“Bringing the Unseen out of the Shadows”: in Pursuit of Ciné-Trance and Film-Performance in Ben Russell’s the quarry (2002) and TRYPPS #7 (BADLANDS) (2010) (original) (raw)

Bringing the Unseen Out of the Shadows’: In Pursuit of Ciné-Transe and Film-Performance in Ben Russell’s the quarry (2002) and TRYPPS #7 (BADLANDS) (2010)

AM Journal of Art and Media Studies , 2018

This paper aims to present the ways in which Ben Russell’s films, the quarry and TRYPPS #7 (BADLANDS), tend to draw on conventions traditionally associated with ciné-trance (TRYPPS #7), as developed by Jean Rouch, and film-performance (TRYPPS #7 and the quarry). While both pictures invoke the presence of the sublime, the quarry transforms the featured landscape into an image-object and hence fails to represent the lived experience and instead provides the audience with a spectacle or a sensation simultaneously engaging them in the performance on their own terms. Meanwhile, TRYPPS #7’s reliance on ciné-trance becomes more evident in its attempt to expose the hypnotic and deceptive capabilities of moving-image media, which do not only distort the spectator’s rational sense of space and perspective, but also connote the phenomenon of possession itself through featuring the protagonist’s narcotic trance. To achieve the desired effect, Russell creates an atmosphere of sublimity and transcendence by means of structural and avant-garde film’s devices that transcend the realist–narrative paradigm of anthropological filmmaking, including static and kinetic montage, multiple perspectives, hand-held and rotating camera movements, intimate long takes or fixed shots of extended duration.

The Sublime Experience in Film And Installation

This practice based MRes project examines the physiological terror-sublime proposed by Edmund Burke’s A Philosophical Enquiry into the Origin of Our Ideas of the Sublime and Beautiful. Using the Enquiry as a manual for artistic production, and employing word charts to map the territory, this project looks to embody ideas of the Burkean sublime in contemporary practice. Simon Morley, in the introduction to The Sublime, broadly describes the subject as ‘…fundamentally transformative, about the relationship between disorder and order, and the disruption of the stable coordinates of time and space…in looking at the relevance of the concept to contemporary art, we are also addressing an experience with implications that go far beyond aesthetics… Awe and wonder can quickly blur into terror, giving rise to a darker aspect of the sublime experience, when the exhilarating feeling of delight metamorphoses into a flirtation with dissolution and the ‘daemonic’’ (Morley, 2010:12) This project uses Burke’s Enquiry as the premise for the creation of gallery-based film and installation, alongside a written comparative analysis of relevant literature and artworks, in order to identify a proposed nihilistic turn in the Burkean terror sublime. In the sublime experience, the reveal of an external annihilating power, a shift in perception or a realisation of great depth or distance, leaves us newly aware of our physical limits and the limits of our rational capacities. The possibility of art to discuss an experience at the edge, where conventional language falters, has resulted in a range of artwork, across mediums, which can be identified with the sublime. Distinct from beauty and containing feelings of awe and reverence, the rush of the sublime can be discerned in the installations of Finnish duo IC-98, Anish Kapoor’s deep, dark voids and Bruce Conner’s apocalyptic Crossroads (1976). Through a process of making and reflection focusing on the dynamics of the Burkean sublime, and with reference to contemporary writing on the subject in both aesthetics and philosophy, this MRes asks - how is the sublime in Burke’s Enquiry distinct from the Kantian transcendent sublime, what is the pleasurable terror at the heart of the Enquiry and, by addressing Burke’s ideas through the artistic process, can a pessimism at the heart of Burke’s system be traced?

Modern-Day Isolation and the Trance Film: A Continued Relevance

This dissertation asserts the relevance, suitability and relatable nature of pure trance film in a contemporary society with issues of isolation, anxiety and alienation. Issues closely related to recent increase in Internet and social networking use. The dissertation analyses theories on modern-age isolation in relation to critical writings and analysis of the 1940’s and 1950’s pure trance film form, drawing thematic parallels between issues represented in the film form and prevalent contemporary psychological issues within society. The dissertation then outlines specific examples of trance film working as a suitable and relatable mode of psychological expression by cross analysing the films themselves with the personal lives and sensibilities of the filmmakers. The two films, At Land (Maya Deren 1944) and The Way to Shadow Garden (Stan Brakhage 1954), are analysed with specific reference to their portrayal of psychological states via the external projection of a main protagonists’ inner psyche onto the external filmic landscape. Challenging the notion of character mediation as primitive, the dissertation asserts the use of a mediating protagonist as relatable. The dissertation examines the way in which trance films operate, regarding the human external-projection of the psyche. Analysis of Carl Jung’s earlier views on projection shed light on this, Conclusions are reached that attest to the form’s relevance and relatable nature as a form of psychological expression.

"Once More, with Feeling: Cinema and Cinesthesia"

In marked contrast to more recent discussions of cinematic affect, this article seeks to affirm the ineluctably passive experience of moving-images. In particular, the essay returns to the tradition of psychology and art history that developed, in the later nineteenth and early twentieth century, around the concept of Einfühlung. On this basis, I argue that cinema constitutes a kind of prosthetic perception whereby the brain is inhabited and vehicularized by images that are not its own.

Diegetic existence. Transmedia instauration in artists' cinema

New Review for Film and Television Studies, 2023

This article engages with differences of experiences generated by transmedia migration of filmic content in artist-filmmaker Albert Serra’s two-channel installation Personalien and feature film Liberté (2019). Made from the same raw footage, the films were seen as iterations of one fictional world. How is diegesis transformed by Serra’s distinct negotiation of viewers’ patience and perversity at the museum and the film theatre? Responding to this issue requires retrieving Anne and Etienne Souriau’s concept of diegesis. Diegesis was exported to narratology and semiotics, though the notion was soon robbed of its relevance: its equal sensitivity to medial environments, circumstantial conditions of experience, and modulations of fictional existence. Reintegrating diegesis within Souriau’s multilayered and intensive ontology of filmic universes is of renewed interest in times of cinematic relocation, when cinematic experiences are reactivated in new contexts. Artists’ moving-images require us to give due weight to the ontic thickness of film. What environments do each experience configurate? Which operations are required in the theatre and the museum? Will viewers support the existence of Serra’s precarious worlds? Resituating diegesis within Souriau’s philosophy of instauration, I address intermedial differences in Personalien and Liberté and reflect on logical and metaphysical disparities.

Seeing with a Filmmaker’s Eyes: Glimpses of Mobilized Landscapes in Stan Brakhage’s The Wonder Ring (1955) and Visions in Meditation #2: Mesa Verde (1989)

Roczniki Humanistyczne [Annals of Arts and Humanities] , 2017

In this paper I present various ways in which Stan Brakhage’s The Wonder Ring (1955) and Visions in Meditation #2: Mesa Verde (1989) tend to challenge the concept of American landscape by means of cinematic conventions traditionally associated with phantom rides, city symphonies and contemporary road movies. It seems that Brakhage’s works do not only employ non-standard editing, camera movement and extended shot to reproduce a continuous flow of motion, but they also exploit the dynamics between the spectactor’s “mobilized virtual gaze” (Friedberg, Window 2) and passing views by evoking a distorted experience of sensational and meditative voyages, hence questioning panoramic perception and an idealized image of American (film) landscape intrinsically bound with the natural and technological sublime. Particularly, both films draw on rapid handheld camerawork, superimpositions, anamorphic lens, bright or dim exposures, fades, odd angles, softened focus and other techniques to defamiliarize and objectify the protagonist’s journey and thus document Brakhage’s perception and extra-objective reality.

Experimenting Film and the Sublime Experience

It is most common to think of moving images as what present us a moving scene in a stable and flat surface (canvas). It is as well common to attribute the perception of moving scene to perceiving moving images (24 frames being projected onto a screen per second). The two ways of describing basic filmic experience exemplify two routes to explain why moving images can have the effect they have on viewers. The do not in themselves answer the question but rather formulate it. Thus, in the first case, the problem is what makes in the projected images possible that we see a scene and not so much the surface; a problem that surfaces in painting and has been adequately captured by the term „seeing-in” developed by Richard Wollheim only to distinguish it from seeing an object in a photo and a scene in a film. The latter cases are then conceptualized as cases of „seeing-through” when we disregard the texture of the surface (as we disregard smudges on our glasses normally) and focus on the unfolding scene. In the other case, the problem is not so much that we can see through the surface, but what makes us see through it, what characteristics of the surface (this time not the canvas but the projected images) make this possible. Pointing out that there is a difference between painting and photographed images in that we simply see through the latter is of no avail here. The relevant question to be answered is the relation between the image as surface and the image as scene. Many approaches trying to answer this question are labeled or self-labeled as illusionist, for there is hardly any other way to conceive of the relation of the image and the depicted object as at least to some extent iconic: there must be something in common in real movement and apparent movement, in the form, shading, texture, etc. of real objects and their depictions, the 3D spatial layout and 2D perspectival layout, etc.

The “Astonishing Moment of Immobility”: Analogue Slow Motion as Archaeological Practice between Cinema and Contemporary Art, "La valle dell'Eden", n. 31, 2018

In an important essay entitled “An Aesthetic of Astonishment: Early Film and the (In)Credulous Spectator” (1989), Tom Gunning, by referring to the first public exhibitions of the Lumière cinématographe in 1895, defines as an “astonishing moment of movement” the presentation of a still photograph on the screen that would be suddenly transformed into a moving image with the cranking of the projector. A reverse transition of the cinematic image from movement to stillness is often produced by contemporary artworks that aim to reflect on the origins of our cinematic gaze through the technique of analogue slow motion. In this respect, the works of artists like James Coleman or Rodney Graham use analogue slow motion as a “retrospective” tool in order to show the constitutional tension between cinema and immobility through the re-emergence of the individual frame on the screen. The essential presence in these artists’ installations of analogue film images and obsolete devices such as old projectors increases their will to explore early structures of cinema in an archaeological way. By examining the technique of analogue slow motion in contemporary art, the goal of this essay is to reflect on the construction of a possible “astonishing moment of immobility”, able to achieve new forms of revelation of the filmic apparatus founded on the tension between movement and stillness. Far from being simply restorative, the dialectics of past and present is conceived here as a future-oriented strategy aimed at investigating alternative practices of cinematic experience in the digital age.

Voiding Cinema: Subjectivity Beside Itself, or Unbecoming Cinema in Enter the Void

This essay examines Gaspar Noë's film, Enter the Void (2009), in light of the work of both Gilles Deleuze and Alain Badiou. Arguing that the film shows to viewers the 'void' that separates subjects from objects, the essay also considers Noë's film in the light of drug literature and the altered states induced by cinema and describe by Anna Powell. Finally, the essay proposes that Enter the Void is a work of 'unbecoming' cinema, which in turn points to expansion of cinematic form through the use of digital technologies.