“Camerawork: Framing Labour”
Lynne Marsh in Conversation with Susan Lord, Thursday 24 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. This is the second in a series of three public discussions, and examines the representation of labour in Marsh’s work through a dialogue between the artist and Susan Lord, Head of the Department of Film and Media at Queen’s University.
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”Camerawork: Framing Labour”
Lynne Marsh in Conversation with Susan Lord, Thursday 24 October, 2013
Agnes Etherington Art Centre, Kingston, Ontario …
Music
Die Fledermaus: Overture
Song 1 of 2
Song 1 of 2
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Annen-Polka, Op. 117
Song 2 of 2
Song 2 of 2
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ARTIST
Slovak Radio Symphony Orchestra, Martin Sieghart
ALBUM
Strauss II: Tales from the Vienna Woods
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Naxos Digital Services US, Inc (on behalf of Naxos Special Projects); UNIAO BRASILEIRA DE EDITORAS DE MUSICA – UBEM, LatinAutor – Warner Chappell, Kobalt Music Publishing, UMPG Publishing, LatinAutorPerf, LatinAutor, and 5 music rights societies
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Music
Use CTRL+F to find key words if it is a longer transcript.
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limoges practice lives of the intersection of moving image performance and installation she was born in Canada
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and studied fine art at the undergraduate level at Concordia University of Montreal subsequently she
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studied at the graduate level I Goldsmiths University in London where she received her mfa presently Lynn
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teaches studio practice in the VA and fine art programs at the university of hertfordshire in the UK her work has
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been exhibited in solo exhibitions internationally at the consumer house bent on young and Berlin at steve turner
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contemporary in los angeles at the musée d’art contemporain new morale at daniel
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i’m a contemporary art in london and a program in berlin she has also shown
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widely and group exhibitions and also have wide screenings of her work and some of these have occurred at the
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palais des Vosges are in brussels rooster vine Wolfsburg in Germany the
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10th international incident involved I Emil the centro cultural monterosso in
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Spain menoth da sank in Quebec City otro galleries 53 art museum in China and the
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National Gallery of Canada at the present when dividing time equally between three cities Montreal
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where she exhibits frequently and is represented by gallery donald brown at london where she teaches and finally
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berlin wishy hazard studio tonight lynn is going to be in conversation with dr.
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Susan Lord the head of department and they associate and an associate professor of film media here at Queen’s
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University she’s also affiliated with the graduate program in cultural studies as well as the department’s of art and
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Gender Studies here at Queen’s University Susan lords research is located in the areas of cinema media
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arts cosmopolitanism new media gendered spaces and the city and cubed cinema and
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visual culture susan is undertaking curatorial projects specializing in media arts and work with artists groups
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and I was from Centers for over 20 years her current projects are concerned with citizenship practices in the media arts
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and civic spaces of post-colonial worlds she’s receiving numerous research awards
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from the social sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada the Canada Council the Ontario Arts Council and
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queens university we will begin this evening with a presentation by Lynn Mars which will include screening of her work
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camera opera and the philharmonia project this will be followed by a conversation between lane and Susan
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after this we’re going to open up discussion to the audience and for the discussion period i invite you to make
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use of the two microphones looking each aisle because we’re recording this event so without further ado please join
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me and giving a warm welcome to Lake Marsh the second visitation titled
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camera work in labor fifty other two engineered sensations can I offer a film
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in a television studio and a safe installation from the home any project Nelson Symphony number five filmed from
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production studio of content this grouping brings together art words that
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are working with for interfering with the means of production camera prefers
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in this talk to the performance of the camera which of these words takes on an
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active role and at times can see as a kind of autonomous agent while framing
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labor refers to the way in which the installations recontextualize the work
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or performance of people who work in production of television images when the
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production actions through artistic intervention and the reframing of the
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behind-the-scenes new events for situations emerged in the installations
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in these works music also has an important framing function organizing
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arrangement of the performance illness bodies gestures and cameras as well as
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through effect where the expressive quality music invests the scenario or situation with heightened drama or
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intensity the first work well show is click the televisions jr. was shot is
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kind of opera Wow natan 2008 camera offer was filmed on the set of dust
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while a German current affairs television program is broadcast live in studio it’s a programmer someone from
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the left-right come in and debate an issue in media the news presenter this
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is an image of observation from the Himalayan trail the words install to
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resemble the opera’s of television studio using lighting mantras on you
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Nicole screams on wheels speakers on stands and a kind of studio floor
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matting surface the piece is to
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synchronized video channels and it’s out 12 in Islam and here I’ll show you six
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you
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you
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you
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you
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okay so Conrad opera developed out of an invitation to create a one-minute video
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artwork for television it was a competition between 10 connect and then
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the zenith of event which would be broadcast during a summer in space of
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commercials 2008 so along with the one minute touches thought I developed this
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larger installation and the basic concept i guess was created a new artwork that restaged the filming of a
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news program where the new script for content was replaced with the mechanisms
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of filming creating a kind of deceit disorientating / dramatics and images
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hence the title camera opera well which also speaks to me is construction of
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experience students back tacular so is in a way I was trying to think about presenting televisions based on
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television to begin with a minute develops into the installation I want a
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reversible of the cameras in conventional news broadcasting they became a subject and the performance of
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filming became the action the work denies the cameras traditional role of related information and instead exposes
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their participation in status as subjects I begin my research by
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observing the process of filming for live broadcast I was able to watch on the studio audience and from
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to control room where the composition of outgoing the programming takes place and
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I really love watching the camera operator to move gliding across the floor authorities wheeled tripod and
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began to see it as a kind of wall sword dance and from the production control
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room really fascinated me where the views of the continuous camera feed essentially outtakes the shots for the
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camera sort of searching for its frame or being dragged across the studio floor and these sorts of incidental shots have
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another kind of intention for me anyway describing how space is arranged or
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inscribe through and by the camera views so I developed a pitch for the producer
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of dust well David yonkers to use the studio and two make four so I got
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permission and collaboration of the entire crew and presenter to work with
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them first sort of a fixed time after the production of their program I
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approached a day as a kind of performative intervention there was no
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chance to rehearse or pre-planned crew had to work with what kind of came out
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of that feeling on that day so my strategy was to design a certified
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choreographies operators and you can see the drawings
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are just where where they live sort of yeah the back of the room and only comic
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really would move towards presenter to
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circling the inside to outside three on the inside one on the outside or on that
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inside and then them spinning around in circles themselves so I directed them
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through these movements from the control room so I didn’t control through that I’ve got the headset on as well and to
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talking it through these kind of choreographies we shot for two periods
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of 25 minutes each kind of trying to replicate the length programming that we
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would normally film and from that Ontario I convinced about a 12-minute
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installation in order to coordinate and
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facilitate timing the camera operators movements I play Strauss losses in TV
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studio while we filmed the choice of stress losses was really more as a tool
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not start at all but I knew it would be familiar and readable and recognizable
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to the camera operators and any editing process I’ve used the music to sync all
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five cat foods so once I began editing i realized that music is wouldn’t work it kind of not only
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described as a flow of Cass’s camera operators but it also added this sort of
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excess and punctuation and elastic sense over dramatic ization of the images that
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I was looking for while at the same time nothing’s really happening on stage of
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the presenter the cue that i gave the presenter was that it was the moment for
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broadcast and she had her cards and i just never gave her that q2 to begin um
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in the installation the music is edited
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so that on one hand of God the the right the right monitor imagine the right side
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speakers of the left home to anatomy lesson sneakers and so those moments where music is in stereo or are the
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moments where there’s two filmed two filmed moments in time when when the
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music starts to slip I’ve sink or when you have to image that to set music
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having it in a different time those music those film images are having a separate time so you get this kind of
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spatial sense three two music in the installation itself I can enter the next
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work I’ll show shot on sight of a Berliner funny football it’s the second in a series of
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three installations forming in phila money project and some of you that appear last week would have seen the
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bruckner keys again the relationship between cameras music and production in
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the television experience was what brought them to the site mateas one of the camera operators from comic opera
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told me about the in-house remotely controlled camera system and invited me to come and watch them film concert or
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broadcast from a small city of houston hall here’s installation shot of Nielsen
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Symphony number 5 which was exhibited at programmable in the installation consists of two synchronized in
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projections one video is production team so and face this is a video production
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team filmed on the night of them broad camera the night that they are filling
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constant broadcast and the other video is it is a dry run into rehearsal of the
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camera shots that are going to perform or the concert just film just before the
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concert now become a bit more clear and then in the initiative work the videos
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are separated by this divine wrath at a sex approve on a diagonal basis they work with architects to party to design
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and construct at the architecture installation so you kind of coming into the space underneath way underneath the
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sort of stage of you that rap and there’s a little a little way that you
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can kind of put inside the structure creates two spaces that are called the
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auditorium seating Saint John writes the split is averted
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by placing the control room above and the stage view underneath so i’ll show
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you the two video sequences first the
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team up the entire captain fear 6-foot
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via ride home ines no 150 tons a front
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for fixing that the thumbprint on dreams are two dicks at lunch after high no
20:04
such a conference title sponsors it has a Toronto Islands want the itouch times
20:12
in Sonic I got ya from fear captain Phil
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give us a femto on print I satellites up
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169 fo guides no sex advices are condemned us afterwards
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decision yeah pitch it off as if you Lara after Isis left after my exercise
20:44
I’d covidien awnings Austin all right after thrill as long as I’m on bond because all Lexus brief a mis
20:51
amigas Inafune willfully having warning signs with greater fear by four
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completions on film photography American film scene 1 12 at a conference more
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formal transition often Zeidan vixen
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time that the other night scene Amano assets y tu mamá de la Paix ‘ entrance
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fee efficient ep one comes up the a
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thumbprint side vector six fathoms
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zipper death on guy right on afterwards and relax 930 up in truth
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on 50th on dry conditions on me go on I love that on fear and spa 2012 tonight
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exit trance
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on fear of death on Jack’s on Finn podium finish movie on all six books
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arrived here that’s here tip of the adult role I proved a thumb drive on
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non-food aligns exactly upon fear isine I am that you haven’t all small Nike up
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and seen directly applies if you got
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times I stood up and reality institutions to music album watch from that the cuttlefish
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one click that applies in the voltage
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modulating fear not it’s a fruit
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or zip scuttled wall lift it up and talk
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on I’ll extractor fans Minds our puzzle comedy channel should off the ends or
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not folded ah Sophia fume is nothing’s
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right they are conferred on physics I
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from drying out in shock on film that’s a control
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on Cygnet 80 miles on limits Adam cut
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the film and a fear nice Titus I flipped Ethel 30 not it’s
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after one I see I from fear he is exposes I nasty up in front english
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throne after effing tour service on
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going after at once
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won’t feel nasty a convicts
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on feminine attire
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okay and so at the same time
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synchronized to what they would be doing so the camera motions and direction that
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they’re doing is played out here to the
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music
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you
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you
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Oh
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so the concerts are filled by these six remote control cameras that are distilled in the hall and the Lea forces
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of team is given the scores in advance all the team members are trained in
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music and to greater extent the camera
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operators sometimes less but they all have a musical training and background and so from the score and an intimate
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knowledge of the layout of the orchestra and places of the cameras in the hall they develop the choreography of camera
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shots mrs. the studio that they work in so they’re just looking through the camera feeds at the concert hall and
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during the rehearsals and first performances in terms of performance deserve to retreat nights they refine
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and practice this choreography and on the final night of the performance broadcast live for non lying or cinema
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theater audience each team member has a specific role we hear them calling out a
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series number is corresponding to the bars music and the camera angles that are filming positions as they play and I
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realize that you don’t get all the details of this information explicitly and I don’t translate a German language
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although even if you understood German it’s hard to tell anyway because it’s a
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kind of specific coding language but I think that they’re counting that there is a sort of
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almost like an assembly line kind of a production going on what was important
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for me to relay was the concentration the coordination and the gestures that I saw as an alternative translation of the
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score a mediated construction of the experience of the concert and an
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alternative performance of considerable virtuosity the dry rental video so
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showing the camera choreography highlights to me again the idea of the cameras subject and quite interested in
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how to counter perform that’s where I would be without the intended subject so the musicians aren’t there and in this
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absence is substitution for the intended subject or shot itself and this brings
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them suspect the camera as a kind of former again the frame is often
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incidental we sort of we see a narrative going on in the background this is the
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miss is this sort of hour or so before the concert in the beginning is of the
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piece that’s very quiet in this technicians come on stage and start
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arranging the instruments and putting out the books but all this is kind of
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going on in the background and not really for the cameras in the relationship between
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what was happening is it has a kind of disjunction way the music again unifies
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these elements broadcasting Nielsen symphony as performed by the cameras and
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by the orchestra punctuated by the voices of the film technicians so in the installation you’d have the voices of
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the technicians can improve one side of the space and the music connected to the stage from from the other side of space
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with some of the music behind the voices of the technician because when they’re working in the room they also have the
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music is being fed into that room so in
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the installations in both installations camera opera and Nielsen needs a new number 5 i’m trying to create a space at
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points to i guess i’m calling it an expression in structure the
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installations invite the viewer of the exhibition to bear witness to the parceling out of their experience
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so I was at the first presentation of that I went to hear you speak in the
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cultural studies seminar the other day as well and and I came visit you in the
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studio and every time I feel like I how did something like like thesis like or
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something to say about your work that I see and I come to another event within
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it unravels I and I just let myself go but there are a couple of things that
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have kind of come to the surface so I’m going to start by just asking you if you
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could elaborate a bit on the the way in
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which you’re thinking about and using the idea of Labor so we had a brief chat
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about this in your studio but I I just set that question up a little bit by saying that you you talk about in your
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talk talk about the production of production and that that’s what you’re
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filming us what you’re showing displaying so there’s this kind of the display of labor of the production and
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you’re also obviously involved in showing the creative creative time in
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the sense of the politics of time in ennis maybe a soft p way at this point
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but of creative labor the the way in
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which there’s a kind of labor drama of Labor and that you really get in both the
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works where it’s the intensity of the people who are doing the filming and the
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recording and you you have their skin and hair and the sweat of the and the
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and their their their pleasures or so so
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I just there these days people are for you know every few years people reinvent
35:51
ways of talking about the relationship between art making and labor and
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recently ish some people have been talking about the shift of work to occupation or immaterial labor as a
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result of information economies and things like that so these are just some kinds of like bits of terrain that of
36:17
discourse that’s out there and I just wondered if you could talk a little bit more about how you’re thinking about
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labor in the way that when you talk about the your engagement with with
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production okay I guess you know I
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haven’t really thought I haven’t leave out through this thesis
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so much but I am fascinated with and I almost want to use that word virtuosity
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like that there’s a kind of specificity in a lot of this production around the
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spectacle or around these these kinds of productions of events and I think on the
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one hand kind of just fascinated by it and and also interested in interfering
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with it or or or playing with it somehow and at the same time I’m also going to
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say I guess I’m also thinking about the labor of the camera it as an apparatus or is it you know like what it what it
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does and the work that it does and in an innocent how it’s how it’s shaping this
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experiential and in the installations
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themselves I think what I’m trying to do is maybe pick pick these apart a little
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bit and try to create another kind of configuration of them I mean it’s still I don’t want to just be a you know
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document what’s going on behind the scenes necessarily although kind of its almost sometimes enough fascinated by it
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but I want to have somehow have this interruption or interference that i was talking about so um so yeah and I’m
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thinking about those moments of I mean
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in these words they’re pretty active but
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maybe with camera where the presenter isn’t you know so that the moments that are about pause about support about
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anticipation about not just when there’s kind of activity happening or also the
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woman’s that I’m quite interested in
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that’s wanted to hear you talk more about that and I now that you mentioned
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the camera offer one of the things that is so dramatic about it is this
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incredibly intense visual field like it’s so packed with surfaces and with
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the apparatus and it’s there’s so much to see and then there’s this incredible
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music that’s playing that there’s so much to hear and then there’s this
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figure there who’s just standing there in the midst of all of this intensity
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right of a fact end of visuality and all
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of that so it it made me okay I’m
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they’ll prob sorry but it made me think of a sick
39:45
freak Krakouer and his 1920s stuff that he was writing about the picture Palace
39:54
and the cult of despair in the cult of distraction and these ideas of a pure
40:01
externality and that the glitter of the of the spectacle of the space in which
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something is seen and the something that scene sort of matters almost not given
40:14
as this other about this other this other thing that is where all of this
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sort of parceling of a fact is taking place and so I just I wonder if you
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could sort of talk a little bit to that the fact that we’re in Berlin with these
40:35
works and that you’ve got this this show of the left and the right and this woman
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who’s gone they look you give it to her finally to moderate something about the
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left on the right in this like crack our moment of the new picture Palace every
40:57
space so i just want i don’t know yeah it’s not again a question it’s just yeah so that’s due out I mean the duel and
41:05
is the title for the show and I think that the the setup is already there also
41:14
an in terms of spectacle you know bringing somebody in from the right and on the left and they’re going to obviously disagree and it turn into this
41:21
kind of heated debate and and so it’s a kind of an orchestration already and I
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think that that orchestration was something that I was thinking about
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extending I with all this sort of you know camera / / doing the camera away
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and and I think that there’s you know working in Berlin and an in German
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culture and I met Anna outside of working in Berlin and encountering German culture as an outsider there is a
41:57
lot of control there is a lot of rules there is a sort of a set way to anything
42:03
and I’m really interested in kind of trying to go in and mess that up a little bit you know and at the same time
42:10
what’s kind of raised that there is an openness to me going in there and messing things up so on the one hand i’m
42:18
not really sure how like these guys all
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agreed to participate in this event and then when I went back to show the the
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word to them I brought like big case of
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beer and you know nobody kind of like I
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think it was really interesting that they were sort of interest I mean nobody cared I don’t know when you only the
42:52
presenter and the producer were really excited about it and the guys who work
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there were but they were open to doing it although when they were doing and I think they thought it was complete you know nonsense and could you so this is
43:06
kind of strange openness but but the rules are really important and the protocol is really important and you
43:13
know i think that the presenter in chem robber really holds that sense of control in the work while all this stuff
43:23
is kind of going on around you and and she’s she’s she’s so fixed and she’s
43:29
so good at being fixed it’s pretty incredible I have another point that I
43:39
ask you about a man we could maybe toss it open to the audience but I the film
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Romani piece that you showed us last time was for four sectors of screen
43:56
right divided and this time we’re seeing the same operators can’t the same camera
44:05
operators inside the studio but in a linear kind of format yeah and now
44:11
they’re edited so we have and there’s something very there’s something
44:16
incredible about the way headaches produce a certain kind of time at a certain anticipation and there’s a lot
44:23
of suspense and there we get to watch
44:30
them as a crew and yet we get these individuals and so there is this very kind of dramatic staging and you use
44:37
editing in a very way so I just wondered you could talk about your practice in that sense as
44:43
someone who assembles images of this in
44:48
the way in which you work as a didn’t in the creation of time in that sense an
44:55
attitude drama yeah I mean I I guess I
45:00
look for a logic in in in the material I don’t start with a fixed notion of how
45:07
something is going to come together you know I camera off broad for someone and
45:14
I wasn’t sure if it would be one screen or five screens or I just I was musing
45:19
what was in the Senate and it was interesting because I filmed in three different times of the fella money they
45:27
were three different teams so that burger team is a different team from this team and each team has a very
45:35
different way of working and I think the fill the money purposely haven’t uses
45:41
different groups of people because they also have a different way of filming and so for different music like that the
45:48
bruckner he is more bombastic and has these kind of more rough cows and these
45:53
guys are much more technical and in the way that the word and and what happened was and I did a number of different
46:01
things like filmed all the teams that I you know I filmed the stage I did a
46:06
couple of other exercises as well and it sort of happened that each installation
46:12
had its own logic that really could have came from a material and so I yeah I
46:21
think I can’t put my finger on exactly but it’s sort of it for me the the word
46:29
really emerges in the in the editing process so I have certain ideas about of
46:36
course how I want to frame things and and I generate a lot of material but the
46:44
editing and the installation always comes from that materials of it i play with it and try to see about you know
46:51
how does that until then speak to me so the so for example in the in the
46:56
bruckner piece which some of his songs on we didn’t say that televisual screen
47:01
the screen of the that they’re looking at we’re seeing multiple feeds really came through as a sort of logic and that
47:10
was because of the way that certain characters were were animated and
47:16
adjusters that were happening across the screens and that started as again just a
47:21
kind of I wanted to see all the phase at the same time I broke them into force
47:27
crackers and I watched the whole thing and I went oh my god this works like the
47:32
budget you know whereas with when I did that but the meals in case it didn’t it didn’t work and it didn’t translate and
47:39
what happens in the Nielsen piece which i think is quite strong is the sense of
47:46
the so that the activity is less fish in Brooklyn activities very visual in
47:53
nielsen um the the sound of the other technicians voices that are happening
48:00
behind you know so you have the guy with the glasses is the camera operator and you just hear all the stuff that’s
48:06
coming at them and it feels almost like it I don’t know like a stock trading floor or something you know this by cell
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you know she’s this is the tent and this is all coming at him so that that was
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something that I really wanted to come out in the edit in in that single screen
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version and and the and the choreography
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for that nielsen keep so so also the music is very you know the music is a is
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a modernist piece of music from 1920 so the architecture of the hall itself
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seemed to me to fit with that music and because the music has this it’s a kind
48:54
of march and it it has these moments where the harmonies kind of collide and
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it gets sort of angular in a way and so
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the type of seeds and the way that the
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architecture of the stage is laid out just seemed really appropriate whereas an Bruckner it didn’t it didn’t work I
49:19
tried filming musicians warming up for pronouncing work so you know I test things out thank
49:30
you further questions from the floor down
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I’ll go to the mic it’s really simple
49:45
question then just with this on the screen I’m thinking about staging in the
49:50
exhibition stage of the Nielsen piece and I just wanted to ask you about you
49:56
to tell us a little bit more about the staging and how you were thinking about that so if I understand it when these
50:03
people they can’t see the other piece and know their knees yeah yeah so I didn’t I didn’t want you to be a there’s
50:09
that there’s a tiny in the first slide I show there’s a sort of tiny spot in the
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installation where you can kind of almost see you can see that there’s two projections that you can’t watch the
50:19
move very well so I wanted them to separate it I didn’t want you to have that you know very I look at the guys
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push button and seeing with the button what happens to button necessarily um the way the architecture in this piece
50:35
works is that you it divides so the idea was ok let’s think of how to how to
50:41
divide the room so that two projections could happen in the same room but also
50:47
trying to think about seating and a site so we decided to divide the room on a
50:54
diagonal basis so the ramp starts at the back wall and then goes all the way
50:59
across the gallery and ends up front and you the door you come in under that
51:05
architecture and there’s a sort of hallway that runs side so the stage view is set underneath
51:15
where all the scaffold that’s holding up the ramp so you have that sense of the kind of backstage or an apparatus and
51:22
then you can walk to the other side and it’s just there’s wood a wood surface with carpet then you just can climb up
51:29
there and sit if you like you’re sitting on a hill actually more than an auditorium but and and you can watch the
51:35
team so again you know kind of simply trying to four foreground the team as
51:42
the side main event in a way so you see the stage pace first as you enter so you
51:50
go by that it doesn’t invite i’m spending time and sitting down with it well there isn’t there is our site there
51:57
is a place where you can sit but what tendons happened where people went to
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the voice people came in and they went straight up first they went yet they
52:08
went to the voice first if that was kind of interesting but you you would you had
52:14
to make a choice because you could sort of make out that there was sound and a
52:21
production here and then be the other screen instead of
52:27
that way so you could you could go either way I’m not I don’t have an order
52:33
put yeah but you’re gonna but you’re
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also kind of reversing where you’re kind of invited to look it’s bent alliances yeah come to the that performance that
52:45
what’s usually it yeah
52:53
there are two my courage is the mic yes we need people to use them it’s being recorded somewhere it seems like
53:05
it’s reasonable to see the work in the tradition of institutional critique
53:10
right and there’s always been this issue institutional petit where the
53:17
institution invites you to critique them and there’s you know this has been going on for decades this kind of issue and I
53:25
wonder where institutional tea in general is at now and when saw your first piece that seemed that
53:31
you know the behind-the-scenes investigations why have I mean it seemed
53:39
like this really sophisticated version of something that we might have seen a david letterman show 20 years ago their
53:47
service you know there’s something else going on here and it seems like it’s really not so much about ideology
53:54
routine now as it is about I don’t know some kind of a playful investigation of
53:59
the apparatus and maybe some kind of anesthetic supplements to the spectacle and I don’t know that’s just an
54:06
observation I just I guess my question is whether you think that observation is fair I do think they also praised for
54:13
span and I you know I’m not we thinking I mean I think it’s a line of
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institutional critique I guess but I’m not thinking along those lines
54:24
necessarily but maybe I’m thinking more along the lines of some of the early video artists who kind of went and tried
54:32
to work with television broadcasting and try to get into those spaces that you
54:37
know when when video first came out that we’re very exciting and maybe that’s also my investigation is to sort of
54:44
somehow as an artist infiltrate these you know studios are these production
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sites and and and you know rearrange so
54:59
so i guess i think that the work probably lies more in a sort of thinking
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about mediation rather than the institution and how how these images are
55:14
however how it’s a constant mediation we need
55:39
okay Ferland I’m gonna ask you why he’s really stuck when you talked about the ambivalence of the camera operators in
55:45
camera opera and how they felt about your production of that word guys what if he could speak a bit about the
55:51
philharmonia project how the camera operators in that piece perceived your
55:56
your project um yeah it was it was interesting that the guy who’s sort of
56:05
the conductor of the team news who’s signaling the chain too cute for the
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camera is that he was super nervous and because we had I had a camera on his
56:21
butt beside his monitor and then there were two of us with cameras on the side kind of and it’s a tiny space and he
56:28
he’s before and i’ve been i’ve been in the room observed I’ve kind of been
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working with them and other teams are observing them another teams and photographing film a little bit myself
56:40
for a while but when we actually did a shoot they were like before cameras in there and he said oh my god I’m too
56:48
nervous you can’t do this you can’t film and I said you’re the minute that music starts you will not know I’m here like
56:54
really they are so concentrated when they’re working but they just didn’t
57:00
didn’t get a honestly they didn’t even know like they weren’t even there and it’s
57:07
almost that they almost like are holding their breath for 45 minutes that’s what it feels I mean they’re not that it’s
57:12
that and so that was that was really interesting and then when when it was
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over to be kind of you know and eventually he became aware of his surroundings in his spacing any kind of
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a government right no food and they they
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were they were more interested in in
57:38
seeing the material afterwards and coming to the exhibition and I think
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that’s also because I don’t know they I
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think they are maybe more aware or more
57:57
interested in that speciality of what they do it’s a new area filming and it’s
58:04
a kind of involves a new technology that the phone money has in place so that you can go you know like everything is
58:11
compressed at that time and so they were they were sort of interested in seeing
58:17
how their work translated whereas I think the camera operator
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camera off Rover we’re more jaded about like going they just go in every day we
58:28
film these programs every day and there they they they didn’t maybe under they didn’t see or understand their
58:34
participation as much as maybe the fellow mommy
58:51
I’m interested to know why work in Germany when you said you felt outside
58:57
Oh couple of reasons I I did a residency
59:05
there so I have been based in here for a while and made have made working button
59:14
and I did a residency in 2007 in Berlin
59:19
and kind of found have often tried to
59:24
infiltrate or get into these sort of situations or into some kind of institution or something and I found
59:31
that there was a an openness in Berlin in any way and I think that a big part
59:36
of it is that the imperative to make money is not so strong it’s a very
59:42
culturally active city and you don’t you a lot of money to live and so that
59:48
pressure is often people have time for things whereas in London even when people are interested money as time and
59:56
so it’s hard to find it’s hard to just hop getting hard for me to get into things and do things and this is a
1:00:05
little biologic the biographical thing there too I what I can I have adopted in
1:00:11
I found later on that my family’s my birth mother was German so interested sort of
1:00:20
that some of its in a cultural stereotypes German is that’s sort of
1:00:30
side thing it was mainly just circumstances that brought me there and then and then finding finding people
1:00:39
that are interested in and want to cooperate on those kinds of projects or Calabria
1:00:58
you
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