1995 Biennial: film and video.Founded in 1970, some 40 years after the Whitney Biennial The Whitney Biennial is a biennial exhibition of recent American art, typically by young and lesser known artists, on display at the Whitney Museum of American Art in New York City, USA. The event began as an annual exhibition in 1918. itself, the film-and-video section could easily be called an afterthought or, as another critic recently put it, a "sideshow See Windows SideShow. ." It doesn't take long to grasp the distinguishing dimensions of the Biennial's main exhibition as compared to its film-and-video section: one flows, if not overflows, through the entire space of the museum; the other has time on its side, changing its look every other day until June 18. Technically one cannot even visit the film-and-video section: you either flirt with it, checking out whatever program is currently showing, or you court it, continually returning until both spectator and spectacle are exhausted. Not unlike those that have preceded it, this Biennial's selection of film and video enjoys the contradictions of its own terms: confined to a single room, it is freed up from the scrutiny of both public and critical purview The part of a statute or a law that delineates its purpose and scope. Purview refers to the enacting part of a statute. It generally begins with the words be it enacted and continues as far as the repealing clause. . The selection of films and videos in the current Biennial reflects this seemingly separate status, both in terms of the programming's relationship to previous Biennials - and in particular to '70s vanguard filmmaking, which has remained a primary coordinate in the Biennial film-and-video program - and in its relationship to what is going down in the larger worlds of film and video. As works that, according to according to prep. 1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians. 2. In keeping with: according to instructions. 3. John C. Hanhardt, the Whitney's film-and-video curator, are "cutting edge" and "test through their content traditional formal structures," the materials selected aim to recycle and reinvent the avant-garde. Yet they remain oddly nostalgic for a time when independent film and video were new, contained, and clearly part of an art-world community. In the current climate of film and video, with the ever-changing structures of film financing and distribution, the advent of multimedia work and public access, and the merging of video and computer technologies, many of the Biennial's choices are willfully willfully adv. referring to doing something intentionally, purposefully and stubbornly. Examples: "He drove the car willfully into the crowd on the sidewalk." "She willfully left the dangerous substances on the property." (See: willful) anachronistic a·nach·ro·nism n. 1. The representation of someone as existing or something as happening in other than chronological, proper, or historical order. 2. . In Raphael Montanez Ortiz's Dance Number 22, 1993 (which rechoreographs a scene from the Marx Brothers' A Night at the Opera by stuttered editing), and Willie Varela's Bad Girl, 1994 (which camps up William Castle's already trashy Homicidal hom·i·cid·al adj. 1. Of or relating to homicide. 2. Capable of or conducive to homicide: a homicidal rage. ), the once subversive strategy of appropriation appears as little more than a formal exercise, albeit a clever one. What is most remarkable about Cheryl Donegan's whimsical Craft, 1994, in which Donegan literalizes the culture of consumption by orally transforming a cheese sandwich into art objects, is how uncrafted it is - as if it were a throwback throwback see atavism. to earlier, simpler video performances. If such pieces emphasize the film-and-video section's prejudice for works that rely rather too much for validation on their "vanguard" credentials, the inclusion of Lewis Klahr's collaged The Pharaoh's Belt, 1994, and Emily Breer's animated Superhero su·per·he·ro n. pl. su·per·he·roes A figure, especially in a comic strip or cartoon, endowed with superhuman powers and usually portrayed as fighting evil or crime. , 1994, gives space to smart, quirky pieces that are artful by surprisingly expanding the traditions of their particular, labor-intensive media. Plenty of other films in the lineup require no special art-world dispensation DISPENSATION. A relaxation of law for the benefit or advantage of an individual. In the United States, no power exists, except in the legislature, to dispense with law, and then it is not so much a dispensation as a change of the law. . Ecological themes account for much of what is most urgent in this Biennial's program. Indeed, if this year's selections, as curator Klaus Kertess has insisted, are driven by the metaphoric, ecology would be the figure that runs most consistently through the film-and-video selections. The films included point to the fact that ecological themes seem to have overwhelmed the body as the figure most central to contemporary critical and esthetic es·thet·ic adj. Variant of aesthetic. debates. In this year's one feature-length film, Shu Lea Cheang's Fresh Kill, 1994, the issue is much less the body politics of a biracial bi·ra·cial adj. 1. Of, for, or consisting of members of two races. 2. Having parents of two different races. bi·ra lesbian couple than the impending im·pend intr.v. im·pend·ed, im·pend·ing, im·pends 1. To be about to occur: Her retirement is impending. 2. ecodisaster that taints the sushi they eat and looms above them in the blood-red sky. In Harry Gamboa, Jr.'s Latino soap-opera L.A. Familia This article is about the Polish political party. For other uses, see Familia (disambiguation). Familia ("The Family," from the Romain familia , 1993, the gray air filling up the industrial landscapes and freeways speaks much more eloquently about the nature of homelessness than the characters' stilted stilt·ed adj. 1. Stiffly or artificially formal; stiff. 2. Architecture Having some vertical length between the impost and the beginning of the curve. Used of an arch. dialogue. The human body is completely evacuated from the landscape Roddy Bogawa edited together from the jungle footage of Hollywood Vietnam films in The Imagined, the Longed-for, the Conquered, and the Sublime, 1994. I suspect the pervasive emphasis on ecology forecasts not only an interest in the environment per se but also a way to position identity politics within an environmental framework. Consider, for example, how the frantic collision of blood cells blood cells, n.pl the formed elements of the blood, including red cells (erythrocytes), white cells (leukocytes), and platelets (thrombocytes). blood cells See erythrocyte and leukocyte. Platelets are classed separately. in Tom Kalin's 1991 Biennial entry about AIDS, They are lost to vision altogether, has now been replaced by a blurred super-8 hurricane in his frenzied music video Nomads, 1993. The occurrence of meteorology meteorology, branch of science that deals with the atmosphere of a planet, particularly that of the earth, the most important application of which is the analysis and prediction of weather. in other works - whether the storm of Margie Strosser and Peggy Ahwesh's Strange Weather, 1993, a saga of crack addicts in Florida during the worst hurricane on record, stunningly filmed in claustrophobic pixelvision; the tornadoes in Leslie Thornton's Peggy and Fred in Hell: The First Cycle, 1984-94; the luminous landscapes of Andrew Noren's Imaginary Light, 1994; or the Brazilian blue sky of Karim Ainouz's Paixao Nacional, 1994, with its voice-over narration about a man freezing to death - should be read as evoking a world openly hostile to human existence. Elizabeth LeCompte/The Wooster Group's Rhyme 'Em to Death, 1994 (which replaces Falconetti, star of Carl Dreyer's Jeanne D'Arc, with a goat), suggests, however comically, that such hostility is the consequence of our outright prosecution (and persecution) of nature itself. What is most poignant about these works is their desire to see the world as a complex network of relationships, not just as a series of representations. In Lawrence Andrew's fragmented study of the politics of false arrest, and they came riding in to town on Black & Silver Horses, 1993, race is the definitional consequence of being in the wrong place at the wrong time. While Jeanne C. Finley and Gretchen Stoeltje's A. R. M. around Moscow, 1993, is a rather straightforward documentary about an American marriage-broker in Moscow offering European brides to American men at discount prices, its characters - from the chubby postal worker whom no woman wants to the translator who gets big tips for conveying sexual advances - embody, rather than simply represent, gender politics in a post-cold war era The Post-Cold War era is a time period following the end of the Cold War. Its beginning is dated either in 1989, when the Revolutions of 1989 occurred in Eastern Europe and amicable relations developed between the United States and the Soviet Union, or it is dated in 1991 with the . In one of the most powerful films, Todd Haynes' Dottie Gets Spanked, 1993, an obsessed ob·sess v. ob·sessed, ob·sess·ing, ob·sess·es v.tr. To preoccupy the mind of excessively. v.intr. boy's visit to his favorite television star's studio becomes a complex meditation on - as well as a parody of - the way television remains a fixture in our homes, our families, and our unconscious. By contrast, Scott Rankin's The Pure, 1993, which might have served as a video primer on cultural politics and representation, is oddly flat and dogmatic, lacking any sincerity or personal investment. A large portion of the works are by lesbians and gay men, many of whom investigate personal politics by exploring national ones. In Frances Negron-Muntaner's Brincando el Charco: Portrait of a Puerto Rican, 1994, the director moves beyond photographic portraits of queer Puerto Ricans to find the historic landscape of her homeland. The mix of the personal and the political is most stunning in Gregg Bordowitz's Fast Trip, Long Drop, 1993, in which Bordowitz's reflections on the progression of his HIV HIV (Human Immunodeficiency Virus), either of two closely related retroviruses that invade T-helper lymphocytes and are responsible for AIDS. There are two types of HIV: HIV-1 and HIV-2. HIV-1 is responsible for the vast majority of AIDS in the United States. fuel a darkly optimistic allegory about the velocities of history, disease, ethnicity, and family through visual metaphors of freeways and automobile traffic. Like Bordowitz's valiant extension of his earlier activist work into a more subjective territory, this Biennial, at its best, reveals film and video's power both to transport and to transgress, carrying the film-and-video section forward and continuing a legacy that, in Hanhardt's words, "break[s] convention to empower and give voice to represent the world around us." Some of the best works (by Bordowitz, Haynes, Negron-Muntaner, Finley and Stoeltje, among others) push generic and national boundaries - but taken as a whole, the film-and-video section does not do so nearly enough. By ignoring new interactive and multimedia technology and refusing to acknowledge that much of what is most decisive in "independent" filmmaking today requires complex financing to be produced, this part of the Biennial fails to address work and the questions it raises, that cannot be pushed, as the screening of film and video in the museum so often is, to the side. Peter Bowen is associate editor of Filmmaker magazine. |
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