Seamus Harahan: Spencer Brownstone Gallery.Seamus Harahan's large-scale, three-channel video projection Holylands, 2004, documents the street life of an urban community that looks as if it's populated almost entirely by men and boys. By day, they hang out in groups or meander down the block drinking liquor out of bottles concealed in plastic bags; by night they commit petty crimes, such as vandalism, and possibly engage in more nefarious activities, furtively gathering around idling vans in a way that screams, "Drug deal in progress!" They roughhouse rough·house n. Rowdy, uproarious behavior or play. v. also rough·housed, rough·hous·ing, rough·hous·es v.intr. To engage in rowdy, uproarious behavior or play. v.tr. , amuse themselves with what's at hand (which isn't much--cardboard cartons, water escaping from an opened fire hydrant) and throw their arms around each other's shoulders in the universal language of male bonding male bonding Psychology The formation of a close nonsexual relationship between 2 or more men; guy stuff. Cf Bonding. . Young or old, clad in the cheap windbreakers of the working stiff or the hoodies of the wannabe gangster, they display a nervous indolence that suggests stress, underemployment un·der·em·ployed adj. 1. Employed only part-time when one needs and desires full-time employment. 2. Inadequately employed, especially employed at a low-paying job that requires less skill or training than one possesses. , the volatile boredom of the demobilized. They could be the inhabitants
The game is based loosely on the concepts from SameGame. of any number of "post-conflict" cities the world over, but in fact live in the Belfast neighborhood unofficially named the Holylands after its biblical street names. Harahan was still living in the area between 2001 and 2003--the period during which Holylands was shot, and a time when the city was several years into the detente dé·tente n. 1. A relaxing or easing, as of tension between rivals. 2. A policy toward a rival nation or bloc characterized by increased diplomatic, commercial, and cultural contact and a desire to reduce tensions, as through ushered in by the 1998 accords among Northern Ireland's political parties. Small details ground the video in its sociopolitical so·ci·o·po·li·ti·cal adj. Involving both social and political factors. sociopolitical Adjective of or involving political and social factors context: Graffiti on a construction barrier, for example, reads SUPPORT THE TURKISH DEATH FAST, an expression of solidarity with Turkish prisoners' hunger strikes that harks back to Northern Ireland's own prisoners' hunger strikes twenty years before. [ILLUSTRATION OMITTED] Harahan also turns his attention to the more mundane elements of his milieu--dandelions blowing in the breeze, birds and planes drifting by, an abandoned easy chair squatting on the sidewalk--to create a sense of the textures of everyday life. At the same time, he is careful to establish distance. He makes no attempt to hide the fact that Holylands is essentially a montage of surveillance-style videos: Shot in available light with a handheld digital video camera, his footage is often so grainy grain·y adj. grain·i·er, grain·i·est 1. Made of or resembling grain; granular. 2. Resembling the grain of wood. 3. Having a granular appearance due to the clumping of particles in the emulsion. or murky that it's difficult to make out exactly what's going on What's Going On is a record by American soul singer Marvin Gaye. Released on May 21, 1971 (see 1971 in music), What's Going On reflected the beginning of a new trend in soul music. , and his camera work and editing are jittery and abrupt. There is almost no diegetic sound; the action seems to take place behind sound-proof glass, with an eclectic selection of music (hip-hop, rock 'n' roll rock 'n' roll: see rock music. , traditional Irish folk) functioning as a sometimes haunting commentary, as, for instance, when a teenager is shown jumping down from a fence in slow motion while "Dear Irish Boy" is played on uilleann pipes. Positioning himself (and by extension, the viewer) as a sort of mole or double agent, Harahan is an intimate observer but an outsider nonetheless, identifying with his subjects without purporting to explain them. His ambiguous, open-ended, anti-monumental approach to the documentary form seems designed to undermine grand narratives--both the high drama of Belfast as the epicenter of the Troubles, and the Chamber of Commerce fairytale in which the city rises from the ashes to become a magnet for foreign investors and members of the "creative class." Here, flickering hypnotically from channel to channel, Holylands proposes that the real story is more complex and perhaps unknowable un·know·a·ble adj. Impossible to know, especially being beyond the range of human experience or understanding: the unknowable mysteries of life. , fragmented as it is among a multitude of personal histories--of which, the artist might be the first to acknowledge, his is only one. |
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