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A thousand words.


Gabriel Orozco Gabriel Orozco (b. 1962) is "One of the most influential artists of this decade, and probably the next one too." - Francesco Bonami, Parachute, 1998. He was born in Jalapa, Veracruz, Mexico and educated in the Escuela Nacional de Artes Plasticas between 1981 and 1984.  TALKS ABOUT HIS RECENT FILMS

What I'm after is the liquidity of things, how one thing leads you on to the next. These films take place in very ordinary urban settings. I'm not concerned with spectacular events or frantic rhythms. The works are about concentration, intention, and paths of thought: the flow of totality in our perception, the fragmentation of the "river of phenomena," which takes place all the time. I avoid all postproduction because I want to keep the clumsiness, insecurity, and ambiguity of the actual shooting. It's really the awareness involved in the shooting itself that is important to me, not what one can do with images afterward. The tension between my intentions and reality itself is what drives the films. I devote a day to creating a kind of "story." Walking down, say, Sixth Avenue, I'll suddenly see something that intrigues me - a plastic bag, a green umbrella Green Umbrella Sport & Leisure Ltd was founded in 1990 as a producer of special interest videos in the United Kingdom. They have a strong history of sports programming - including such documentaries like The Mark Hughes Story for Manchester United. , an airplane tracing a line in the sky. That's how I get started.

One can't really see the films as entries in a diary, because they're not at all private. I'm very conscious of the fact that they'll be viewed by somebody else. I think about the viewer all along. The presence of the viewer makes me want to be more precise. But more important, the fact that the thoughts of the spectator are with me as I shoot the film short-circuits all ideas of privacy. There's nothing private about the process of creation.

The metaphoric links between things are not something I plan but something that just happens. The kind of connection that intrigues me is contiguity contiguity /con·ti·gu·i·ty/ (kon?ti-gu´i-te) contact or close proximity.

con·ti·gu·i·ty
n.
The state of being contiguous.
. I move from one thing to another, and in the film they'll be situated next to each other or happen right after one another, although there may be ten or twenty minutes between them in reality. The connections themselves are real, not metaphoric. Borges wrote somewhere that all these things "These Things" is an EP by She Wants Revenge, released in 2005 by Perfect Kiss, a subsidiary of Geffen Records. Music Video
The music video stars Shirley Manson, lead singer of the band Garbage. Track Listing
1. "These Things [Radio Edit]" - 3:17
2.
 that are next to each other, we call the universe. It's this "being next to each other" that appeals to me. In the films things are related, but through proximity rather than narrative. Therefore you can begin in one place and wind up in another that doesn't seem related to the starting point Noun 1. starting point - earliest limiting point
terminus a quo

commencement, get-go, offset, outset, showtime, starting time, beginning, start, kickoff, first - the time at which something is supposed to begin; "they got an early start"; "she knew from the
. For example, the tape I like the most, From Dog Shit Noun 1. dog shit - fecal droppings from a dog
dog do, dog turd, doggy do

faecal matter, faeces, fecal matter, feces, ordure, BM, dejection, stool - solid excretory product evacuated from the bowels
 to Irma Vep, traces a series of connections between two things: a piece of dog shit I saw in the street at 10:45 A.M. and this beautiful Chinese actress whose face I found on a poster at 4:45 P.M. Between these two events there's an entire day of walking, now condensed con·dense  
v. con·densed, con·dens·ing, con·dens·es

v.tr.
1. To reduce the volume or compass of.

2. To make more concise; abridge or shorten.

3. Physics
a.
 into forty minutes of recording on a tape.

There could be some kind of resemblance between what I'm doing and John Cage's recordings, but Cage's work has so much to do with chance, whereas I'm really focusing on concentration and intention. The same goes for the automatic writing of Surrealism. That's all about losing control, whereas the flow of images in my work is extremely controlled. I trace certain intentions with the camera, and then suddenly the tension between my intentions and reality becomes too great and the whole thing breaks down.

I wake up in the morning. The light has to be okay. I have breakfast and then start walking down some street until something catches my attention. That's when the movie starts. When I begin recording something, I don't know Don't know (DK, DKed)

"Don't know the trade." A Street expression used whenever one party lacks knowledge of a trade or receives conflicting instructions from the other party.
 how long it's going to last, maybe thirty seconds, maybe five minutes, so I improvise, watching and walking at the same time. I always hope to be able to stop filming at the right moment, not before something great happens or after my finger and future viewers get calambres of boredom. Sometimes I focus and just wait. I like the sounds in the video to connect in the same way as the images. I'm actually amazed by how "normal" my video sounds, just like real life - collapsing sounds and noises that overlap and connect without logic. I move the camera, I walk with it, I take stills, I use the zoom a lot and play with scale and distance. Sometimes I intervene in reality, like at this bar in Amsterdam, where I turned all the beer coasters upside down on a table and taped them. Sometimes I follow a dog, sometimes I follow a backpack. These are the things I normally look at when walking down the street. They wouldn't be interesting in photographs, but perhaps they are in a movie. After a day of walking I have twenty to forty minutes' worth of tape. I like to sit at a bar and have a beer while going through it. It's nice to see all the fragments of a day condensed. The narrative is like a series of punctums - focal points of attention. There's no postproduction - it's all left as it is: a day of awareness. I think that if I were to edit these films and try to make sense out of them, the final result would still be the same: "Las partes son el todo, el todo son las partes."

In his "Six Memos for the Next Millennium," Italo Calvino Noun 1. Italo Calvino - Italian writer of novels and short stories (born in Cuba) (1923-1987)
Calvino
 dreams about a future poetry free of traditional obsessions with the human subject, a poetry about the world itself - about color and light
For the Stephen Sondheim song, see Sunday in the Park with George.


"Color and Light" is the 30th episode of the ABC television series, Desperate Housewives. The episode was the seventh episode for the show's second season.
 and the infinite variety of things. Gabriel Orozco's photographs have often reminded me of Calvino's vision. In these images, the objects of the world - fruit, animals, human artifacts artifacts

see specimen artifacts.
 - assume a new dignity. Similarly, the artist's recent films (he's made five to date with a digital video camera during long strolls in New York City New York City: see New York, city.
New York City

City (pop., 2000: 8,008,278), southeastern New York, at the mouth of the Hudson River. The largest city in the U.S.
 and Amsterdam) comprise unexpected sequences of the happenstance hap·pen·stance  
n.
A chance circumstance: "Marriage loomed only as an outgrowth of happenstance; you met a person" Bruce Weber.
 connections among things. Viewing one of Orozco's films is like taking in an enormously large exhibition of his photographs - the experience can be exhausting, but it's also strangely rewarding.

Born in 1962 in Veracruz, Mexico, the New York-based Orozco has been included in international shows ranging from the previous two Whitney Biennials to the most recent installments of Documenta and the Munster Sculpture Show. He talks with great energy not only about his art but about a great many things he finds interesting, peppering his English with phrases in Spanish. When i recently met up with Orozco in Paris, where a survey of his work is on view at the Musee d'Art Moderne mo·derne  
adj.
Striving to be modern in appearance or style but lacking taste or refinement; pretentious.



[French, modern, from Old French; see modern.]

Adj. 1.
 de la Ville de Paris Ville de Paris may refer to:
  • Paris
  • French ship Ville de Paris (1764)
  • HMS Ville de Paris
, and asked him to talk with me about one of his projects, he chose to focus on the video recordings, which were recently exhibited at the Stedelijk Museum in Amsterdam. Over a meal of steak tartare
:For the popular sauce, please see tartar sauce.
Tartare is a preparation of finely chopped raw meat or fish optionally with seasonings and sauces.

Examples are
  • Steak tartare,
  • Venison tartare,
  • Salmon tartare,
  • Tuna tartare.
 and raw oysters, he explained what he's after: the liquidity of things, how one thing leads to the next. Each videotape represents what he calls a "day of awareness," condensed but not edited. The excerpts from my conversation with Orozco are offered in the spirit of that experience.

- DANIEL BIRNBAUM
COPYRIGHT 1998 Artforum International Magazine, Inc.
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 1998, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Title Annotation:description of approach to production of motion pictures
Author:Orozco, Gabriel
Publication:Artforum International
Date:Jun 22, 1998
Words:1153
Previous Article:Surf and turf. (art schools in Los Angeles, California)(includes related articles on art students' view of their training)
Next Article:Covering the spread. (feature film 'Buffalo '66,' by Vincent Gallo)
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