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CHRISTINE DAVIS.


THE POWER PLANT

For more than a decade, Christine Davis's installations have combined artifacts artifacts

see specimen artifacts.
 of the body (contact lenses contact lenses contact nplverres mpl de contact

contact lenses contact nplKontaktlinsen pl

contact lenses npl
, a metal dress patterned on genetic encoding sequences), photographs of skies (clouds, solar eclipses), and images of books (English dictionaries, Copernicus's Cosmology) to consider constructions of the self. Taking shape at the intersection of science, pain, and beauty, her work betrays the influence of Deleuze (on rime), Bataille (on Sade), and Kristeva (on love); it's no surprise to learn that Davis's early training was in Paris. This might explain why her installations have always been markedly different from those of other English-Canadian photo-based artists, with the possible exception of Michael Snow.

Pluck, 2000, is Davis's first foray into time-based work. The artist is concerned here with duration and what Henri Bergson identified as "flux," the aspect of perceptual experience that cannot be spatialized in representation. The piece relies on an icon of modern art and cinema, the bird. A large screen made of hundreds of black feathers was suspended in a darkened dark·en  
v. dark·ened, dark·en·ing, dark·ens

v.tr.
1.
a. To make dark or darker.

b. To give a darker hue to.

2. To fill with sadness; make gloomy.

3.
 room. Davis extracted the frames from a found color film of a female trapeze artist, made them into slides, and projected them on the screen in a slow sequence of continuous computerized dissolves, reconfiguring the temporality tem·po·ral·i·ty  
n. pl. tem·po·ral·i·ties
1. The condition of being temporal or bounded in time.

2. temporalities Temporal possessions, especially of the Church or clergy.

Noun 1.
 of the original footage and creating a sense of ephemerality and disintegration. The densely saturated colors--particularly the reds of the velvet rope around the woman's neck, the flower in her hair, and the garish ballerina costume--fuse with the surface of the feathered screen to create an astounding a·stound  
tr.v. a·stound·ed, a·stound·ing, a·stounds
To astonish and bewilder. See Synonyms at surprise.



[From Middle English astoned, past participle of astonen,
 effect: The projected image becomes tactile.

In fact, the variegated variegated adjective Multifaceted; with many colors, aspects, features, etc  light of the dissolving images, reflected and absorbed by the feathers, takes on the quality of an Impressionist painting. It is not only the illusion of brushstrokes created by the feathers that recalls the Impressionist project but also the capturing of an elusive temporality that is both mundane and marvelous. The first image in the sequence is a close-up of the subject's face, mouth and eyes wide open This article contains links, text or other information that has been inserted due to a business arrangement by the Wikimedia Foundation rather than the usual Wikipedia editing process. It may or may not comply with all of Wikipedia's normal editorial standards.  as if in horror; later she smiles as she spins perilously in the air. The trapeze artist relies on split-second timing in this spectacle of danger. Her performance is less an act than a routine: It is precisely through the repetition of the same, through the elimination of chance, that she will succeed in not falling. It is by calculating her movements to the most precise degree--that is, by making her actions cinematic--that she will defy the odds.

The installation's title plays across various registers: the plucked feathers of the screen, the trapeze artist plucking the bar from the air as it swings toward her, and finally the process that so disturbed Bergson, extracting a moment from time and reducing it to a sequential, cinematic linearity. All these aspects coalesce co·a·lesce  
intr.v. co·a·lesced, co·a·lesc·ing, co·a·lesc·es
1. To grow together; fuse.

2. To come together so as to form one whole; unite:
 around the problematic of flight. Images of flight call to mind not only the photographic experiments of French physiologist Etienne-Jules Marey, the first to take pictures of birds in the wild and reconstitute re·con·sti·tute  
tr.v. re·con·sti·tut·ed, re·con·sti·tut·ing, re·con·sti·tutes
1. To provide with a new structure: The parks commission has been reconstituted.

2.
 the illusion of their movement in the studio, but also the work of Romantic artists from Blake to Breton, whose emphasis on freedom relied on flight as a central metaphor. Birds in so many instances have stood for a temporality that needs to be rescued from space, that would provide an escape from the instrumentality Instrumentality

Notes issued by a federal agency whose obligations are guaranteed by the full-faith-and-credit of the government, even though the agency's responsibilities are not necessarily those of the US government.
 of the everyday. In this context, Michael Snow's fiberglass geese hovering in the atrium of Toronto's Eaton Centre shopping mall are a pivotal example, even a culmin ation, of this sense of the end of time, of the profound closure that haunts modernity. With Pluck, Davis picks up where Snow's Flight Stop left off some quarter-century ago, only now the birds are the screen on which "the taming of chance," to use Ian Hacking's expression, is performed.
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Author:Marchessault, Janine
Publication:Artforum International
Article Type:Brief Article
Date:Oct 1, 2001
Words:627
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