what you how you

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understand the temporality of spectacle and so what is time how do you how do

48:14

you think about the relationship or what kind of temporalities spectacle is

48:20

because sometimes people talk about it as empty time or monumental time or whatever but there seems to be other

48:27

another kind of time then you have going on for spec yours the spectacle that

48:33

you’re engaging with in these yeah hard question I I can I don’t know if this is

48:41

going in that direction but what I have been trying to think about is this

48:47

notion of support in terms of the spectacle so not particularly monumental

48:54

time but the the pauses the the the

49:07

moments of participation that are in between the events I guess and I think

49:15

that’s the place that I’m most interested in and I think that’s enough in a way and when when if I have an

49:23

opportunity to show another section of this in the beginning you see quite a bit of that so the the I leave her

49:33

lingering a lot I leave her waiting for the next gesture or waiting for him and

49:39

that happens a lot in other works as well camera opera you’ll see where I i have a newscaster on a stage and I have

49:48

cameramen up filming around her and tell her that I will give her the cue to

49:54

speak but I never give her the cue and so I haven’t quite formulated my thesis

49:59

on it yet but I think it’s something around that notion of of the way in

50:06

which participation or support happens in the in-between moments and trying to

50:13

render that space visible somehow one of your early animation piece was also that

50:19

games when you win at one level there senator before you get to the next level

50:26

and so I remember that piece that was very much about trying to kind of occupy

50:31

that space in between the two parts of the game so we have time for one more

50:42

thank you again for your presentation I kind of a straight for a question about

50:48

the active spectatorship and a couple different strategies you’re using one

50:56

regarding the installation of it which so there’s the blood set of physical bodily activation and I wonder if you

51:03

could comment on how you see active spectatorship or some of these films and

51:13

videos as activating the spectatorship maybe without the physical

51:20

infrastructure and if that’s possible mm-hmm well I think I’m more and more

51:26

I’m I’m I’m framing in such a way that I don’t you don’t really know what’s going on and it takes a while and I think not

51:32

in that sense that’s a that’s a big part of that activity where there tends to be

51:38

I mean the bruckner there’s a lot of suspense there’s a lot of you know you you’re working hard to try to figure out

51:46

what and why you know and I and I don’t like to give the whole story the

51:54

conclusion is not important to me so that you figure out what’s going on it that you that you that you have all the

52:01

inside information isn’t isn’t important and I think that there has to be a kind of self-contained pneus to the work even

52:12

though it’s open-ended at the same time but you know it had it has to it has to have enough of the of the cues and the

52:19

clues for you to have an understanding of an emphasis or a focus and in that in

52:27

the tower the same thing is happening you don’t really know if she’s an actress or if she works there there are

52:33

some clues in the middle section where where I show her more in the leg up from

52:40

the outside of the glass and you kind of feel her comfortable and working in this space but you know again that sort of

52:49

those kinds of questions that the work asks of you to to engage if you if you

52:57

stay with them and you engage i think is another part of that I’m spectatorship which is different from interpretation

53:03

which is different from trying to create meaning or interpretation but just actually to sort of get your head around

53:09

the scenario in a way to move on to those places maybe

53:18

thank you

53:34

you

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