Images
Talk (April 2001)
DARKROOM
Thirty years
ago Richard Kerr and I set up a darkroom in my basement and I suppose it was
there where I became drawn in to photographic processes... I have always been
excited by that moment when the print is put into the developer and the image
begins to appear. It’s a fleeting moment when change is most focused and
visible and I suppose I’ve continued to dwell in that moment of transformation
in my filmmaking...
Here’s an excerpt from passing through/torn
formations, it’s Christopher Dewdney’s poem Out of Control: The Quarry:
“It is a warm
grey afternoon in August. You are in the country, in a deserted quarry of light
grey Devonian limestone in Southeren
In passing through/torn formations I tried
to create a form that wasn’t frozen or fossilized (as film tends to do)... and
this was accomplished through the layering of dialogue and collected sound, the
layering of story, the repetition of story, superimposition (sometimes three separate
image systems on the screen at the same time)… It is my hope that this
polyphonic form allows for participation from the audience, and at the same
time suggests that all family stories have several perspectives, there is no such
thing as one objective fact/truth, or way of looking at things…
I suppose this open form is taken up further in Opening Series where the audience orders
twelve boxes like this and determines an order (there is an interrelated film
in each box)... each time the film gets played there is a new order, and I
track the various orders as the film screens... What I learn through Opening Series often finds itself in
other films. For example, some sections in Opening Series 2 and 4 find themselves in What these ashes wanted, a somewhat more
narrative driven film, so it’s a kind of testing ground for images as well.
I have taken up
a method borrowed from Adrienne Rich’s feminist dictum: Collect Reflect Revise.
The method of collecting is spontaneous and non-scripted, in which I try to
dwell in that fleeting moment, watching time through the lens…
GINSBERG
In the early 1980's, Allen Ginsburg gave a talk and led a
meditation at Ontario Institute for Studies in Education and recently I found
the tape I had recorded and played it for Janine and she bounced it into
Public’s recent Lexicon issue. Here
it is.
“It is possible through mindfulness practice, to bring
about some kind of orderly observation of the phenomenology of the mind and to
produce a poetics. From that instant by instant recognition of thought forms comes a notion of spontaneous poetry which Jack Kerouac and
Gertrude Stein practiced. And that form of poetry is a form of Oriental form
that is composed on the tongue rather than on paper. It is also a Western form,
a very American form. Blues and Calypso poetics were always made up on the
spot. There always was a formulaic structure as in all Bardic
poetics but it was dependent on the Back blues singer to get it on and make up
on the spot all the rhymes and all the personal comments, all the moaning,
empty bed samsara lamentations of the moment while
singing. So that Tibetan poetics and American poetics are based on the
spontaneous. The key to this is that you have to accept that the first thought
is the best thought, you have to recognize that the
mind is shapely. Because the mind has shape, what passes through the mind is
the mind’s own, so that is all in one mind, it is all linked connectedness and
consequence.
Ginsberg’s method may sound familiar to people who
follow the work of Brakhage for instance, where his
muse directs him through his work... I appreciate this link with the Muse but
my background has directed me towards seeing it in a less individualised state.
Through the 1990's I have come to appreciate the way other people can
contribute to my projects… that there is an energy around the making of a work
that can create a more participatory model during the making... in other words,
I get a lot of help from my loved ones, friends and assistants and I see them
as part-makers of the film. Chance elements come into play when this kind of
energy is set up around a project, and through people, these chance elements
often help direct the film. The film is a tuning fork, resonating through people
and events.
EDITING
Whereas the spontaneous is most connected to the
shooting of films and is quite light and free the editing process has been
tortuous, these collected concrete forms of memory do not always go together,
and it can take a long time before I sculpt them into shape, blending story and
form. Maybe this is why some of my films take five to seven years to complete.
FILM FARM
This process-oriented approach to making was used when
I and my late partner Marian McMahon set up a Filmmaking Retreat in 1994, in
DIGITAL VS VIDEO
I am more interested in passing on a way of working
than a medium(for example celluloid), in the so called
digital age....
What these
ashes wanted was finished on film but it makes use of high-8
and 3/4" video, digital video, 16mm reversal, 16mm high contrast and
negative, digital to film transfers and so on... It’s a way of working that I
would be more concerned about losing during the corporate mandate of this
millennium. Film has a beauty we should use when we need it, even if we have to
get into making our own emulsion up at the film farm...