So although the film attempts to mimic a dream like logic, Cocteau perhaps unintentionally interweaves his own personal dream into this film, for some of the best films, art and novels derive from an artist's own experience of life. Indeed even Freud wrote an essay on un Sang d'un Poete. Unfortunately, I haven't been able to find a copy of, however, I can imagine the contents of this film, are brimmed with symbols and events for which Freud would be able to psychoanalyse.
Monday, October 29, 2007
Un Sang d'un Poete
So although the film attempts to mimic a dream like logic, Cocteau perhaps unintentionally interweaves his own personal dream into this film, for some of the best films, art and novels derive from an artist's own experience of life. Indeed even Freud wrote an essay on un Sang d'un Poete. Unfortunately, I haven't been able to find a copy of, however, I can imagine the contents of this film, are brimmed with symbols and events for which Freud would be able to psychoanalyse.
Sunday, October 28, 2007
Wise Blood and Cinematic Writing
Monday, October 22, 2007
The Films of Charles and Ray Eames
Personally I have always considered furniture and their design to be products of mass consumption, and as commodity items since my family work within the furniture design industry. Only in last century with the advent of modernism in art history - I'm thinking of Le Corbusier's modern architectural designs and the German Bauhaus school - has architecture and furniture been conceived as a way of bringing avant garde art into everyday life condensed in the mantra of Louis Sullivan, an American architect who stated “form follows function”. Modern artists were recognising the potential for objects since Marcel Duchamp challenged the artistic canon with his introduction of the Readymade, transforming the domestic coat hook or urinal into an object by simply proclaiming an item to be a work of art. Andy Warhol’s Brillo Box installation deconstructs the nature of everyday commercial item, expressing his idea about simulacra in so far as he believed the mass reproduction of an item or image inevitably results in their death of meaning. Alan Kaprow, a 1970s New York installation artists would create dialogue about the object through his replications of living spaces within art galleries. As these artists demand contemplation on the aesthetics of everyday objects as art, so too do the films of Charles and Ray Eames films. Kaleidescope and House After Five Years of Living urge us to consider these “anonymously designed” objects imbuing them almost with a personality of their own, as they impact on the individual living, working and engaging in that space. Charles and Ray Eames house also epitomises influence of modern design, the colour scheme evoking Piet Mondrian straight line and colour aesthetic.

In the Eames' Powers of Ten film they blend science and art, the camera zooming outwards. In this film, the scale of human to the cosmos is questioned alongside science’s concern with observation, data, statistics. Although I have never seen this film as some people in the seminar may have, the exactitude, the documentarian aspect, and the objective monotone voice of the narrator, are reminiscient of films I watched during high school on mysteries of the Universe. Charles and Ray Eames propose in this film the pedagogical function of film to illuminate the multifaceted scale of the human to the Universe, here one no longer needs to abstractly learn about concepts but can visually be shown images of the milky way, our galaxy. This ties in with the ontology of film and photography, as a way of capturing time and aspects of nature hidden to human vision. Walter Benjamin in The Work of Art in the Age of Mechanical Reproduction makes an analogy between the role of the director as analgous to a surgeon, in so much as modern technology has unconcealed what was once hidden to the eye, the surgeon operating can get a glimpse in the intricacies of the human body, in the same way a director can capture everyday life on a microscopic level.
The films of Charles and Ray Eames approach modern film from a sociological phenomenon, and places film as a space in which to explore developments within design and science. Although the breadth of films viewed in Cinematic Modernism have explored films which contribute to the linear development of modern cinema through experimentation with the medium, reaction to Modern urban life and its impact on the human individual, the Eames' film innovatively chart the history of design, art and science through a cinematic medium.
Thursday, September 27, 2007
The portrayal of "otherness" in King Kong and Piccadilly
Part of the fascination with the East also resides on its ability to be a threat to Western civilisation impinging upon the known, the rational and everyday existence of Western humanity. In Piccadilly, when we first see Sho Sho dancing in the kitchen, she is shrouded in an air of seduction, yet she poses as a risk to the flow of kitchen management . Even the Chinese characters she writes is subversive and is suggestive of the threat from another linguistic system to a Western one. The yellow filter through which most of the film is projected, was interesting, in that I thought it contained a subliminal message about the threat posed to the West by the East. Yet unlike Kong, towards the end, of Piccadilly, I thought the film does instil some sympathy and pathos for the death of Jim. In King Kong, the a beast appears revered and worshipped in the East but when the travellers encounter him he is viewed as an otherworldly beast embodying sublime terror so much so Ann screams for many minutes on screen. Furthermore when Kong is carted into the Western world he erupts havoc and posits a threat to both public life, in the way the camera glides over the destruction of the city, and private life since Ann is plucked from the interior space. The Americans to whom King Kong poses a threat to, seem only interested in Kong as a beast and a subject of scientific investigation.
In many of the tutorials the issue of scale in cinema has been raised. This film is interesting in that it suggests the relativity of scale. Compared to human, Kong is proportioned to overpower the individual, scale is a point which contributes to his sublime qualities. Yet when Kong climbs the Empire State building his scale is undermined by man's great architectural structure. Indeed Kong assertion as a threat is corrected by their intelligence and plan by the city council to use Ann as bait perched upon the Empire state building, and planes, a testament to man's invention in conquering flight, to swoop around Kong. The last line of the film "the aeroplanes got it" suggest the ultimate power of a human and Western kind's ability to wield the machines of their design to correct the imbalance of power of beast and man.
Wednesday, September 19, 2007
Joseph Cornell's, 'Rose Hobart'
These carefully chosen, non linear sequence of images cut from the traditional jungle film, East of Borneo reflect mental process and the way memory, the consciousness and subconscious, carefully select images that we occasionally replay in our minds. Other moments in the film, when Cornell weaves in the image of people gazing up at the sky at the beginning of the film and then cuts to a clip from East of Borneo are akin to the distortions of one's own subjective experience in registering a particular memory. Slippages easily occur in the transition from the original text to the way we process visual information within the mental "interior", as Victor Burgin mentions in his article:
"These tend away from the causal linear progressions of secondary process thought towards the extremity of the dream - which, Freud emphasizes is to be understood not as a unitary narrative but as a fragmentary rebus....these residues are mental images." (Burgin, 14)
Box with image of Lauren Bacall
Bryan Frye's notion that the manner in which the screen of the film frames the actress, Rose Hobart is analogous to Cornell's boxes and can be contextualised within his penchant for making boxes dedicated to female actresses. Cornell seems to be seeking a dialogue between the actress for whom the work is intended and himself, the shots chosen inhabit a very active male voyeuristic gaze, particularly at the beginning as the camera moves so we see Rose lying on the bed, through a screen. The assemblage format of the film is almost like an archive of his obsession with Hobart, the clips for the piece carefully chosen by Cornell to evoke his creative idea for the film as a whole. As such his status as an isolated outsider artist, his insistence on the importance of childhood, is reminiscent of artists such as Henry Darger, who similarly through art sought to rearrange the world and recreate it from their perspective in a way thats very personal so much that we may never completely grasp the full resonance of its meaning.
Thursday, August 30, 2007
Berlin: Symphony of a City and The Edukators (Symphony of Modern Revolutionists?)
Concerns over temporality seem to be an overarching theme in Berlin . The somewhat initially random images are conjoined by the repeated reminders of the human construct of time, notably in the inclusion of shots of clock time and the segregation of the film into five acts taking place from dawn to dusk. There is a sense of human control over the naturalistic setting via constrast between rural and the urban or the camera’s shots of ephemeral and fleeting moments as discussed in the seminar. As such this unique upclose insight gained becomes part of the film's aesthetic cinematic effect conveying to the viewer a sense of everday life in the public spaces of 1920s Berlin. That striking realism becomes apparent in The Edukators filmed entirely from a digital video camera, where the camera negates any point of view shots. Unlike Berlin, the film is driven by its linear narrative but the action appears documented in real time for instance when the male figures Peter and Jan are driving along real streets in Berlin and in the background an ambulance passes by. At the beginning of the film the central female character, Jules attends an anti-capitalism protest, the shaky actions of the camera capture the arrest of protestors as riot police move to break down the demonstrators. A sense that this is real pervades through this sequence, the viewer thrown admist the action as if occurring right before their eyes. The film seems to document the events through the course of a few days, these clues revealed in the stream of characters waking up or Julie’s night job. The natural style of acting, the sense of spontaneity also make this film very documentarian. Interestingly notion of the blurring of art and life is raised and in my background reading to The Edukators, I came across this article about copy cat acts inspired by this film which poses the question - what happens when life mimics art which mimicks life. Any ideas?
Strikingly, the prevalence of Berlin footage shot from a street level, as well as aerial shots, or close up shots of streets, railway networks, cafes, interiors of factories, workers and so forth illustrate the beginnings of this question of the use of surveillance in the modern city. Networks, circuitry, and interpersonal relationships are within Ruttmann's film, the major cohesive forces established by the series of shots showing the rail crossroads leading in all directions and aerial shots of the eerie quiet streets and rooftops. As such Berlin is well before its time in its references to surveillance in the modern city, via scenes of police martial power and eerily oblique aerial shots of the city. Individuals on the ground appear at times aware of the camera’s presence glancing at the camera with the knowledge they are being watched and at other times the camera obscured from view shows surveillance like footage.
The opening sequence of The Edukators shows footage of a family arriving home from their vacation to find the furniture in their opulent mansion rearranged, some even into Dada-esque configurations, one scene shows antique tin soldier figures dumped in the bathroom, even their stereo inside their refridgerator. This is the work of the primary figures of the Edukators, Peter, a alarm system engineer and his friend Jan, who are disenchanted by the increasing disparity between rich and poor within their society, monitor the mansions of the wealthy bourgeois and enter their targeted homes. The distinction from Wattman's film is the way in which surveillance in the public sphere such as Berlin is brought into the private sphere of the home. With a threatening tone, The Edukators stake their claim of private space of the wealthy, rearranging furniture and leaving a note “your days of plenty are few” or “you have too much money” in their attempt to ingrain a sense of fear among their targets. In a way their desire to shake and shift the private spaces of other individuals parallels their desire to fragment the structure of their materialistic society. In this way both films refer to surveillance, albeit much more candidly in The Edukators, as a power structure which one can utilise to rule over another and when anachronistically manipulated become a potent force used to momentarily destabalise the establishment of the modern city.
Tuesday, July 31, 2007
Cinematic Modernism
I'm also taking Victorian art and getting through the texts, Great Expectations and Middlemarch as well as Victorian poetry. In some ways these texts provide a little introduction into the Modernism era as a precursor and it will be interesting to contrast between the different paradigms. I've chosen to take Cinematic Modernism largely because I've been interested in this era introduced through other similar units of study in Modernist art, and literature so naturally studying the avant garde film of this era appealed to me.