Jaki Irvine: Frith Street Gallery.Soho's Frith Street is no stranger to spooky goings-on. At No. 22, John Logie Baird
John Logie Baird (August 13 1888 – June 14 1946) was a Scottish engineer and inventor of the world's first working television system. invented the television: The crossover between the Victorian inventor's wave-channeling invention and his belief in Spiritualism spiritualism: see spiritism. spiritualism Belief that the souls of the dead can make contact with the living, usually through a medium or during abnormal mental states such as trances. was evoked, some years ago, in a series of wraithlike Adj. 1. wraithlike - lacking in substance; "strange fancies of unreal and shadowy worlds"- W.A.Butler; "dim shadowy forms"; "a wraithlike column of smoke" shadowy projections by Tony Oursler in nearby Soho Square. No. 60, home of Frith Street Gallery, is a recurring flash point for coincidence, as one discovers in Jaki Irvine's six-part video installation Towards a Polar Sea, 2005. In the opener, the only segment in black-and-white, gallery director Jane Hamlyn recalls how a Craigie Horsfield photograph she'd once exhibited attracted a visitor who not only knew the female sitter but had lived in the gallery years before, when it was a private residence, and where this woman had visited him. The Georgian house--which, with its creaking floorboards and compact rooms, retains its domestic ambience--is thus set up as amenable to revenants; by contrast, in capturing the current incumbents' self-consciousness before the lens (that of Hamlyn in particular), Irvine makes them seem very real. She then uses these individuals to sketch a narrative that pulls them into the orbit of the past: The last journey of Victorian explorer Sir John Franklin, who disappeared in the Arctic in 1847, and is thought also to have lived at 60 Frith Street. [ILLUSTRATION OMITTED] The second film finds a redheaded red·head·ed adj. 1. Having red hair. 2. Having a red head: a redheaded woodpecker. Adj. 1. gallery employee, Karon Hepburn, wearing mourning black and gazing expressionlessly through a window before descending a flight of stairs Noun 1. flight of stairs - a stairway (set of steps) between one floor or landing and the next flight of steps, flight staircase, stairway - a way of access (upward and downward) consisting of a set of steps . "Every morning I awake to find your ghost self has wrapped its arm around me in the night," says a female voice-over, nudging an identification of Hepburn with Franklin's widow, Lady Jane. The sinuous interchange between past and present, truth and fiction, is sustained in subsequent films: In one, a 16-mm film is shown being packed up in the gallery office; a loupe loupe (lldbomacp) [Fr.] a magnifying lens. loupe n. A small magnifying lens. loupe a magnifying lens. lingers over a woman's face in a strip from one of Irvine's previous films. The voice-over, apparently from Franklin's diaries--"If the earth opens and swallows me up, this does not mean my trust in it was misplaced mis·place tr.v. mis·placed, mis·plac·ing, mis·plac·es 1. a. To put into a wrong place: misplace punctuation in a sentence. b. "--might briefly position the magnifier's user as the explorer thinking of his distant wife, or, more generally, could imply that his own demise was just one of a lineage of losses in the common adventure of love. Faced with such deft deployment of indeterminacy, one wonders whether something more than a blind spot for bathos ba·thos n. 1. a. An abrupt, unintended transition in style from the exalted to the commonplace, producing a ludicrous effect. b. An anticlimax. 2. a. led Irvine to film four of the gallery's employees sitting together in a bare room while reciting more agonized ag·o·nize v. ag·o·nized, ag·o·niz·ing, ag·o·niz·es v.intr. 1. To suffer extreme pain or great anguish. 2. To make a great effort; struggle. v.tr. journal fragments, as if they were the stranded exploration team. This show, we are told, marks the hundredth exhibition at Frith Street Gallery; and the comparison of Franklin's fatal journey with that of several people selling art feels radically imbalanced. Yet Irvine closes off beautifully, framing Hamlyn lying down in the basement in which the last segment was shown, her head on a leather pillow, vignetted by an ellipse of daylight. "I am lying on the floor in this building, listening to it creak and shiver in the dark," the voice-over murmurs. But the dealer's tensed features--the presumably pre·sum·a·ble adj. That can be presumed or taken for granted; reasonable as a supposition: presumable causes of the disaster. prosaic art-world worries that crease them briefly substituting for those of her dead namesake, the culturally erudite Jane Franklin--are what weight the space with insinuations of an obscure past and a multiplicity of potential futures. It's a demonstration that the art of using coincidences lies not in discovering one--that's easy--but in creating a setting that makes it shimmer with significance. |
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