Opening
Series (2000, 10 min., 16mm)
I wanted to find a way of working with images that would allow them
the possibility to move more freely, to change position with each and
every screening so that over time, through their range of juxtapositions,
and ensuing meanings, I might come to know them as a sibling, a friend,
or a lover. (Philip Hoffman)
Opening Series consists of twelve segments, each segment in its own
hand-painted film canister. Using the visual references on the canisters,
the audience, prior to each screening, makes an arrangement of pictured
canisters, which orders the flow of the film.
Opening Series 1 (10 minutes, silent, 1992) Images taken at home and
in travel. I decided to start at the beginning, and slowly·a static
frame, long takes, 3-shot rhythms, silent, about looking and listening
to light. (Philip Hoffman)
Opening Series 2 (7 minutes, silent, 1994) The films show a garden erupting
in colour, a bevy of deer staring back at the lens; lying side by side
I see her solemn face break into a smile·for the camera? for me? A still
life comes alive, as he arranges flowers in late afternoon, a nervous
smile comes to meet a slow tracking shot of his painting·filmed flowers
meeting painted flowers; a group of ducks swoop down in the autumn night
sky; in the Kentucky Fried Chicken parking lot a trio of pigeons picking
on the discarded bones of their relatives; the river in moonlight. (Philip
Hoffman)
·A continuing series of films that are projected in a different order
each time they·re shown, Opening Series gives evidence of Hoffman·s
interest in chance and open form. Opening Series is presented to the
audience in several separate film canisters, each labeled with a unique
graphic, as they enter the theatre. Each participant changes the position
of one of the boxes, and the final result is edited together on the
spot, in an order determined by the collective choices of the audience.·
(Chris Gehman, Images Festival Catalogue, 2001)
Opening Series 3 (6 minutes, sound, 1995) Live sound performance/accompaniment
by Gerry Shikatani Spoken text in English, Japanese and French
Opening Series 3 features poet Gerry Shikatani and explores the relationships
surrounding language, image and sound, set to the backdrop of a gravel
pit. When I got the footage back from the lab I was disappointed because
of the periodic flipping of the image. After screening the footage several
times I realized that the malfunctioning camera rendered the filmed-nature,
unnatural ...and this poses questions: what is nature? What is natural?
Made at the gravel pit, down the road, Gerry gestures in visual and
sound, sometimes coming to meet the lens, sometimes out of the picture...
a stone... a feather, his script/poems floating like big ships in a
puddle. The irregular, yet rhythmic sound of the camera's inner workings
echoes Gerry's phrasing, and re-phrasing... This film turned into Kokoro
is for Heart (7 minutes, sound, 1999) (Philip Hoffman)
Opening Series 4 (10 minutes, silent, 2000) Plain and simple... a reflection
of grieving. (Philip Hoffman)
REVIEWS
& ARTICLES:
Opening
Series: an interview with Philip Hoffman by
Barbara Sternberg, Cinecycle, Toronto, Winter 1993 (text
only)
