Bill Morrison: Maya Stendhal Gallery.In A Voyage on the North Sea, Rosalind Krauss recalls that in the late '60s and early '70s artists including Richard Serra and Robert Smithson made a habit of visiting Anthology Film Archives, where they absorbed the canon of modernist film up to and including its structuralist endgames. These days, the art world seems to be in the midst of a similar, if more diffuse, engagement with the classics of experimental cinema--viz. Stan Brakhage's inclusion in the current Whitney Biennial or the modernism-is-dead, long-live-modernism riffing of film and video artists from Jeremy Blake to Haluk Akakce to Paul Sietsema. Experimental filmmaker Bill Morrison's recent show, which centered on the feature-length Decasia, 2002, fell into alignment with this convergence; Morrison's films, which use decayed footage as medium and metaphor, elegize the avantgarde tradition even as they make the case for its continued relevance. What preservationists call "visual distraction"--the derangements of the cinematic image that occur when celluloid celluloid [from cellulose], transparent, colorless synthetic plastic made by treating cellulose nitrate with camphor and alcohol. Celluloid was the first important synthetic plastic and was widely used as a substitute for more expensive substances, such as ivory, amber, horn, and tortoiseshell. It is highly flammable and has been largely superseded by newer plastics with more desirable properties. warps, emulsion cracks and blisters, or mold grows between the convolutions Broca's convolution the inferior frontal gyrus of the left hemisphere of the cerebrum. Heschl's convolutions transverse temporal gyri; see temporal gyrus, under gyrus. con·vo·lu·tion (k of the reel--is the main event in Decasia. Commissioned to make a movie to accompany a symphony by composer Michael Gordon, Morrison trolled film libraries around the US, unearthing decomposing newsreels, melodramas, and travelogues--most of them printed on celluloid nitrate, the notoriously nonarchival stock that was in wide use until 1951. He selected dozens of sequences and edited them into a sixty-seven-minute black-and-white montage in which cinematic conventions are repeatedly undone by the special effects of decay. [ILLUSTRATION OMITTED] These effects are endlessly various: They take shape as flat patterns--linear striations 1. the quality of being marked by stripes or striae. 2. a streak or scratch, or a series of streaks. stri·a·tion (str - or Art Nouveau art nouveau (är' n vō`), decorative-art movement centered in Western Europe. It began in the 1880s as a reaction against the historical emphasis of mid-19th-century art, but did not survive World War I.-ish whorls 1. A form that coils or spirals; a curl or swirl. 2. A turn of the cochlea or of the ethmoidal crest. 3. An area of hair growing in a radial manner. 4. One of the circular ridges or convolutions of a fingerprint. While Morrison's concerns with obsolescence and with the archive place him alongside any number of neo-Conceptualists, Decasia resonates most strongly on a more reflexive level, where the history of film itself is specifically engaged. Its aleatory aleatory adj. uncertain; usually applied to insurance contracts in which payment is dependent on the occurrence of a contingent event, such as injury to the insured person in an accident or fire damage to his insured building. animations point toward an ironic denouement to the old conflict between representational and abstract film--what Malevich called, with respective disdain and approbation, "imitative" cinema and cinema "as such." Imitative cinema would seem to have decisively won the day (not only in the theater, but, arguably, in the white cube as well). But as Decasia illustrates, Malevich gets the last laugh: All film, if left to its own devices, will eventually become cinema as such. |
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