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Ulrike Ottinger: Renaissance Society.


Travel remains the surest path to the pleasures and politics of defamiliarization. German independent filmmaker Ulrike Ottinger's Southeast Passage: A Journey to New Blank Spots on the Map of Europe, 2002, is a three-part, six-hour-plus digital video that records aspects of a journey through sections of Poland, Slovakia, Hungary, Romania, Bulgaria, Ukraine, and Turkey. In the context of a contemporary Europe committed to some kind of union from the Atlantic to the Urals, Ottinger's film is a reminder of regional difference as an antidote to continental hegemony. A kind of nonnarrative post-travelogue, the work is at times meandering and slowly paced, as Ottinger casually films the towns and landscapes that trickle endlessly by her car window, and at times intense and tautly focused, as she carefully shoots unexpected examples of Art Nouveau art nouveau (är' nvō`), decorative-art movement centered in Western Europe. It began in the 1880s as a reaction against the historical emphasis of mid-19th-century art, but did not survive World War I. architecture, long-abandoned Jewish areas, and the market and communal life of small towns and neighborhoods. Even when what's onscreen is banal or dreary--possibly especially then--one can tell the filmmaker is seeing it all for the first time. The film is a constellation of reflective snippets driven first by what Ottinger encounters but also by what she seeks: a frank examination of the patterns of life and history in some of Europe's least observed and economically most depressed places.

Ottinger's opus is divided into three parts: "From Wroclaw to Varna"; "Odessa

Odessa, city, Ukraine

Odessa (ōdĕs`ə, Rus. ədyĕ`sə), Ukr. Odesa, city (1989 pop. 1,115,000), capital of Odessa region, in Ukraine, a port on Odessa Bay of the Black Sea.
"; and "Istanbul Istanbul (ĭs'tănbl`, ĭstan`bl), city (1990 pop. 6,748,435), capital of Istanbul prov., NW Turkey, on both sides of the Bosporus at its entrance into the Sea of Marmara.." The first, a leisurely and sequential document of her journey from Poland to the Bulgarian port on the Black Sea, is the closest to a classic road trip, a study of the way not usually taken. Ottinger's itinerary brings her from Wroclaw, Poland, to Kosice Košice (kô`shĭtsĕ), Ger. Kaschau, Hung. Kassa, city (1991 pop. 235,160), E Slovakia. It is a major industrial center and transportation hub and a market for the surrounding agricultural area., Slovakia, to the towns of Eger

Eger, city, Czech Republic

Eger, Czech Republic: see Cheb.

Eger, city, Hungary

Eger (ĕ`gĕr), Ger. Erlau, city (1991 est. pop. 62,474), NE Hungary, on the Eger River. It is the commercial center of a wine-producing region and has food- and tobacco-processing plants.
 and Szeged Szeged (sĕ`gĕd), city (1991 est. pop. 176,100), S Hungary, at the confluence of the Tisza and Maros rivers. It is a river port, a railroad hub, and an agricultural center. Famous for its paprika and salami, its chief products are chemicals, glass, and textiles. It is well-known for its outdoor concerts held each summer. in Hungary, to Timisoara, Romania, and finally to Vidin and Varna in Bulgaria, with much countryside in between. She films the vicissitudes of place, the traces everywhere of lives lived in economic duress duress n. the use of force, false imprisonment or threats (and possibly psychological torture or "brainwashing") to compel someone to act contrary to his/her wishes or interests. If duress is used to get someone to sign an agreement or execute a will, a court may find them null and void. A defendant in a criminal prosecution may raise the defense that others used duress to force him/her to take part in an alleged crime., seemingly epitomized by her study of the men and women who spend their days going from car to car selling sneakers and bric-a-brac amid the traffic at the Romanian border with Hungary. As a sound track, Ottinger uses her locations' ambient sounds, recordings of local music, or texts by twentieth-century, mostly Eastern European writers (such as Anna Akhmatova, Isaac Babel 1. BABEL - A subset of ALGOL 60, with many ALGOL W extensions.

["BABEL, A New Programming Language", R.S. Scowen, Natl Phys Lab UK, Report CCU7, 1969].
2. BABEL - Mentioned in The Psychology of Computer Programming, G.M. Weinberg, Van Nostrand 1971, p.241.
3. BABEL - A language based on higher-order functions and first-order logic.

["Graph-Based Implementation of a Functional Logic Language", H.
, Kavafis, Imre Kertesz, and Josef Roth) in voiceover. But if the filmmaker is temporarily transfixed by a child chasing pigeons or a bit of baroque balustrade, that's what we see: Her visual engagement is, finally, an end in itself.

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

The visits to Odessa (beginning with the freighter that took her there from Varna) and Istanbul reveal Ottinger attentive to the sedimentary culture of these cities, in which the present is always enacted on the past and which both have an eerie air of unreality. On the fringes of both Europe and Asia, these cities' bifurcation
Bifurcation
A term used in finance that refers to a splitting of something into two separate pieces.

Notes:
Generally, this term is used to refer to the splitting of a security into two separate pieces for the purpose of complex taxation advantages. However, it is also used to describe two divergent conditions when analyzing or evaluating market situations.
See also: Derivative, Split-Up, Synthetic
 gives them an expectant quality, as if something is going to happen that never quite does. Ottinger seeks through multiple vignettes to offer the poetics of place and people as an alternative to the politics of power. Whatever occurs under the European Union, Ottinger's film indicates that something remains untouched and unmoved, and all the more valuable for that reason.
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Title Annotation:Chicago
Author:Yood, James
Publication:Artforum International
Date:Mar 1, 2004
Words:527
Previous Article:Tim Etchells: P.S. 122.(New York)
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