Printer Friendly
The Free Library
14,757,922 articles and books
Member login
User name  
Password 
 
Join us Forgot password?

Michel Auder: (S)extant et plus.


"Auder is a poet of moods, brief encounters, tragic moments of our miserable civilization. When I used to visit him at the Chelsea Hotel, around 1970, the video camera was always there, always going, a part of his house, a part of his life, eyes, hands. It still is. A most magnificent love affair: a life's obsession." These words, written in 1991 by Jonas Mekas, the other pope of the cinematic diary, confirm the importance of Michel Auder Video recording was invented in 1956 as an intermediary in live broadcast television. It was a cheap means to pre-record and edit regularly scheduled programs taped from live events. , today an illustrious unknown in France, an artist who in New York New York, state, United States
New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of
 attained mythic status without ever becoming famous. Now reparation Compensation for an injury; redress for a wrong inflicted.

The losing countries in a war often must pay damages to the victors for the economic harm that the losing countries inflicted during wartime. These damages are commonly called military reparations.
 has been made with a retrospective showing most of his videos, films, and photographs.

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

Born in Soissons, France, in 1944, Auder moved to Paris in his late adolescence and worked there as a fashion photographer. He then became associated with the Zanzibar group, a collective of experimental filmmakers led by Philippe Garrel. Auder was fascinated by the New Wave and the films of Pasolini, and eventually with Andy Warhol's Chelsea Girls (1966), which jolted his vision of cinema and convinced him to produce films that followed an aesthetics of marginality. At the same time, he crossed paths with Nico (the Factory muse who would go on to sing with the Velvet Underground) and even more consequentially with Viva, the Warhol "superstar" whom Auder would marry in Las Vegas in 1969. A series of films followed, including Keeping Busy (1969), fictionalizing Viva's social and sexual escapades and modeled on the nonnarrative verite vé·ri·té  
n.
Cinéma vérité.
 diary. Auder ultimately moved to New York in 1970, settling into the Chelsea Hotel and putting out a new "trash" version of Cleopatra (1970), shown at the Cannes Film Festival Cannes Film Festival

Film festival held annually in Cannes, France. First held in 1946 for the recognition of artistic achievement, the festival came to provide a rendezvous for those interested in the art and influence of the movies.
, where even in a bowdlerized version it caused a scandal.

This adventure would definitively mark Auder's orientation toward a more diaristic and mobile medium, the antithesis of Hollywood: video. An amateur and assiduous as·sid·u·ous  
adj.
1. Constant in application or attention; diligent: an assiduous worker who strove for perfection. See Synonyms at busy.

2.
 chronicler in the Mekas tradition, Auder films everything: his private life with Viva, their daughter's first steps, a garden party at John and Yoko's, but also the most ordinary activities--eating, kissing, calling people on the phone. At the heart of the triangular system in which he is not only "Viewer and Participant," as the exhibition title has it, but also documenter, he archives and captures candid and painful moments that can then be arranged into a collective autobiography. Often described as the quintessential voyeur voy·eur
n.
1. A person who derives sexual gratification from observing the naked bodies or sexual acts of others, especially from a secret vantage point.

2. An obsessive observer of sordid or sensational subjects.
, Auder defends himself by systematically implicating im·pli·cate  
tr.v. im·pli·cat·ed, im·pli·cat·ing, im·pli·cates
1. To involve or connect intimately or incriminatingly: evidence that implicates others in the plot.

2.
 himself in the environments he films and by using the camera as a tool for social interaction. At the same time, he establishes quasi-systematic distance between the events filmed and their reuse years later, as in the magnificent My Last Bag of Heroin (For Real), 1986/93.

Several of Auder's projects of the '80s, when he kicked his habit and met his second wife, Cindy Sherman, involved television both as subject and material. This collection of remixes chronicling an epoch--specifically, the Reagan era--is composed of small gems, like the video about the 1984 Olympic Games in Los Angeles, The Games: Olympic Variations, 1984, with its simultaneous eroticization and mechanization mechanization

Use of machines, either wholly or in part, to replace human or animal labour. Unlike automation, which may not depend at all on a human operator, mechanization requires human participation to provide information or instruction.
 of the body. Auder's work unfolds as a great intimate and social fresco punctuated by stolen moments, ordinary instants--and it's all the more fascinating for that.

Translated from French by Jeanine Herman
COPYRIGHT 2005 Artforum International Magazine, Inc.
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2005, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

 Reader Opinion

Title:

Comment:



 

Article Details
Printer friendly Cite/link Email Feedback
Author:Moulene, Claire
Publication:Artforum International
Article Type:Critical Essay
Geographic Code:4EUFR
Date:Nov 1, 2005
Words:546
Previous Article:Alain Sechas: Palais de Tokyo.(Critical Essay)
Next Article:Jeff Wall: Schaulager.(Critical Essay)
Topics:



Related Articles
Critical Essays on Alice Walker.(Review)
Documentary and anti-graphic: three at the Julien Levy Gallery, 1935. (Feature).
Montaigne et le travail de l'amitie: Du lit de mort d'Etienne de la Boetie aux Essais de 1595. (Reviews).(Book Review)
Histoire et litterature au siecle de Montaigne: Melanges offerts a Claude-Gilbert Dubois. .(Book Review)
Editorial.(Editorial)
Michel Auder: Chronicles and Other Scenes.
Errata.(Correction Notice)
Notes on Edward Said's view of Michel Foucault.

Terms of use | Copyright © 2009 Farlex, Inc. | Feedback | For webmasters | Submit articles