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It
only takes an instant for an impression to become a vision.
-Bill
Viola
Prologue
I took a quick pull on my fag, and tossed the rest into
the wind. My shoulders hunched, I sauntered along
the sidewalk, and as the success and excess of humanity
swarmed past me, I suddenly saw myself in a shop window.
Alone and in a foreign land, I found myself experiencing
the wonder of reflection. I thought: Who am I amidst all
of this noise? I'm slightly under six feet tall. I possess
average intellectual abilities, and am of modest circumstance.
What am I to make of all of this that I see around me?
Logos
In
September of this year I was in the city of San Francisco.
Amidst the hustle and bustle I stepped off the street into
the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art. Once inside the
gallery I found myself immersed in the video artistry of
California artist Bill Viola. Viola is world reknowned for
his use of film as art. His huge, technically brilliant,
installations serve to, among other things, scare the crap
out of unsuspecting museum goers. With his often violent
depictions of humanness: for example the installation entitled
The Crossing, in which the viewer sees a man consecutively
doused in water and then burned in effigy, the vital elements
of fire and water combine to create a picture of fin de
siecle humanity which questions our basic understanding
of self. With Viola's work, the medium is the message. You
cannot get away from the film. The size and the noise sear
themself into your memory, and I found myself, even a month
later, attempting to grapple with what I saw. Viola’s terrifying
images of humanity (asleep in barrels of oil The Sleepers),
of unsuspecting gallery goers trapped in his works (He
Weeps for You) serve a cautionary, yet edifying role.
With modern technology we can essentially recreate ourselves
on film. Yet, how do we appear when we do so? In Viola’s
installations we view the fullness of human experience (which
is the most powerful role of art in any society). Too often
commercial filmmakerse tend to recreate on film only those
parts of society which reaffirm our ideal vision of self.
Commercial filmmaking appeals to our insecurities about
beauty, intelligence, and financial success. Viola’s vision
directly contrasts with Hollywood’s idealized vision of
humanity (the main purveyor of films in the West). Viola
takes the talents of the filmmaker, especially the craft,
and turns film on its head until a fuller version of humanity
is revealed.
Film
is the most powerful and transcendent artistic medium of
our times. Across languages and cultures, movie “stars”
loom large above us in theatres around the globe. These
images come into our lives and serve to affect our understandings
of relationships, power, love, war, sin, and redemption,
among other things. I've seen movies in countries from Asia
to North America, and the same basic theme strikes me --the
power of the visual image as it serves, for a brief instance,
to comfortably seduce us from our assumptions about who
we are. In the intimacy of a theatre (a feeling I recently
experienced as I graciously allowed myself to be dragged
along to a showing of the Richard Gere/Juli Roberts movie
Runaway Bride) we are normally lulled into accepting
an idealised understanding of self. Yet, I always find the
viewing of a film rewarding. Because it is in those brief
instances in even the most hackneyed film, that entertainment
transcends its self-understanding and becomes something
more. This something more is the ideal in our society we
call art, and its challenge is that we constantly rethink
our understanding of self. In Runaway Bride, an otherwise
banal and trite rehashing of the movie Pretty Woman,
one scene (in the hour and a half plus) grabbed me. In the
scene, the protagonists embrace after having finally realized
they love one another (what other central need is there
for another Gere/Roberts movie except to bring it to this
inevitable conclusion). As they are madly kissing, suddenly
they stop, look into each other’s eyes, and say, “No, wait,
we should talk first.” Then their passion consumes them
and they return to the business at hand. It’s somewhere
amidst this brief realisation of what they are actually
doing, this reflection amidst overwhelming passion, that
served to illustrate to me the deep crisis of identity that
Western society is facing.
In our present age there are more means to communicate than
at any other period of history. We have cellular telephones
and pagers. Landlines and lecture halls. The possibilities
for communication are myriad. We can communicate with more
people than at any other time in history, with better clarity,
and at a greater distance. It is the effect of this communication,
what I call "electronic consciousness," that I
am most concerned with. Electronic consciousness is the
idea that Western society in general, (and global society
not before long) seeks to understand itself through its
means of communication, rather than through the messages
communicated by these media. Every word has intention, and
that intention is potential power. Through the sheer verbosity
by which society packs images of light and sound into film,
television, music and computers we seem to laconically take
it all in, yet rarely consider what we’ve injested. It brings
to my mind the images of Chris Woods, a Canadian painter
from Chilliwack, B.C., who paints hyper-realistic images
of adolescents as they consume fast food. The iconographic
affect of the paintings, combined with the subject matter,
serves to paint our quick, disposable culture in almost
reverent terms. By doing so Woods exposes the essential
falseness of the society. The paintings are pleasing to
the eye-the content of the images are damning. In the same
way electronic consciousness paints a picture of light and
sound that seduces us, yet at the same time, in its utter
banality, condemns our society for its worship of the medium,
and utter ignorance of its message.
Film, like print, is a reflective medium. The film that
engages your eyes, is essentially reflected light (light
passing through still photography shots moving quickly in
front of a beam). Unlike television, which directly engages
the viewers' eyes (and creates a stuppifying effect), film
allows the viewer to be engaged, and at the same time allows
for reflection (or a first kiss). In movie theatres across
the globe, the theatre serves as the art gallery for the
masses. It is a public house of reflection. Theatres serve
as the place that the vast majority of people experience
the truth of art; art that exists to question who we are,
and in some cases, to forecast who we should become.
Given that society today is essentially a dialogue of images
(we dress in order to impress others, speak to remind others
of our social position and privelege, act in a manner which
others find acceptable) society needs to be challenged by
the power of the arts, in a familiar medium. This brings
me back to Bill Viola. Viola’s work serves this purpose,
and in many ways, breaches the divide between the gallery
and the viewing public. Viola’s work is a search for meaning,
an exploration of humanness, in a medium which all of us
know and understand.
Epilogue
As I stepped out of the gallery into the glare of the California
sun, I peered into the abyss of self as it was defined by
the noise around me. Am I more than just the sum total of
my ability to purchase things and store them in receptacles
of stone and wood? What is this world that wishes to intoxicate
me with its splendour, only to break-down my idea of who
I am, in order to convince to become something that it wishes
me to become? Suddenly I was tired, and I reached into my
pack to grab a CD and my Discman®. My attention turned to
a poster of a beautiful woman with a perfectly airbrushed
body, holding a gun in her hand. A recruiting poster for
some radical guerilla movement? Only in my dreams. Just
another moviehouse advertising its wares. Large vehicles
roared past and sounds of drum and bass, urban tribal rituals
in progress, waft through the air. Amidst the neon and the
electric signs, I sighed, and returned my attention to the
next hit from my CD player.
Copyright
© 1999 Robert F. Delamar
Robert
Delamar is a first year student in the Faculty of Law at
the University of British Columbia, in Vancouver, Canada.
He’s the Managing Editor of *spark-online.
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