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Cheezie Vogue: the essential modern cinema povera of Colin Campbell.


"I'm the only 'art star' in Sackville. You can check the phone book. I'm the only one listed." (Sackville, I'm Yours)

When Colin Campbell unexpectedly passed away last October at the age of 59, a remarkable body of irreverent, witty and profoundly personal video art works was brought to an untimely close. Campbell's pioneering contributions to media art are fundamental to understanding the historical development of the art form. He was acknowledged as one of our greatest contemporary artists. As the celebrated auteur auteur (ōtör`), in film criticism, a director who so dominates the film-making process that it is appropriate to call the director the auteur, or author, of the motion picture.  of some 40 original video works, he achieved a rare unanimous vote of critical approval. His work found immediate and continued international success in prestigious festivals, symposia, broadcasts, biennials, museums and gallery exhibitions. Major personal retrospectives were curated in 1990 and 1993. Inclusion of his works is an essential component to every important video collection or archive.

Since 1972, Campbell created an evolving laboratory of distinctive works. These productions fly in the face of Verb 1. fly in the face of - go against; "This action flies in the face of the agreement"
fly in the teeth of

go against, violate, break - fail to agree with; be in violation of; as of rules or patterns; "This sentence violates the rules of syntax"
 the established and prevailing notions of television and film, yet are among the most exuberant and penetrating contemporary cinematic works produced here -- or anywhere -- in any genre. Campbell's oeuvre speaks with a humility and a perspicuous per·spic·u·ous  
adj.
Clearly expressed or presented; easy to understand.



[From Latin perspicuus, from perspicere, to see through; see perspicacious.
 brevity of form that is a continual relief to a medium usually long on production value and short on intelligence. Although he chose to work within the parameters of low-budget, independent video, Campbell's adroit, inventive approach to storytelling compares substantively with the most influential auteurs
For the band, see The Auteurs.


The term auteur (French for author) is used to describe film directors (or, more rarely, producers, or writers) who are considered to have a distinctive, recognizable style, because they (a) repeatedly
 anywhere working under the umbrella of film or media--based cinema. Behind a deceivingly unsophisticated veneer lay an intellectually astute examination of narrative cinematic structure and a cognitive dramatic fluency that transcends the limitations of technology.

"Campbell creates temporary disturbances through irony and other transgressions. If his work has any ability, it is to be found in the disquieting dis·qui·et  
tr.v. dis·qui·et·ed, dis·qui·et·ing, dis·qui·ets
To deprive of peace or rest; trouble.

n.
Absence of peace or rest; anxiety.

adj. Archaic
Uneasy; restless.
 consistency of subversion." (Colin Campbell: Otherwise Worldly by Bruce W. Ferguson)

Campbell's works explore fractured multiple territories. The stories revel in dualities that parody, skew (1) The misalignment of a document or punch card in the feed tray or hopper that prohibits it from being scanned or read properly.

(2) In facsimile, the difference in rectangularity between the received and transmitted page.
 and ultimately reinvent popular notions of glamour, sophistication so·phis·ti·cate  
v. so·phis·ti·cat·ed, so·phis·ti·cat·ing, so·phis·ti·cates

v.tr.
1. To cause to become less natural, especially to make less naive and more worldly.

2.
, celebrity, sexuality and modernity. They careen forward, unapologetically transparent, sketchy yet fully developed, scripted but spontaneous, playful though serious, naive but sophisticated, camp and...well, they are definitely camp. The plots unfold toward an implied certain resolution, then veer off in a new direction, slipping into a new territory, peeling away the artifice, jump--cutting to a new subtext sub·text  
n.
1. The implicit meaning or theme of a literary text.

2. The underlying personality of a dramatic character as implied or indicated by a script or text and interpreted by an actor in performance.
. We are kept off--kilter, suspicious of the intent and complicit com·plic·it  
adj.
Associated with or participating in a questionable act or a crime; having complicity: newspapers complicit with the propaganda arm of a dictatorship.
 in the farce being perpetrated. Intellectual pretensions are continually imploded im·plode  
v. im·plod·ed, im·plod·ing, im·plodes

v.intr.
To collapse inward violently.

v.tr.
1. To cause to collapse inward violently.

2.
.

To Campbell it all began with storytelling. "I think everybody likes stories," he told Sue Ditta in A Work in Progress: An Interview with Colin Campbell. "If you can tell a good story instead of something that appears to be merely confessional or diaristic, you probably will have an audience that is interested in what you are saying. If you can bind the viewer up with a persona that makes them emphatic, that is a more interesting way to do it."

This is the homespun cousin of structural postmodernism, showing both the artifice and the strategy pulling back the curtain of illusion to share the deception, speaking from both sides of the mouth, simultaneously constructing and deconstructing the fiction. This Oz is always just an elaborate dream. I am tempted to draw parallels between Campbell and his contemporary internationalist film auteurs -- Fassbinder, Godard, Jarman, Anger, Resnais, Snow, Kuscher, Warhol, et al. The deconstructionist gods do share common narrative territories. Many of Godard's famous quips about the nature of his own filmmaking can be used to describe Campbell's works. Yes, they generally have a beginning, middle and end; and yes, it is seldom in that order Campbell sets about to tell his own intimate stories in his own personal way, through whatever means is available. He is never thinking in terms of appropriation, but he is not operating in a vacuum. Campbell's work is informed. We all go to the movies, honey. Surprise, surpris e.

Campbell remains his own greatest invention. He displays an incredible knack for comedy and feeling for comedic timing through an amazingly diverse (and entertaining) range of characters. In his early works, his multiple identities are concerned with simply delivering a monologue directly into or slightly askew a·skew  
adv. & adj.
To one side; awry: rugs lying askew.



[Probably a-2 + skew.
 of the seeing eye of the camera. Throughout his more elaborate works featuring multiple actors, the personal monologue continues as an internal diegetic narration. Coming full circle, his brilliant late works allow us privilege to new personae, again addressing the lens to speak to us directly. By allowing us confederacy Confederacy, name commonly given to the Confederate States of America (1861–65), the government established by the Southern states of the United States after their secession from the Union.  to the gossipy confessional disclosures, we are made complicit in the fictional deceit. This intimacy creates an almost interactive illusion of camaraderie. The experience of watching becomes participatory and personally inclusive.

Campbell's many fictional escapades tread a territory somewhere between kitsch, avant--garde, gender studies and I Love Lucy I Love Lucy is a television situation comedy, starring Lucille Ball and Desi Arnaz, also featuring Vivian Vance and William Frawley. The series originally ran from October 15, 1951, to May 6, 1957, on CBS (181 episodes, including the "lost" Christmas episode and original . His unique, hybrid body of work, perhaps inadvertently, defines the notion of postmodern Canadian urbane. With his demise, we lose some of our most enduring femme femme  
adj.
Slang Exhibiting stereotypical or exaggerated feminine traits. Used especially of lesbians and gay men.

n.
1. Slang One who is femme.

2. Informal A woman or girl.
 fatales -- genuine homegrown movie stars all. We mourn the loss of the triple--threat sisters: Mildred, Robin and Colleena; we will miss the future hijinks hi·jinks  
pl.n.
Variant of high jinks.

Noun 1. hijinks - noisy and mischievous merrymaking
high jinks, high jinx, jinks

jollification, merrymaking, conviviality - a boisterous celebration; a merry festivity
 of Art Star, Anna, Moira, Mary, Colleeta and their numerous colourful co--conspirators. Their wit and wisdom will be missed more than they ever knew. Without them our world has become a decidedly more linear place.

Sexual definitions as we know them don't apply to this brave new world Brave New World

Aldous Huxley’s grim picture of the future, where scientific and social developments have turned life into a tragic travesty. [Br. Lit.: Magill I, 79]

See : Dystopia


Brave New World
. Campbell's work raises the bar, defining a new skewed skewed

curve of a usually unimodal distribution with one tail drawn out more than the other and the median will lie above or below the mean.

skewed Epidemiology adjective Referring to an asymmetrical distribution of a population or of data
 behavioural model for society. It's back to the drawing board for Masters and Johnson Masters and Johnson, pioneering research team in the field of human sexuality, consisting of the gynecologist

William Howell Masters, 1915–2001, b. Cleveland, and the psychologist

Virginia Eshelman Johnson, 1925–, b.
. There can be no straight gay, androgyny Androgyny
Hermaphrodites

half-man, half-woman; offspring of Hermes and Aphrodite. [Gk. Myth.: Hall, 153]

Iphis

Cretan maiden reared as boy because father ordered all daughters killed. [Gk. Myth.
, transy, fairy or fey. There are no nancy girls, cross--dressers, pansies, butches, flip--flops or ponces. Things here are no longer defined by former sexual codes or conduct. All are beautiful in their own way. All are comfortable in their new fictitious skin. The only way to describe these folk is as just plain "critters." And so they live in perfect harmony. Theirs is a better place. And to make matters even more interesting, their emperor has found a whole trunk of new clothes.

"Why does she call herself Ms. Susan?" "That's easy...if you call yourself Miss...you're single. If you call yourself Mrs.... you're married. But if you call yourself Ms.... it means you're bisexual." (Bad Girls)

Typically the stylized styl·ize  
tr.v. styl·ized, styl·iz·ing, styl·iz·es
1. To restrict or make conform to a particular style.

2. To represent conventionally; conventionalize.
 dramas proceed through breezy narrative twists and turns to eventually arrive at a logical but totally unexpected conclusion. Everything begins slightly askew then is spun deliriously off--kilter. In a rare reversal of established sense, fiction becomes stranger than fact. The bevy bevy

a flock of birds.
 of wacky characters unfailingly become endearing to us, like those odd--ball relatives we all have but can't quite believe we are related to. At this Betty Ford clinic, Elizabeth Taylor is as dotty as our favourite aunt. Like us, they are slightly south of the archetypical ar·che·type  
n.
1. An original model or type after which other similar things are patterned; a prototype: "'Frankenstein' . . . 'Dracula' . . . 'Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde' . . .
 classical ideal. Like us, they are absolutely gorgeous. We revel in wishing it were our own reflection. In the oddly naive geek--chic loop of their own self-proclaimed perfection, participants drift contentedly within their eccentricity, marching to their own drummer. Performers are as peculiar as the kooky characters they portray. Talent ranges from brilliant to good, to adequate, to embarrassing. It' s all so revealing, inviting, seductiv e, sophomoric soph·o·mor·ic  
adj.
1. Of or characteristic of a sophomore.

2. Exhibiting great immaturity and lack of judgment: sophomoric behavior.
, pretentious -- so desirable. Everything is so painfully amateurish when art imitates life. It's all of course, absurdly hilarious.

Consumer-video technology demands low-end production. Hang a Venetian blind on a brick wall and it's a window. Place a plant in front and it becomes a restaurant. Project a slide on the wall and you are transported to Rome. Unabashedly un·a·bashed  
adj.
1. Not disconcerted or embarrassed; poised.

2. Not concealed or disguised; obvious: unabashed disgust.
 direct, the productions revel in their own faux facade with an almost conspiratorial con·spir·a·to·ri·al  
adj.
Of, relating to, or characteristic of conspirators or a conspiracy: a conspiratorial act; a conspiratorial smile.
 glee. Campbell's work is always modestly opportunistic in the way it integrates available resources. The early work is recorded on half-inch black and white, unedited, with a Sony PortaPac. Over the next decade (as basic technology is made available through the art community) straight--cut editing introduces new narrative devices, intercut in·ter·cut  
v. in·ter·cut, in·ter·cut·ting, in·ter·cuts

v.tr.
To interweave (two separate, usually concurrent scenes) in a film; crosscut.

v.intr.
To crosscut.
 fragments, parallel storylines, the occasional reverse shot and multiple points of view. As consumer technology advances, the work appropriates the available means. The final works are shot on Hi 8 and digitally edited. This idiot savant idiot savant
n. pl. idiot savants
A mentally retarded person who exhibits genius in a highly specialized area, such as mathematics.
 is a crafty fox. High camp on a low budget. This work is not only fiscally responsible. It's actually financially successful.

What defines a great Canadian film? What defines a great Canadian filmmaker? We are generally a modest, self-effacing culture, yet we constantly try to measure our success against some unobtainable big-time foreign acceptance. We crave international commercial success but have no viable homegrown support, no real distribution network. Gotta make it. Gotta make it. Gotta make it. Oh, Canada -- get over it. In the words of actress Jackie Burroughs, the reason she chooses Canada is: "There is no fear of failure because there is no possibility of success." Campbell's work is free from the fear of failure. It's successful. He summarily dismisses the notion of his endeavour as industry. He utilizes film (video) as a convenient storytelling tool and searches out the most economical, least complicated means to realize his stories. The end is greater than the means. The whole is bigger than the sum of its parts. Campbell never participated in the Canadian film scene. He was the Canadian film scene. His entire oeuvre p robably cost less than a single Telefilm--financed feature--film project. He made his cinema without needing or asking permission. He insisted on remaining exclusive. There can be no compromising authorship. I call this cinema povera.

I am an unabashed fan of Colin's art. It has made a big impression on me for nearly three decades. I still can't figure out how or why it became such a significant influence. Perhaps I adore these works for all the wrong reasons. Perhaps I can actually locate myself in these fictions. Perhaps we all can. In the end, I most admire just how sensitive and funny these stories are. I like the unapologetic low-band aesthetics, the irreverent cult--drama performances, the unabashed voguing of pretension Pretension
See also Hypocrisy.

Prey (See QUARRY.)

Pride (See BOASTFULNESS, EGOTISM, VANITY.)

Absolon

vain, officious parish clerk. [Br. Lit.
, and ultimately the optimistic look at the sunny side of a world in which all are free and happy to be just who they are...well sort of.

A few thousand words are barely enough to scratch the surface of the multiple strategies presented in the collective body of this great artist's work. Fortunately, the oeuvre has thoroughly and extensively been examined in available scholarly texts. It will undoubtedly continue to be interpreted, analyzed and deconstructed. I hope this artide can serve as a kind of informal introduction -- a crude sketch or simple map to the work of this essential Canadian auteur.

RELATED ARTICLE: Let's share a few favourite moments from Campbell's classic 1979 underground masterpiece, Modern Love.

Meet sexually ambiguous Robin (Colin). By day she works as an office temp running a Xerox machine in the TD Centre. At night she likes to party at the Beverley Tevern. When the incorrigible in·cor·ri·gi·ble  
adj.
1. Incapable of being corrected or reformed: an incorrigible criminal.

2. Firmly rooted; ineradicable: incorrigible faults.

3.
 Lamonte Del Monte (Played by David Buchan) Shows up in his gold lame outfit to share Black Labels and Cheezies, things go from good to bad to worse and poor na<ve Robin gets quite an education. Oh, you cad, Lamonte.

Lamonte: "Like some Cheezies?"

Robin: "Oh, I love Cheezies. I didn't know you could get Cheezies here."

Lamonte: "Oh yeah, well you really can't but Wally keeps a few things behind the bar, special like"

Robin: "I guess he knows you're pretty important in show biz. What are you doing in Toronto now?"

Lamonte: "Working on a TV show, doing a special with Anne Murray."

Robin: "With Anne Murray! I really like Anne Murray."

Lamonte: "Oh yes, she's had a couple of really big hits you know. She's got a hit that's number one in the States."

Robin: "I'm not really creative like you Monte."

Lamonte: "Babe you want something, you got to reach out and grab it."

Robin: "Oh, I do too. Is this an original?"

Lamonte: "Uh huh...it's an oil."

Robin: "A real oil painting. It must be from Europe, I bet."

Lamonte: "Well sort of from Europe. I mean it was painted from a photograph that was taken in Europe. A friend of mine was there recently."

Robin: "It's very realistic. Is it France?"

Lamonte: "I think so. South of France South of France south n the South of France → le Sud de la France, le Midi  I believe. It's done with vanishing points."

Robin: "When he said water sports water sports Urophilia, see there , I thought he meant swimming. I certainly never knew people did things like that. If only my mother knew. And all those little machines and instruments. I never saw a bedroom with so many outlets. I always thought a French tickler was some kind of bilingual joke. Remember that day you didn't untie me until noon?"

Lamonte: "Boy, do I."

Robin: "But what about romantic love?"

Lamonte: "That's bunch of bullshit. Get with it. This is 1978. Modern love is where it's at now. We're just like two buses that pass in the night. Modern love, well it's like an orchestra. There's a horn section and no strings, that's how I want our relationship to be...no strings attached."

Robin: "What about commitment, Monte?"

Lamonte: "I'd never commit to you."

Robin: "Romantic love...I guess I could get into it -- once I find another room, another job...but there will never be another Monte."
COPYRIGHT 2002 Canadian Independent Film & Television Publishing Association
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2002, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Title Annotation:includes related excerpts; producer of video art works
Author:Gledhill, Randy
Publication:Take One
Article Type:Obituary
Geographic Code:1CANA
Date:Mar 1, 2002
Words:2208
Previous Article:Guy Maddin's Dracula: Pages from a Virgin's Diary.(the making of a dance film)
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