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Oliver Payne and Nick Relph; gbe (modern).


Creating a modest, more charming, and less tabloid-hungry brand of sensation with a series of short films they've made with friends and each other over the past couple of years, Londoners Oliver Payne and Nick Relph Oliver Payne and Nick Relph are British artist-filmmakers who have collaborated since 1999.[1] Oliver Payne was born in 1977, Nick Relph in 1979. Both studied at Kingston University, London.  are the unanimously hailed first new kids of the post-YBA moment. In productions like Driftwood, 1999, and Mixtape, 2002, stylish, intimate, music-driven portraits of a generation under siege by youth culture intuit ways of being in a city (and on camera) where escape routes from corporate time and space seem less and less navigable. Their latest production, Gentlemen, 2003, inhabits the terminal stages of Carnaby Street, a once-fashionable and distinctively local district that recently gave up the ghost to Starbucks and the Gap. The film mourns this passing but in a perversely fascinated way: Payne and Relph want to live this death as a new sense of possibility and a sense of humor Noun 1. sense of humor - the trait of appreciating (and being able to express) the humorous; "she didn't appreciate my humor"; "you can't survive in the army without a sense of humor"
sense of humour, humor, humour
, leaving sentiments such as regret and nostalgia to Prince Charles and the longhairs. In the same way that the dandy poets of nineteenth-century. Paris embraced the prostitute and the flaneur flâ·neur  
n.
An aimless idler; a loafer.



[French, from flâner, to idle about, stroll, of Germanic origin; see pel
 as living-dead life-forms adequate to the hypnotic shopping arcades and bourgeois boulevards of their city, Payne and Relph seek states of grace in the latte-sipping, distracted lifestyles of a homogenized ho·mog·e·nize  
v. ho·mog·e·nized, ho·mog·e·niz·ing, ho·mog·e·niz·es

v.tr.
1. To make homogeneous.

2.
a. To reduce to particles and disperse throughout a fluid.

b.
, pasteurized pas·teur·ize  
tr.v. pas·teur·ized, pas·teur·iz·ing, pas·teur·iz·es
To subject (a beverage or other food) to pasteurization.



pas
, and tourist-friendly London at Christmastime.

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

Matching handheld, blatantly unfocused DV shots to the sharp-tongued, mannered phrasings of a rant on commodification Commodification (or commoditization) is the transformation of what is normally a non-commodity into a commodity, or, in other words, to assign value. As the word commodity has distinct meanings in business and in Marxist theory, commodification  and cancer (voiced by writer and curator Ian White), Gentlemen flirts with the look and feel of '60s underground cinema. Seeming to take formal cues both from early Situationist cine-tracts and postbeatnik Super-8 diaries, it updates the small, personal art film as cool entertainment for viewers raised on MTV MTV
 in full Music Television

U.S. cable television network, established in 1980 to present videos of musicians and singers performing new rock music. MTV won a wide following among rock-music fans worldwide and greatly affected the popular-music business.
. Shooting street lamps through fluttering tinsel, neon reflected in rain puddles, extreme close-ups of urinal urinal /uri·nal/ (u?ri-n'l) a receptacle for urine.

u·ri·nal
n.
A vessel into which urine is passed.
 water and window displays, mandala-like patterns of blinking Christmas lights, etc., the camera transforms banal, everyday surfaces into abstract, often psychedelic rhythms of light, motion, and color. Aestheticizing "bad" shots and mining the urban desert for fleeting moments of visual poetry, this is the first Payne and Relph production that doesn't rely on young bodies for content. Optical distortion is one way of negating the new city's (and the urban body's) insidious powers of suggestion and communication, its hyperlegibility and screenlike functions. As Gentlemen trips out on the metastatic "mall or nothing" gentrification and factory-made, mutant youth trash of Carnaby Street, its freewheeling, wisecracking voice-over seems to channel Baudelaire's opiated eye on the instant ruins and cadaverous ca·dav·er·ous
adj.
1. Suggestive of death; corpselike.

2. Having a corpselike pallor.
 seductions of early modernity. Mean-while, signaling through this flood of words and visuals, an instrumental track of free-jazz drums and bleeping Morse code transmits a more cryptic message--between the lines or from a sinking ship.

There is a kind of affirmative nihilism nihilism (nī`əlĭzəm), theory of revolution popular among Russian extremists until the fall of the czarist government (1917); the theory was given its name by Ivan Turgenev in his novel Fathers and Sons (1861).  in Payne and Relph's passionate embrace of a life-destroying environment, but they know the patient is too far gone for a surgical cure. Viral and cellular metaphors abound in this video manifesto, whose optimist-miserablist authors hope to build immunity by learning to carry the new poison inside them. As their favorite songs are remixed for advertising jingles and their subculture is replayed on cheap T-shirts, they want to be as hyperresilient and "staggeringly modern" as what out-modes them. Shooting a knockoff underground film in a Starbucks bathroom is not the same as burning it down, but, for well-mannered punks like Payne and Relph, taking back the streets is first of all an aesthetic problem, and must begin with reappropriating the image, the very absence, of the streets themselves.
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Title Annotation:New York
Author:Kelsey, John
Publication:Artforum International
Date:Jan 1, 2004
Words:584
Previous Article:Gabriel Orozco; Marian Goodman Gallery.(New York)
Next Article:Steve Wolfe; Luhring Augustine Gallery.(New York)



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