Maryam Jafri: Malmo Konstmuseum.In Costume Party, 2005, history becomes a chamber play. Written and directed by Maryam Jafri for her first solo museum presentation, the three-screen video installation features nonactors along with film and theater professionals. Other recent works hybridizing video art with film or the live arts come to mind--for different reasons, Yinka Shonibare's Un Ballo in Maschera Un ballo in maschera, or A Masked Ball, is an opera in three acts by Giuseppe Verdi with text by Antonio Somma. The opera's first production was at the Teatro Apollo, Rome, February 17, 1859. , 2004, and Jeroen de Rijke and Willem de Rooij's Mandarin Ducks, 2005--but Costume Party is an altogether more satirical project. [ILLUSTRATION OMITTED] The party guests have been invited to come dressed from their favorite historical period, and so the characters--ranging from a crusader and a monk to a cowboy and a Victorian widow--reflect defining moments in Western civilization since antiquity. Between cabaret performances and anxious talk among the guests of a violent uprising taking place "outside," it transpires that some breach of the law--a murder?--has taken place at the party. Police in trench coats arrive on the scene, bungling bun·gle v. bun·gled, bun·gling, bun·gles v.intr. To work or act ineptly or inefficiently. v.tr. To handle badly; botch. See Synonyms at botch. n. their investigation yet finding a credible culprit; at the end a merman mer·man n. A legendary sea creature having the head and upper body of a man and the tail of a fish. [mer(maid) + man.] Noun 1. in a wheelchair restores good feelings with a consoling speech. The burlesque burlesque (bûrlĕsk`) [Ital.,=mockery], form of entertainment differing from comedy or farce in that it achieves its effects through caricature, ridicule, and distortion. It differs from satire in that it is devoid of any ethical element. undertones of Costume Party leave you with the impression that the angel of history, as Walter Benjamin evoked him, could be waiting in the wings ready to take the stage as the Red Baron. The fifteen-minute video plays in a loop, and its seven scenes seem slightly detached from the ostensibly linear plot. The characters do not embody redeemed images of the past but rather represent scraps of myth that continue to be visited upon civilization as our "common heritage." But Costume Party also introduces some of history's marginal figures to upset the period archetypes: a park flasher flasher Psychiatry A person, usually a man who derives sexuoerotic stimulation from 'flashing'–ie, opening a coat, under which his doodads flap freely to the open air. See Bakerloo syndrome. , a leather fetishist, and an aging hippie chick scramble signification SIGNIFICATION, French law. The notice given of a decree, sentence or other judicial act. vaudeville-style. In a purple outfit on an impressive golden stage, the Hippie lip-synchs Doris Day's "Que Sera, Sera." The Park Pervert and the Leatherman deliver monologues on the nature of love. The actors' accents--Danish, Spanish, British, and American--unmoor the narrative from any geographical specificity and lend it a twist of perversion. Their gestures and timing are often ostentatious: Costume Party is theater played for the camera, exploiting the gaps between theatrical and cinematic conventions. In her fictionalization fic·tion·al·ize tr.v. fic·tion·al·ized, fic·tion·al·iz·ing, fic·tion·al·iz·es To treat as or make into fiction: "has fictionalized his people and their town, but we know they are real" of the search for foundations and the desire to idealize i·de·al·ize v. i·de·al·ized, i·de·al·iz·ing, i·de·al·iz·es v.tr. 1. To regard as ideal. 2. To make or envision as ideal. v.intr. 1. the past, Jafri brushes history against its grain by camping it up. In this way she uses narrative excess to dissociate dis·so·ci·ate v. dis·so·ci·at·ed, dis·so·ci·at·ing, dis·so·ci·ates v.tr. 1. To remove from association; separate: her work from history and its rulers but also to tentatively mess with her own discursive obligations--multiculturalism, the borders between fact and fiction, and identity as a garb. In this double strategy, Costume Party is best when it goes bonkers, reveling in the pleasures of its own visual impact and surprising dialogue. When the Merman is reprimanded by a man in an eighteenth-century costume for not being from any part of history, the Victorian Widow retorts, "But the imagination is part of history." By enacting the same argument, Jafri presses Costume Party's allegorical charge against the Western world's desire to exercise control over history. |
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