Resisting extractive uses of the archive in Colombian experimental non-fiction

DOI:10.15664/fcj.v19i0.2380

 

In the first two decades of the 21st century, a cluster of Colombian filmmakers started to develop a distinctive body of work engaging with the country’s histories of violence through critical documentary and experimental devices. Juana Suárez has written about a generation of filmmakers with transnational histories whose work “shares a particular set of characteristics linked to aesthetics and forms of production”, including a diasporic perspective on the national, connections with alternative funding and exhibition circuits, generic and linguistic hybridity, and a political approach to experimental practice.[1] Filmmakers born in the 1970s and 1980s, including Camilo Restrepo, Laura Huertas Millán, Felipe Guerrero and Juan Soto have built substantial portfolios ranging across short film, features, and installation.[2] Without imposing on them a unified identity, or defining the boundaries of a “movement”, it is possible to see an expanding constellation of moving image works with overlapping interests and strategies. Central to this commonality is a critical relationship to archival moving image and found footage, expressed in a variety of ways to appropriate, intervene. and juxtapose source materials. These strategies engage with the materiality of analogue and digital images, often retaining traces of their provenance and mediation. In doing this, the films can embody a reflection on the filmmaker’s access to appropriated images and challenge the spectator to question their own viewing position.

While this article follows emerging scholarship that recognises such a cluster of characteristics in Colombian filmmakers specifically, this must be understood in the context of broader shifts in documentary practice, particularly in Latin America.[3] María Luisa Ortega observes that, in contemporary documentary, existing images are appropriated, re-edited and often re-filmed in ways that “emphasise the material (objectual) nature of images” and explore “the traces of their (ideological) origins”.[4] Maria Luna and Carolina Sourdis consider whether there is a “specifically Latin American approach to found footage”, which may be more explicitly politicised than the kinds of experimental collage practices studied in other contexts.[5] According to Luisa Fernanda Ordóñez, “Latin American nonfiction films have approached the past, the present, and memory in diverse assemblages that combine autobiography, family history, and reflections about identity”.[6] In Argentina and Chile, for instance, those who were too young to remember the dictatorships have reopened questions that were pushed aside in the transition to neoliberal democracy, refusing a status quo that depends on forgetting the brutality of the regime and, moreover, the complicity of many citizens. In Colombia, the transition towards a state of “post-conflict” has been repeatedly delayed by the collapse or betrayal of multiple peace negotiations with different actors. Instead of a linear endpoint, there is a history of fluctuating intensities and geographies of the conflict. Sourdis and Luna find that this results in approaches to the archive that reflect political fragmentation but also a nostalgia for unity.[7] Rather than nostalgia, Suárez finds that this group of contemporary filmmakers approach the archive with “suspicion”, and struggle against the narrative pull of the idea of the nation.[8]

There are generational factors that may be relevant to this perspective. There is no consensus on the temporal boundaries of Colombia’s internal conflict, as it has shifted its intensity, territorialisation, actors, methods, and frames of reference so many times. Over more than fifty years, the war has “transformed itself and transformed the country”.[9] By 2012, when peace negotiations started with FARC, over 220,000 people had been killed and millions had been displaced. Within this extended timeline, the late 1980s and early 1990s were a critical juncture. Cocaine cartels had a grip on every level of political and economic power; landowner-backed paramilitary groups massacred peasants and opposition politicians in collaboration with the army; guerrilla groups kidnapped civilians, ran drug routes and blew up infrastructure. A glimmer of hope had appeared with a series of peace accords leading to the demobilisation of guerrilla factions, who were then betrayed and persecuted. The filmmakers discussed here lived through these years as children or adolescents, and they share an impulse to revisit these histories. Lacking the sense of closure of a “post-conflict” narrative, these explorations often adopt less linear forms, weaving together overlapping and ongoing pasts.

The films I discuss in this article engage with historical events through different strategies of mediated representation. Their “suspicion of the archive” (to use Suárez’s term) is performed through formal and rhetorical devices that complicate a simply indexical or nostalgic archive effect.[10] This critique, however, does not stop at questioning the veracity or completeness of the archive. More fundamentally, the material traces of archival mediation serve to denaturalise the use of found footage through reflexivity and distancing. In other words, the films question the filmmaker’s prerogative to display, and the audience’s right to consume audio-visual evidence.

To understand the ethical and political nuances in these filmmakers’ use of found footage and archive material, I use extractivism as a critical lens. In a structural sense, “contemporary neo-extractivism refers to a way of appropriating nature and a development model based on the over-exploitation of natural goods […] characterized by its large scale and its orientation towards export”.[11] As Imre Szeman and Jennifer Wenzel put it, in extractivism, “‘natural resources’ are taken out of one geographic location – often on a colonial periphery – and utilised as ‘raw materials’, that is, as inputs to industrial processes elsewhere”.[12] This is a material process tied to an ideology, a “logic of extraction”, which includes extractive seeing or extractive visuality. Macarena Gómez-Barris defines “the extractive view” as one that renders territories as commodities. It is related to the colonial gaze that sees territories as empty or up for grabs, and “facilitates the reorganization of territories, populations, and plant and animal life into extractible data and natural resources for material and immaterial accumulation.”[13] Extractivism cannot function without these abstractions; however, it is important not to lose from the analysis the material dimension of extraction.

These material and symbolic frameworks of extractivism offer a way to question how source materials – in this case, the images and testimonies of violence – are mobilised in new film works as they circulate internationally. This opens up critical perspectives on the transformation of media images of the Colombian conflict into a visual and narrative commodity that can be marketed abroad, and how critical filmmakers negotiate or resist this commoditisation. In the appropriation of existing footage there is an act of displacement, where a resource is taken from one place and transformed into a new commodity that can enter markets elsewhere. The archive, then, can be a site of extraction, but also of resistance. I propose this framing with reservations, keeping in mind Szeman and Wenzel’s warning against the “conceptual creep” of using extractivism to describe relationships that are beyond the instrumentalisation of nature, for instance by applying it to texts, a “metaphorization” that dematerialises this approach and risks “losing the very thing that gives extractivism its conceptual bite”.[14] The materiality of the archive and practices of appropriation must then be at the centre of this analysis, linked with the films’ refusal of national representation, legibility, and spectacle.

In the following discussion, I identify three structural patterns through which this resistance is articulated in specific films from this group of filmmakers. Firstly, I approach the work of Camilo Restrepo, in particular his early short film Tropic Pocket (2011), as it demonstrates the use of formal strategies (visual texture and sound) to disrupt the ethnographic gaze. I then look at Laura Huertas Millán’s work The Labyrinth (2018) as an inversion of dominant patterns of archival appropriation that acknowledge the role of fictions in shaping the material world. The final part of the essay considers the autobiographical encounter with news footage in Oslo, 2012 (2014) by Juan Soto, alongside works by Federico Atehortúa and Marta Hincapié. I argue that these strategies articulate positions of adjacency to the Colombian conflict. They offer alternatives to the illusory transparency of witnessing, by grappling with mediated relationships with historical events.

Tropic Pocket: Anticolonial illegibility

Camilo Restrepo’s work is explicitly concerned with the imbrication of past and present, through palimpsestic and non-linear forms. Trained as a painter, Restrepo questions found images through the intervention of sound and surface.[15] As Janet Stewart argues, if extractive seeing is the dominant logic, “retaining a certain illegibility” can be a way of countering its totalising effects.[16] It stops the material from becoming data, from being accumulated into colonial currency.[17] Working on analogue formats, Restrepo lets deterioration, fragmentation and low resolution interrupt the indexical reading of appropriated footage. Throughout several of his later works, most saliently Impression of a War (2015) and Los Conductos (2020), there is an interest in inscription, printing and marking on paper, fabric, or skin, which draws attention to the materiality of the film image. Appropriated footage is treated as such an inscription, a sign with a history rather than an automatic record of reality.

Restrepo’s first film, Tropic Pocket, is a 10-minute, fast-paced short. Based on an      investigation (both remote and on-site) of the region of Chocó in Colombia, the film consists of black-and-white and colour 8mm footage shot by Restrepo, and three disparate archival sources he found online while researching the area. As Suárez argues, this apparently unsystematic method using regular search engines is a critical strategy: “Restrepo shares a frustration with historical models, a suspicion towards images and the way they are organised in state archives […] his films open up a space for images found by chance”.[18] Furthermore, having found the images online, Restrepo captures them on analogue supports, not in order to erase their digital origins but to maintain the traces of their unsanctioned archival transmutations.

The oldest source from which fragments are included in Tropic Pocket is a feature-length fictionalised account of a Claretian missionary evangelising indigenous and Afro-Colombian communities, shot in 16mm colour in the late 1950s by one of the priests.[19] This film combines documentary images of religious ceremonies and community work with a staged narrative about an attack on the missionary by an Afro-Colombian sorcerer, which seems both intended to increase the entertainment appeal of the film and to give a sense of peril and adventure to missionary work. The second source is a 1961 promotional film, which captures the attempt to cross the Darién gap on three Chevrolet Corvairs in order to demonstrate the cars’ toughness. This was produced by the Jam Handy organisation, a prolific maker of sponsored films that had close ties with Detroit carmakers.[20] Finally, Restrepo uses videos uploaded by Colombian army soldiers and guerrilla combatants. Tropic Pocket ends with title cards outlining these sources, but the footage is otherwise unmarked within the film.

As Jaimie Baron writes, experiencing footage as archival entails an apprehension of temporal and intentional disparity; the viewer perceives that the images were produced at a different time and for a different purpose than those of the film they are watching.[21] This “archive effect” most often results from the perception of differences in format and medium, such as the grain and blur of small-gauge film or the magnetic artifacts of analogue video, contrasting with the sharper images expected of each new audio-visual technology. In Tropic Pocket, however, these perceptual differences do not work in the expected manner. The surface of the image does not allow for a straightforward distinction between analogue and digital points of origin. The three archival sources are both digital and analogue images. In the case of Isla de los Deseos and Chevrolet Corvair (the two films described in the previous paragraph), the 16mm prints exist in archives, but Restrepo has used the poor-quality video transfers available online. In this remediated form, these sponsored institutional films thus inhabit the same platforms, the same encodings, the same computer screens as the videos shot by combatants on their phones. The perceptual traces that induce the archival effect are disorientating, as each image has undergone several transfers from analogue to digital or vice-versa and is presented digitally. The combined artifacts of digital compression and small-gauge film, as well as Restrepo’s choice to remove colour from most – but not all – of the footage, work to resist linear time and to inhibit restorative readings of these archives. Rather than presenting a nostalgic analogue past in contrast with a violent digital present, Restrepo’s film implies that past and present are simultaneous and inseparable, as both the recent and older archives speak of the forces that have laid claim to the Chocó region, revealing “a relation of domination that is ceaselessly renewed”.[22]

The older archival films used by Restrepo enact forms of extractive seeing. In both cases, the territory and its inhabitants are seen as challenges to be conquered, through persuasion or force. Restrepo thus mobilises these films against each other to expose this colonial standpoint – not as something of the past, but as an ongoing violence. This is articulated through the soundtrack and the narration. After a first silent sequence, sound comes in, but vivid animal calls are soon interrupted by insect buzzing and chainsaw engines. These loud, violent sound segue into an over-revving car engine, which marks the introduction of the Corvair images. Here, the voiceover from the missionary film is laid over the images of the car struggling through jungle rivers and hills. This juxtaposition continues with the narration displaced to the subtitles, while distorted, rhythmic music and snippets of audio from the films constitute a disquieting soundtrack. The narration from Isla de los Deseos, in which a missionary tells a boy about his evangelisation methods, reaches a crisis as the car journey ends. The rest of the film gestures towards more recent forms of violence with the combatant images and performance, while the fictional narration continues with a reference to a community under attack from pirates. The multiple layers of image, sound and narrative produce a tension, as the impulse is to interpret the images in light of the narration, but this is much more difficult here than in the first section. The final section of the film then resolves into cathartic movement, with some distorted champeta music and frenetic dancing.

Figure 1: Tropic Pocket (Camilo Restrepo, 2011). The car pushing through the jungle (from Chevrolet’s Daring the Darien! sponsored film) is presented in low-resolution black-and-white, with subtitle narration coming from the missionary film La isla de los deseos.

For Tropic Pocket, Restrepo filmed the digital archives he was working with on Super8.[23] He justifies this as a distancing strategy, against the hyper-realism of sharp digital images, and also as an attempt to “de-instrumentalise” these sources, all of which are “vehicles of colonising ideologies”.[24] However, the images’ coloniality is stubborn; they remain more legible than the more recent footage, so that paradoxically meaning becomes more unstable the closer we are to the present. The very short fragments potentially recognisable as combatant footage include a walk through tall grass to find a dead dog, and an explosion, both filmed in low resolution and with blocky compression artifacts. The footage shot by Restrepo in the village of San Francisco is sometimes frenetic with the movement of bodies, sometimes reaching for symbolism through performance and everyday objects. It again demonstrates a distance, a deliberate incomprehension. In this film, it is the contemporary images that are enigmatic, while the archival ones are obvious but obfuscated. Using non-representational performance, shaky camerawork and distorted sound, the filmmaker refuses to produce recordings that can be abstracted as “data” and therefore participate in the extractive logics that previous image-making enabled.

Figure 2:  Tropic Pocket (Camilo Restrepo, 2011). Extremely pixelated mobile phone footage which seems to record the aftermath of a violent attack.

Restrepo has described Tropic Pocket as “a documentary against the document”.[25] However, after the intensity of the finale, the credits offer some documentary closure. Restrepo has included a brief description of each source as a sort of archival footnote. These notes, to some extent, explain the images, and thus dissipate their strangeness. They are partially recuperated for the audience’s knowing gaze. In these acknowledgements, Restrepo does not reference the digital mediation of the older films, but he does draw attention to the role of online video in the armed conflict, where “the manipulation of truth through the use of images has now become an ordinary weapon for any soldier and any fighter”, as the credit slide puts it. This moves away from a critique of the digital image as pure simulacrum, and instead points to a more materialist focus on the circulation and instrumentalisation of these images. By retaining the traces of the images’ transit through non-professional digitisation and small-gauge analogue formats, Restrepo’s film gives an account of his situated encounter with these archives. This refusal to abstract the archival image from its material context, even while questioning its indexicality, is a characteristic that Tropic Pocket shares with the other works I will discuss. 

The Labyrinth: Dialectics of fantasy

Laura Huertas Millán’s short film The Labyrinth (2018) is part of a series of works that she calls “ethnographic fictions”. Drawing on Jean Rouch’s notion of “ethno-fictions”, these works engage with contemporary ethnographic practices, while also treating ethnography as a discursive system imbued with fiction:

On the one hand, if one considers ethnography as an ensemble of narratives rooted in colonialism, it can be understood as a kind of fiction-making. On the other, some of the most interesting contemporary practices of ethnography have embraced a decolonial turn, sometimes by integrating the language of fiction into themselves.[26]

The Labyrinth is constructed around a voiceover testimony by Cristóbal Gómez Abel, who recounts his time working for drug trafficker, Evaristo Porras. This narco famously had a house built to emulate the Carringtons’ mansion from the TV series Dynasty (ABC 1980-1989). The film informs the viewer that Porras died penniless and the house, in the Amazonian city of Leticia, is now a crumbling ruin. The image track initially alternates between colour 16mm footage of these ruins and clips from Dynasty. The final section of the film then goes into the jungle and into the night with Cristóbal as he recounts his visions during a near-death experience. While Huertas Millán’s 16mm cinematography is saturated with the texture and colour of walls, vegetation, water and fire, the film follows Cristóbal between spaces that are all in some way beyond reality. The house is a failed fantasy, a copy of a copy, insofar as it is a simulacrum of the spectacular spaces of the Dynasty mansion. Cristóbal’s vision, on the other hand, remains unrepresented. The beautiful white space he describes is not available for the viewer’s consumption.

In a talk at the Cinemateca de Bogotá in 2021, film critic Pedro Adrián Zuluaga introduced a fragment of The Labyrinth as an example of a form of emancipatory cinema that could offer paths of resistance to the planned obsolescence and extractive drive of capitalist image-making.[27] The global media’s avid consumption of Colombia’s cocaine trade stories is an example of Zuluaga’s “transnational economy of the ruin”, with the countless Netflix documentaries about Pablo Escobar’s hippos and other excesses a case in point. The Labyrinth could be one such story, but instead the film centres Cristóbal’s agency and the reclamation of the house by people, plants, and animals. The narco story is told simply as a workplace situation, albeit a particularly dangerous one, and the ruin is another quotidian space rather than a romantic symbol. It does, however, exist in dialogue with the symbolic, and particularly with Dynasty as an example of the legitimating fantasies of extractive capitalism.

A family melodrama centred on the Denver oil magnate Blake Carrington (John Forsythe) and his wife Krystle (Linda Evans), Dynasty had top ratings in the US by 1984, while it was also being broadcast in over 75 countries.[28] The show’s representation of affluence has been linked to the entrenchment of consumerism during the Reagan era, even though the storylines ostensibly presented corporate greed as immoral.[29] For international audiences Dynasty could function as a representation of US lifestyles,[30] an aspirational slice of the American dream that obscured the realities of poverty and inequality, as well as underplaying the centrality of oil. In Dynasty, oil is a source of personal wealth but also a necessary material for a lavish lifestyle, demonstrating the mutual implication of extractivism and consumerism.

The Labyrinth contrasts the American petro-dream and its tropical simulacrum, often in humorous ways, by swapping the soundtracks. In some sections, the overwrought dialogue and string music from the TV show plays over the 16mm footage of Porras’s abandoned house. The artificial intensity of the soap opera is exposed as absurd through its juxtaposition with the organic and the mundane: a man walking through the jungle, a puddle with rubbish floating on it, an iguana making an escape. In other sections, the image track shows clips from the TV series, focusing on the mansion that Porras was trying to copy. Cristóbal’s testimony about the cocaine-laden tables and barbecue parties for army accomplices plays over repeated angles of the Dynasty house and garden. As the luxury of ballrooms, dining halls and diamond necklaces is paraded on screen, Cristóbal describes the mortal risks for ordinary coca farmers working for the cartel: “If they owed you a million pesos, or two, rather than pay you, they would send someone to bump you off”. Meanwhile, on-screen, Krystle stands alone on a balcony, as if in a gilded cage.

Figure 3: The Labyrinth (Laura Huertas Millán, 2018). Scene from Dynasty (ABC 1980-1989). Krystle (Linda Evans) and the Carrington house, overlaid with Cristóbal’s testimony on the soundtrack and subtitles.

 

Then comes a short, striking sequence, with ten shots of oil drilling machinery towering against the sky, and then one image of a drilling tower exploding and collapsing. Appearing immediately after Cristóbal’s story of exploitation by cartel henchmen, this sequence connects their violence to that of oil barons, whose lifestyles provided an aspirational model for drug traffickers as they embarked on their own practices of extraction. As Erika Balsom writes,

Between Colombia and the United States, cocaine and oil, reality and television, multiple narratives intersect in a nexus of affluence, aspiration, and violence […] creating an accord between the violence of the drug wars, the violence of European conquest, and possibilities of survival and resistance against both.[31]

A later sequence presents a succession of cars and planes, gliding across all-American landscapes as Cristóbal recounts his childhood, hunting and fishing on the riverbank. His sense of autonomy and the ease with which he moves around the territory, on foot or canoe, express an alternative to the spectacular promises of petroculture and petromodernity.[32] This resistance is not fetishised in an ethnographic fantasy of purity, but set alongside the material trappings of the oil baron lifestyle, in a continuum of relationships to the land.

The Labyrinth’s aesthetic strategies overlap with those in Tropic Pocket, using analogue filmmaking, found footage, and soundtrack transpositions to propose a critique of colonial gazes. The coloniser’s fantasies, materialised in the petroimages of consumerist excess, are put to work against themselves. Hyperreal gilded mansions aspire to transcendence but are reclaimed by the jungle, like the Chevrolet Corvair abandoned in the Darién gap, which is the last image in Tropic Pocket. Huertas Millán’s choice to engage with an American soap opera that does not bear an explicit relationship to the Colombian context is radical, because it returns the ethnographic gaze back on the coloniser. It engages with Reaganite petroculture as a kind of “fiction-making”, like colonial ethnography. By realising the inseparability between affluence and violence, between oil barons and narcos, and between popular media ideologies and real lives, the film refuses to commodify Cristóbal’s testimony.

Oslo, 2012: Mediation and direct experience

While Restrepo and Huertas Millán work with found footage in the public domain, there is also a strong presence of home movies and the private archive in recent work by Colombian filmmakers. Ranging from experimental to mainstream documentary, works by Juan Soto, Daniela Abad, Andrea Said, Federico Atehortúa, Mercedes Gaviria, and Marta Hincapié, amongst others, have engaged with their own family archives as a means of exploring      questions of memory and history. Home movies and family photographs have had a growing presence in Latin American filmmaking since the 1980s.[33] The work of filmmakers like Albertina Carri and Andrés di Tella has been cited by their Colombian counterparts with appreciation for the reflective approaches to the archive.[34]  In the works that I study here, the personal archive works side by side with television news footage to make explicit the distance between the two, which in turn is a reflection on situated experiences of the Colombian conflict. This reflexivity serves again to counter extractive approaches to the archive, by giving back other images and by questioning the filmmaker’s right to tell certain stories, as well as the audience’s right to consume them. If the ethnographic and the extractive gazes are characterised by the erasure of their subjective standpoints, reflexivity can offer paths of resistance.

Speaking about his film Pirotecnia [Mute Fire] (2019), Federico Atehortúa reflected on his initial attempt to make a documentary about the “false positives” (thousands of cases of civilians murdered by the army and falsely presented as enemy combatants in order to obtain perks and rewards).[35]  Atehortúa recognised that he “felt limited when [he] approached this topic as [he] didn’t feel authorised to talk about this”.[36] A semi-fictionalised personal narrative about a family illness then becomes a way into the topic, framing a reflection on the function of images throughout the Colombian conflict. By positioning himself as a spectator rather than a victim, Atehortúa finds a standpoint from which to engage with the archive, which ultimately tells a story about representation rather than violence. There is a similar unease in Marta Hincapié’s Las razones del lobo [The wolf’s reasons] (2020), which refers to the conflict in the voiceover narration without showing its images, presenting instead the calm pools and manicured lawns of a country club. These films express a structural unease about the positionality of representation and the expectation that Colombian filmmakers will speak from direct traumatic experience. The films reflect on mediated witnessing while refusing to perform first-hand trauma or to appropriate victims’ narratives. This refusal is an attempt to acknowledge and be accountable for structural differences in the conflict’s impact across class divides. Aside from the heightened terrorism stage of the drug wars in the 1980s and 1990s, the Colombian conflict has mostly played out in rural areas and urban peripheries. Therefore, it was possible for children of the middle and upper-middle classes – those most likely to have home videos to look back on – to grow up experiencing war mainly as an ongoing televised event.

For filmmakers of this generation and background, questioning this perspective is ethically crucial, but it risks reifying the distance it observes. Writing on “elite capture”, Olúfémi O. Táíwò warns against the “deferential” application of standpoint epistemology, as “it focuses us on the interaction of the rooms we occupy, rather than calling us to account for the interactions we don’t experience”.[37] In the ethical attempt to avoid speaking on behalf of others, there may be a risk of assuming a separation that ignores mutual implication and responsibility. In Colombia, there is no experience that is completely outside that of conflict. As Camilo Restrepo argues, even international law has recognised the collective victimhood of Colombians, and hence, he says, “I would like to avoid that common thought that considers that only having experienced violence validates one’s interest in the topic”.[38] Extensive research with secondary sources and witness testimony allows the filmmaker to inhabit other perspectives without mimicry, by recognising their own position as fragmentary.

Distance from the conflict is, in any case, always relative and provisional. In Juan Soto’s short film Oslo, 2012, shifting positions of proximity and mediation play out across a range of registers, from the home video to the television archive. The video starts with a warning that it is “for Colombians only” and a mise-en-abyme where Soto films his own computer screen in a flat in Berlin. The film’s title alludes to the start of the peace dialogues with FARC in the Norwegian capital in October 2012. At this inflection point in the long history of conflict, the film offers an analysis of some of the intractable obstacles on the way to peace, central amongst them the United States’ historical role in Colombian politics, played out in the pageantry of US presidential visits that have served to cement extractivist trade agreements and military support with unspoken links to paramilitary violence.

Oslo is a dense collage of moving images and sounds gleaned from nearly a century of representations of the Colombian conflict, from the 1927 anti-imperialist feature Garras de Oro [a.k.a. The Dawn of Justice][39] to a 2007 animation criticising the “phony demobilization” of paramilitaries, who were granted immunity and allowed to rearm.[40] The never-ending cycle of violence is punctuated by the state visits, captured on film and video in all their obsequiousness. At the core of the film is the 2007 meeting between George W. Bush and Alvaro Uribe, and the protests that surrounded it. The framing of this moment moves across a proliferating number of perspectives. There is the predictable news footage of pomp and ceremony, but as the national anthem plays, Soto cuts to digital video footage of the police detaining a group of young protesters as the presidential visit plays on TV. First, the television set at the detention place foregrounds the mediation that both separates and links the state visit with the act of police repression. Then, another frame appears showing this protest footage playing on a computer media player. Showing the media interface again makes explicit a second-hand perspective, which is then complicated because the filmmaker himself can be seen in the footage, holding a video camera. This is a second-hand account of an event at which the filmmaker was present, which both legitimates and fragments the veracity of the reportage.

Figure 4: Oslo, 2012 (Juan Soto, 2014). A TV news broadcast shows Alvaro Uribe standing next to George W. Bush during the US president’s visit to Colombia in 2007.

The following section appears more immediate, intercutting protest scenes and chants with black-and-white footage of 20th-century crowds and with the official ceremony, until the “Stars and Stripes” is interrupted by a transition to riot police firing tear gas. The camerawork becomes frantic as the filmmaker has to escape the gas and negotiate an intimidating encounter with a policeman who will not allow filming. This direct experience of repression gives way again to the archive, with news footage assembled into a harrowing sequence of dead bodies that tracks back through the decades. The sequence has a troubling abstract quality, where abject images of the dead stand in for the violence of each decade. Amongst these images, repeated twice, is a piece of footage that is as recognisable for Colombians as the Zapruder footage is to Americans: the confused moments after presidential candidate Luis Carlos Galán was gunned down while taking the stage at a campaign rally in 1989. This becomes an anchor point for the legibility and temporality of the other, less famous images.

Figure 5: Oslo, 2012 (Juan Soto, 2014). News footage of Luis Carlos Galán’s assassination in 1989.

The voiceover talks about the systematic extermination of the socialist political party Unión Patriótica (UP), by state forces and allies, as a condensation of Colombia’s inability to sustain the conditions for peace. In other films, Soto has explored the victimisation of members of his own family who were connected to this political party. 19º Sur 65º Oeste (2010) deals with the forced exile of one of Soto’s relatives, and Parábola del Retorno (2016) takes the imagined perspective of another one, who worked as a bodyguard to the UP’s presidential candidate, before being disappeared in 1987. The archival news footage is thus inseparable from family history and from Soto’s own relationship to it. This is, however, not explicit unless the viewer already knows this. An extra-textual or inter-textual understanding of the filmmaker’s own personal and political position thus becomes determinant for the interpretation of this sequence as distanced or intimate. Without it, the explicit footage of victims of violence risks being received as generic and sensationalist, in keeping with its television news sources.

At the start of the film, Soto declares he is making “a self-portrait”. Besides the media player sequence mentioned above, Soto appears on screen as a boy in a home video dated 1997, learning to dive in a swimming pool. The assumed innocence of the family video, edited in parallel to news clips about insurgent attacks and paramilitary massacres, speaks to the confusing experience of growing up in Colombia in the 1990s. In the swimming pool, metonymic for a family holiday, Soto appears carefree, while the montage demonstrates the intensity of war during that period. Nine years later, he is filming as he runs away from tear gas on the streets of Bogota. Five years after that, he is staring out of an apartment window in Berlin, where he is assembling this film. As Juana Suarez has observed, “central to Soto’s work is an equation between editing a film and editing life”.[41] Laura Correa and Juan Osorio note that, through his editing, Soto “not only reviews the past but reviews himself, as a way of seeing himself implicated in the images he appropriates”.[42] This implication is unstable, producing a play between proximity and distancing, where the filmmaker reflects on shifting positions and relationships to Colombian events, as first-hand participant, victim, second-hand TV viewer, or distant observer.

This fragmented positionality corresponds to the “dislocations of the national” that Suárez has found in this group of Colombian filmmakers working abroad.[43] Theirs is not an experience of exile but of relative mobility. Like Restrepo and Huertas Millán, Soto moves between Colombia and Europe (though not without the difficulties and barriers that colonial borders impose on Global South citizens). His films often combine footage shot in different countries, but also mediated accounts of events in Colombia as seen from afar.[44] The uses of archival images introduce another layer of distance, both through their temporal disparity and through their marking as media discourses, seen on television or digital screens. Oslo, 2012 is not an archive compilation, but an account of the filmmaker’s encounter with archives, including his own. Like in Tropic Pocket, the mediations that bring together digitised analogue film and television with non-professional home video formats are exposed, but the discontinuities are emphasised.

Filming a TV news broadcast as it is being watched on a TV set is a way to explain the filmmaker’s distance from the event, and thus to refer to violence without appropriating it. This can then be another way of resisting or derailing extractive uses of the archive. In Las razones del lobo, Marta Hincapié also includes the TV news playing in a country club room, bright and sterile, while a toilet can be heard to flush in the background. The final sequence of the film could be a reverse shot to this setup: María Teresa Uribe, Hincapié’s mother, who is both the protagonist of many of the stories told in the film, and a scholar of violence in her own right, is watching the news about the referendum defeat of the peace agreement in 2016. “This is a national tragedy”, she tells her daughter, “This is like a nightmare”. Suddenly, the quiet scene is invaded by the overwhelming noise of explosions. In the streets, people are celebrating the referendum results, confirming their allegiance to violence. What seemed like a distant reality from the comfort of the club reasserts itself, first as mediated information (in the voice of a well-known news anchor) and then loudly, inescapably.

Conclusion

Archive filmmaking is a process of reappropriation. Theories of extractivism can, therefore, provide tools for a critical approach to these films. Colombia’s cinematic image abroad has been dominated by violence and poverty, alongside touristic visions of a rich biodiversity ripe for the taking. However, Colombian filmmakers have long struggled with these tropes, negotiating expectations internally and abroad about how the country is to be represented. As Zuluaga argues, “memory, ruin and archive appear as dominant discourses of Colombian documentary”, which sometimes grants the archive an unproblematic, positivist evidentiary value.[45] Instead of assuming the transparency of historical footage, filmmakers like Restrepo, Huertas and Soto have found ways to interrogate “a dispersion of ruins and signs” that refuse to package both landscape and history as consumable spectacles. This questioning proceeds through different strategies, some of which have been explored in this article.

Camilo Restrepo takes images constructed from a colonial gaze and disrupts them through juxtaposition, finding points of resonance, and using the surface distortions of informal digital archives to disclose his own archival pathways. This serves to question what is in the archive – or, rather, in the non-archival repositories of internet video – and how it was created. The multiple transits between analogue and digital formats invert assumptions of legibility, as the newer images are rendered more enigmatic than the older ones with which they are in dialogue. This refuses to see the colonial gaze as a historical artifact, and instead recognises it as a structuring pattern that persists even in the filmmaker’s own approach to the topic.

Laura Huertas Millán uses an unexpected source, an American melodrama, which, placed alongside the more traditional oral testimony, allows her to establish a dialectical relationship between Colombia’s drug trade, American consumerism, and more traditional extractive industries. Like Tropic Pocket, The Labyrinth performs its critical operations through montage, but rather than disrupting the surface of the image, Huertas Millán challenges the positivist impulse of documentary by weaving it together with fiction. In this approach, testimony and fantasy are different regimes of knowledge that sustain ways of being in the world.

Juan Soto uses his own archive to produce a reflective and eclectic approach to history, focusing on US-Colombia relationships and interweaving first- and second-hand accounts of events. The news footage is framed and reframed as mediated representation, drawing attention to their material devices and formats. The autobiographical approach to editing refuses to fill in the temporal gaps, offering a fragmentary, incomplete approach to history where the personal intersects with the collective only in flashes. The filmmaker’s positionality is implicit but crucial to a non-sensationalist reading of the appropriated footage.

The use of archive footage in these works rejects the nostalgic or explanatory, refusing to render the past as linear, visible, and legible. This would seem like a promising site for forms of visuality that resist the extractive logic. While this article has identified practices of curation, intervention and montage used by the filmmakers studied, a materialist analysis of these films needs to go further, considering not only the sources of images, but their circulation and reception, as Juana Suárez starts to do in the closing section of her 2019 article. There are important questions to be asked about how the audio-visual memory of the Global South is kept, cared for, shared, and made available for appropriation. As digitisation speeds up the transnational movement of images and sounds, there are opportunities for more critical film cultures that continue to challenge the hegemony of the commoditised image.

Notes

[1] Juana Suárez, “Dislocations of the National: Colombian Cinema and Intercultural Spaces,” Journal of Latin American Cultural Studies 28, no. 4 (2020): 541–63, https://doi.org/10.1080/13569325.2020.1739007, 542.

[2] These are filmmakers who are aware and supportive of each other, who cross paths at festivals and are often brought together by curators. In 2018, for instance, Juana Suárez’s “Against the National Project” programme, screened in Glasgow and Durham, included films by Soto, Huertas Millán, Restrepo, Guerrero and Gonzalo Escobar (Centre for Contemporary Arts, 2018). In a 2021 curatorial fellowship for Cinemateca de Bogotá, works by Huertas Millán and Restrepo were screened alongside the likes of Kevin Jerome Everson and Susana de Sousa Dias, as part of a reflection on memory, testimony and the ruin (Cartel Urbano, 2021)

[3] Alongside Suárez’s work, which focuses on those filmmakers who live and work outside Colombia, other authors propose different clusters. For instance, Diana Cuéllar places the work of filmmakers such as Restrepo and Guerrero within a tradition of “documentaries of dissent”, alongside the political video-art works of Oscar Campo and Claudia Salamanca. Guerrero and Campo are also studied by Carolina Sourdis and María Luna in their work on found footage practices, alongside works by Luis Ospina and others. Diana Patricia Cuéllar España, “Documental del disenso: Representación de la violencia contemporánea en Colombia” (Madrid, Universidad Carlos III, 2019); Maria Luna and Carolina Sourdis, “Colombian Found Footage: The Tradition of Rupture,” New Cinemas 13, no. 1 (March 2015), https://doi.org/info:doi/10.1386/ncin.13.1.51_1, 54.

[4] María Luisa Ortega, “El Mañana Empezó Ayer. Tradiciones y Rupturas En El Documental de América Latina,” in Territorio y Memorias Sin Fronteras: Nuevas Estrategias Para Pensar Lo Real (Bogota: Uniminuto, 2021), 23–46., 26. [Author’s translation]

[5] Maria Luna and Carolina Sourdis, “Colombian Found Footage: The Tradition of Rupture,” New Cinemas 13, no. 1 (March 2015), https://doi.org/info:doi/10.1386/ncin.13.1.51_1, 54.

[6] Luisa Fernanda Ordóñez Ortegón, El Archivo Audiovisual y la Escritura de la Historia (Bogotá: Cinemateca Distrital; Idartes, 2020), p. 113 [Author’s translation]. A range of approaches to archives in Latin American cinema are represented in Mauricio Durán Castro and Claudia Salamanca, eds., Archivo, Memoria y Presente En El Cine Latinoamericano, 1st ed. (Bogotá: Pontificia Universidad Javeriana, 2016), https://doi.org/10.2307/j.ctv8xngsg.

[7] Luna and Sourdis, 54.

[8] Suárez 2019, 542.

[9] Gonzalo Sánchez Gómez, Caminos de Guerra, Utopías de Paz: Colombia: 1948-2020 (Bogota: Editorial Planeta, 2021), 10.

[10] Jaimie Baron, “The Archive Effect: Archival Footage as an Experience of Reception,” Projections 6, no. 2 (November 15, 2012): 102–20, https://doi.org/10.3167/proj.2012.060207.

[11] Maristella Svampa, Neo-Extractivism in Latin America: Socio-Environmental Conflicts, the Territorial Turn, and New Political Narratives, Cambridge Elements. Elements in Politics and Society in Latin America (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2019), 7.

[12] Imre Szeman and Jennifer Wenzel, “What Do We Talk about When We Talk about Extractivism?,” Textual Practice 35, no. 3 (March 4, 2021): 505–23, https://doi.org/10.1080/0950236X.2021.1889829, 506.

[13] Macarena Gómez-Barris, The Extractive Zone: Social Ecologies and Decolonial Perspectives, Dissident Acts (Durham, NC and London: Duke University Press, 2017), p. 5.

[14] Szeman and Wenzel 2021, 511.

[15] Suárez 2019, 554-555.

[16] Janet Stewart, “Visual Culture Studies and Cultural Sociology: Extractive Seeing,” in Sage Handbook of Cultural Sociology, ed. David Inglis and Anna-Mari Almila, 2016, p. 331

[17] Gómez-Barris 2017, 10.

[18] Suárez 2019, 558.

[19] At the time of writing, fragments of this film could be viewed on Universidad Tecnológica del Choco’s YouTube channel (e.g. Part 1 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Lz-qcLkdi0o). The university supports the regional film and photo archive (Archivo Fotográfico y Fílmico del Chocó) and in 2006 published research on this film as part of a cinema history report by Gonzalo Díaz Cañadas.

[20] Brian Oakes, “Building Films for Business: Jamison Handy and the Industrial Animation of the Jam Handy Organization,” Film History 22, no. 1 (2010): 95–107, https://doi.org/10.2979/fil.2010.22.1.95; Rick Prelinger, “Eccentricity, Education and the Evolution of Corporate Speech: Jam Handy and His Organization,” in Films That Work, ed. Vinzenz Hediger and Patrick Vonderau, Industrial Film and the Productivity of Media (Amsterdam University Press, 2009), 211–20, https://www.jstor.org/stable/j.ctt45kdjb.16.

[21] Jaimie Baron, The Archive Effect: Found Footage and the Audiovisual Experience of History (Oxford: Routledge, 2014), 8.

[22] Camilo Restrepo, “Líneas de errancia: despliegue espacial en el montaje audiovisual,” Cuadernos de cine colombiano, no. 30 (2020): 16–27, 20.

[23] Suarez 2019, 554

[24] Diana Kuéllar, “Camilo Restrepo, un cineasta del disenso,” Nexus Comunicación, no. 27 (2020), https://doi.org/10.25100/nc.v0i27.10569, 15.

[25] Restrepo 2020, 21.

[26] Laura Huertas Millán, “In conversation”, Tank magazine, Issue 82 (2020), p. 17-18 https://www.laurahuertasmillan.com/ethnographic-fiction

[27] Pedro Adrián Zuluaga, “Estéticas de La Ruina y La Precariedad En El Cine Colombiano Contemporáneo” (Estudio de Campos, Cinemateca de Bogotá, May 22, 2021), https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=G-y-Fu0APU8.

[28] “‘Dynasty’ Overseas” Variety, 315:6 (1984), 62.

[29] Jane Feuer, Seeing Through the Eighties: Television and Reaganism (Durham, NC: Duke University Press, 1995), p. 131. Gabriele Kreutzner and Ellen Seiter, “Not All ‘Soaps’ Are Created Equal: Towards a Crosscultural Criticism of Television Serials,” Screen 32, no. 2 (July 1, 1991): 154–72, https://doi.org/10.1093/screen/32.2.154., 167.

[30] Jennifer M. Keane-Dawes, “(Mis)Perception of American Media Reality: Narrating Dissonance in the Actuality of Cultural Assimilation,” in Re-Constructing Place and Space: Media, Culture, Discourse and the Constitution of Caribbean Diasporas, ed. Kamille Gentles-Peart and Maurice L. Hall (Newcastle upon Tyne: Cambridge Scholars Publishing, 2012), 33–52., 33-34.

[31] Erika Balsom, “Speaking into Being: The Ethnographic Fictions of Laura Huertas Millán,” Text written for the individual exhibition The spring song. le chant du printemps, Maison des Arts, Centre d´art contemporain de Malakoff, 2018, https://www.laurahuertasmillan.com/speak-into-being.

[32] Belinda Smaill, “Petromodernity, the Environment and Historical Film Culture,” Screen 62, no. 1 (April 8, 2021): 59–77, https://doi.org/10.1093/screen/hjab002.

[33] Jorge Ruffinelli, “Del Cine Doméstico al Documental Personal En América Latina. Cinco Casos,” in La Casa Abierta: El Cine Doméstico y Sus Reciclajes Contemporáneos (Madrid: Ocho y Medio, 2010), 225–50, 225.

[34] Federico Atehortúa in conversation with María Paula Lorgia, Cinemateca de Bogotá, #CineClubCinemateca: Pirotecnia (Dir. Federico Atehortúa Arteaga), 2020, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VPcr8Dee3k8.

[35] “Ejecuciones Extrajudiciales En Colombia 2002-2010” (Bogotá: Observatorio de derechos humanos y derecho humanitario, 2013), 7.

[36] Atehortúa in conversation with Lorgia, 2020.

[37] Olúfémi O. Táíwò, “Being-in-the-Room Privilege: Elite Capture and Epistemic Deference,” The Philosopher 108, no. 4 (Autumn 2020), https://www.thephilosopher1923.org/essay-taiwo.

[38] Diana Kuéllar, “Camilo Restrepo, un cineasta del disenso,” Nexus Comunicación, no. 27 (2020): 1–17, https://doi.org/10.25100/nc.v0i27.10569, 13.

[39] Juana Suárez and Ramiro Arbeláez, “Garras De Oro (The Dawn of Justice—Alborada De Justicia): The Intriguing Orphan of Colombian Silent Films,” trans. Laura A. Chesak, The Moving Image 9, no. 1 (2009): 54–82, https://doi.org/10.1353/mov.0.0034.

[40] Marc van Gurp, ‘Colombia Clean’, Osocio, 2007, https://osocio.org/message/colombia-clean/.

[41]  Juana Suárez, “Cine ‘nacional’/circulación transnacional: la experiencia fílmica colombiana en el extranjero en años recientes,” Nexus Comunicación, 2016, 6–23, https://doi.org/10.25100/nc.v0i19.661, 18.

[42] Laura Correa Montoya and Juan Osorio Villegas, “El Desplazamiento de La Mirada. En 19° Sur 65° Oeste, Oslo, 2012 y Parábola Del Retorno, de Juan Soto,” in Territorios y Memorias Sin Fronteras, ed. María Luna, Pablo Mora, and Daniela Samper (Editorial Pontificia Universidad Javeriana, Corporación Universitaria Minuto de Dios -UNIMINUTO, Alados, 2021), 167–94.

[43] Suárez 2019, 542.

[44] For instance, Soto’s 2020 film, Revelaciones, is mainly structured around a long telephone conversation with his mother as she drives on a Colombian road during one of the days of a national strike. Through her account, both the filmmaker and the viewer have access to an ordinary experience during an important historical moment.

[45] Pedro Adrián Zuluaga, “Asedios a Las Ruinas En El Documental Colombiano Contemporáneo,” in Territorio y Memorias Sin Fronteras: Nuevas Estrategias Para Pensar Lo Real (Bogota: Uniminuto, 2021), 147–67. 155.

 

Filmography

Atehortúa, Federico. Pirotecnia. Invasión Cine, 2019.

Hincapié Uribe, Marta. Las razones del lobo. Sandelion Producciones, 2020.

Huertas Millán, Laura. The Labyrinth. 2018. Source: SAVVY Contemporary, https://vimeo.com/500803326, last accessed November 2021.

Jam Handy, Daring the Darién! Chevrolet Motor Division, 1962.

Martínez Velasco, Alfonso [as P.P. Jambrina] Garras de Oro / Alborada de Justicia. Cali Film, 1927.

Restrepo, Camilo. Impression of a War. 529 Dragons, 2015.

Restrepo, Camilo. Los Conductos. Montañero Cine If You Hold A Stone, 2020.

Restrepo, Camilo. Tropic Pocket. Mutokino / Collectif Jeune Cinéma, 2011. Source: https://kinoscope.org/v/tropic-pocket/, last accessed November 2021.

Restrepo, Jorge. La Isla de los Deseos. Misioneros Claretianos, c. 1958.

Soto Taborda, Juan. 19º Sur 65º Oeste, 2010.

Soto Taborda, Juan. Oslo, 2012. 2014. Source: Artist’s website. https://www.juansoto.co.uk/oslo-2012, last accessed November 2021.

Soto Taborda, Juan. Parábola del Retorno. Tardeotemprano Films, 2017.

 

Bibliography

“Ejecuciones Extrajudiciales En Colombia 2002-2010.” Bogotá: Observatorio de derechos humanos y derecho humanitario, 2013. https://coeuropa.org.co/wp-content/uploads/2017/05/Documentos-tematicos-8-FINAL-1.pdf.

Balsom, Erika. “Speaking into Being: The Ethnographic Fictions of Laura Huertas Millán.” Text written for the individual exhibition The spring song. le chant du printemps, Maison des Arts, Centre d´art contemporain de Malakoff, 2018. https://www.laurahuertasmillan.com/speak-into-being.

Baron, Jaimie. “The Archive Effect: Archival Footage as an Experience of Reception.” Projections 6, no. 2 (November 15, 2012): 102–20. https://doi.org/10.3167/proj.2012.060207.

Baron, Jaimie. The Archive Effect: Found Footage and the Audiovisual Experience of History. Oxford: Routledge, 2014.

Cartel Urbano. “Relato Oral y Ruina,” November 28, 2021. https://web.archive.org/web/20211128184014/https://cartelurbano.com/eventos/agenda/relato-oral-y-ruina-proyecto-curatorial-cinemateca-de-bogota.

CCA Glasgow. “Against the National Project: Memory and Mobility in Contemporary Colombian Cinema,” 2018. https://www.cca-glasgow.com/programme/against-the-national-project.

Correa Montoya, Laura, and Juan Osorio Villegas. “El Desplazamiento de La Mirada. En 19° Sur 65° Oeste, Oslo, 2012 y Parábola Del Retorno, de Juan Soto.” In Territorios y Memorias Sin Fronteras, edited by María Luna, Pablo Mora, and Daniela Samper, 167–94. Editorial Pontificia Universidad Javeriana, Corporación Universitaria Minuto de Dios -UNIMINUTO, Alados, 2021.

Cuéllar España, Diana Patricia. “Documental del disenso: Representación de la violencia contemporánea en Colombia.” PhD Thesis. Universidad Carlos III de Madrid, 2019.

Díaz Cañadas, Gonzalo. “Historia Del Cine En El Chocò.” Quibdó: Universidad Tecnológica del Chocó, November 2006. https://es.slideshare.net/udelchoco/historia-del-cine-en-el-choc.

Feuer, Jane. Seeing Through the Eighties: Television and Reaganism. Durham, NC; Duke University Press, 1995.

Gómez-Barris, Macarena. The Extractive Zone: Social Ecologies and Decolonial Perspectives. Dissident Acts. Durham, NC and London: Duke University Press, 2017.

Gurp, Marc van. ‘Colombia Clean’. Osocio, 2007. https://osocio.org/message/colombia-clean/.

Huertas Millán, Laura. “In conversation”, Tank magazine, Issue 82 (2020), p. 17-18 https://www.laurahuertasmillan.com/ethnographic-fiction

Keane-Dawes, Jennifer M. “(Mis)Perception of American Media Reality: Narrating Dissonance in the Actuality of Cultural Assimilation.” In Re-Constructing Place and Space: Media, Culture, Discourse and the Constitution of Caribbean Diasporas, edited by Kamille Gentles-Peart and Maurice L. Hall, 33–52. Newcastle upon Tyne: Cambridge Scholars Publishing, 2012.

Kreutzner, Gabriele, and Ellen Seiter. “Not All ‘Soaps’ Are Created Equal: Towards a Crosscultural Criticism of Television Serials.” Screen 32, no. 2 (July 1, 1991): 154–72. https://doi.org/10.1093/screen/32.2.154.

Kuéllar, Diana. “Camilo Restrepo, un cineasta del disenso.” Nexus Comunicación, no. 27 (2020): 1–17. https://doi.org/10.25100/nc.v0i27.10569.

Luna, Maria, and Carolina Sourdis. “Colombian Found Footage: The Tradition of Rupture.” New Cinemas 13, no. 1 (March 2015): 51–64. https://doi.org/info:doi/10.1386/ncin.13.1.51_1.

Mauricio Durán Castro and Claudia Salamanca, eds., Archivo, Memoria y Presente En El Cine Latinoamericano, 1st ed. (Bogotá: Pontificia Universidad Javeriana, 2016), https://doi.org/10.2307/j.ctv8xngsg.

Oakes, Brian. “Building Films for Business: Jamison Handy and the Industrial Animation of the Jam Handy Organization.” Film History 22, no. 1 (2010): 95–107. https://doi.org/10.2979/fil.2010.22.1.95.

Ordóñez Ortegón, Luisa Fernanda. El Archivo Audiovisual y La Escritura de La Historia. Bogotá: Cinemateca Distrital; Idartes, 2020. https://idartesencasa.gov.co/sites/default/files/libros_pdf/El%20archivo%20audiovisual_web%20%281%29.pdf.

Ortega, María Luisa. “El mañana empezó ayer. Tradiciones y rupturas en el documental de América Latina.” In Territorio y memoria sin frontera, edited by María Luna, Pablo Mora and Daniela Samper. 23-46. Bogotá: Uniminuto, 2021.

Prelinger, Rick. “Eccentricity, Education and the Evolution of Corporate Speech: Jam Handy and His Organization.” In Films That Work, edited by Vinzenz Hediger and Patrick Vonderau, 211–20. Amsterdam University Press, 2009. https://www.jstor.org/stable/j.ctt45kdjb.16.

Restrepo, Camilo. “Líneas de errancia: despliegue espacial en el montaje audiovisual.” Cuadernos de cine colombiano, no. 30 (2020): 16–27.

Sánchez Gómez, Gonzalo. Caminos de Guerra, Utopías de Paz: Colombia: 1948-2020. Bogota: Editorial Planeta, 2021.

Smaill, Belinda. “Petromodernity, the Environment and Historical Film Culture.” Screen 62, no. 1 (April 8, 2021): 59–77. https://doi.org/10.1093/screen/hjab002.

Stewart, Janet. “Visual Culture Studies and Cultural Sociology: Extractive Seeing.” In Sage Handbook of Cultural Sociology, edited by David Inglis and Anna-Mari Almila, 322–34, 2016.

Suárez, Juana, and Ramiro Arbeláez. “Garras De Oro (The Dawn of Justice—Alborada De Justicia): The Intriguing Orphan of Colombian Silent Films.” Translated by Laura A. Chesak. The Moving Image 9, no. 1 (2009): 54–82. https://doi.org/10.1353/mov.0.0034.

Suárez, Juana. “Cine ‘nacional’/circulación transnacional: la experiencia fílmica colombiana en el extranjero en años recientes.” Nexus Comunicación, no. 19 (July 25, 2016): 6–23. https://doi.org/10.25100/nc.v0i19.661.

Suárez, Juana. “Dislocations of the National: Colombian Cinema and Intercultural Spaces.” Journal of Latin American Cultural Studies, April 28, 2020, 541–63. https://doi.org/10.1080/13569325.2020.1739007.

Svampa, Maristella. Neo-Extractivism in Latin America: Socio-Environmental Conflicts, the Territorial Turn, and New Political Narratives. Cambridge Elements. Elements in Politics and Society in Latin America. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2019.

Szeman, Imre, and Jennifer Wenzel. “What Do We Talk about When We Talk about Extractivism?” Textual Practice 35, no. 3 (March 4, 2021): 505–23. https://doi.org/10.1080/0950236X.2021.1889829.

Táíwò, Olúfémi O. “Being-in-the-Room Privilege: Elite Capture and Epistemic Deference.” The Philosopher 108, no. 4 (Autumn 2020). https://www.thephilosopher1923.org/essay-taiwo.

Zuluaga, Pedro Adrián. “Estéticas de La Ruina y La Precariedad En El Cine Colombiano Contemporáneo.” Beca de Curaduría, Estudio de Campos, Cinemateca de Bogotá, May 22, 2021. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=G-y-Fu0APU8.

Zuluaga, Pedro Adrián. “Asedios a Las Ruinas En El Documental Colombiano Contemporáneo.” In Territorio y Memorias Sin Fronteras: Nuevas Estrategias Para Pensar Lo Real, 147–67. Bogota: Uniminuto, 2021.

 

Author Biography

María A. Vélez-Serna is a lecturer in Film and Media at the University of Stirling, and a film school graduate from Universidad Nacional de Colombia. She is the author of Ephemeral Cinema Spaces (Amsterdam University Press, 2020) and co-author of Early Cinema in Scotland (Edinburgh University Press, 2018).

Remediating the Archive: Sabrina Gschwandtner’s Film Quilts as Forms of Material Knowledge

DOI:10.15664/fcj.v19i0.2382

 

Introduction: Film Quilts and the Practice of a Material Archiveology

When entering the Gustavsbergs Konsthall art gallery in Sweden in 2009, visitors were surprised to see that the gallery’s windows had been covered by semi-transparent curtains of vivid colours and geometric shapes which closely resembled traditional American quilts. On closer inspection, these curtains appeared to be composed of 16mm strips of film, sewn together and arranged according to colour and pattern. The transparency of the celluloid and its arrangement created vibrant, radiating shapes that attracted the viewer closer, while also encouraging a distanced point of view. Viewing the city of Gustavsberg through the patterns of the film quilts called attention to and prompted inquiry regarding their materiality and potential to filter the world through a different point of view. Whose point of view was it?

For American filmmaker Sabrina Gschwandtner’s first solo exhibition, Watch & See (2009), the artist stitched together hundreds of yards of documentary archival footage donated to her by Anthology Film Archives, in New York City, with a Bernina sewing machine. Gschwandtner writes on her website that her “film quilts recuperate sewing’s essential role in cinema, while expanding material possibilities for quilt-making.”[1] I argue that Gschwandtner’s film quilts pose critical points of discussion around the ontology of quilt-making as a fibre art, as well as cinema as a projected medium. The qualities of both artistic media become expanded in their encounter and interaction. Most importantly, her quilted film works offer a sensorial and spatialised experience of archival film footage that leads to an understanding of film archives as embodied sites of historical, gendered knowledge. Through this material encounter with the audience, they reflect on and expand a conception of film archives as enclosed spaces that regulate both objects and bodies.

To study the impact of Gschwandtner’s quilted film works on film archives, I turn to Catherine Russell’s work on archiveology. Russell defines archiveology as “a mode of film practice that draws on archival material to produce knowledge about how history has been represented and how representations are not false images but are actually historical in themselves and have anthropological value.”[2] As I show in this article, Gschwandtner’s quilts offer a critical reflection on the history of craft, and its revaluation by feminist artists, filmmakers, and critics dating back to the 1960s. Beyond the film quilts’ subject matter, Gschwandtner’s methodology interrogates the role of images in the creation of historical knowledge, and affirms their function as forms of knowledge in themselves. As Jaimie Baron argues, history becomes “not only knowable but also perceptible in these [archival] images” by bringing the viewer in direct “contact” with the past.[3] Composed of cut and stitched rescued celluloid, film quilts materialise and spatialise the practice of montage on which archiveology rests – quite literally putting the viewer in physical contact with past images. As the etymology of archiveology suggests, film quilts as well as archiveological films use “the image archive as a language.”[4] Archives, in these practices, are repositories, and offer the building-blocks for a language based on fragmentation and metaphor.

Quoting Walter Benjamin’s 1936 essay “The Storyteller”, Russell contends that “the archiveologist is in this sense a craftsperson, whose work takes place primarily at the editing table or computer, fashioning the ‘raw material of experience’ into a ‘ruin that stands on the site of an old story,’”[5] and adds that “the emphasis on gesture and detail in archiveology necessarily shifts the focus of experimental media from masculinist oversight and vision to filmmaking as craft.”[6] This conceptual framing of archiveology as craftwork powerfully echoes Gschwandtner’s commitment to meticulous manual labour deeply entrenched in the history of women’s work. For her, craft – whether it be quilt-making, knitting, or film editing – is key to the writing of a feminist history of art and media. She writes that “[i]n the era of streaming video, with film on the brink of obsolescence, I drew from the craft of quilting salvaged remnants to create a feminist future for film.”[7] Indeed, Gschwandtner’s work intervenes at the crossroads of two strands of feminist criticism that flourished in the 1970s and questioned the intersection of “gender, domesticity, and power”: the reclaiming of a history of craft as specifically feminine and subversive, and a feminist film theory that challenged patriarchal norms of representation.[8]

With the concept of archiveology, Russell intends to “emphasise the documentary value of collecting and compiling fragments of previously filmed material.”[9] Documents, for her, are produced by the process of excision and recontextualisation of archival fragments, producing renewed histories and knowledges. One could then further ask what are film quilts documents of, and how does their materiality potentially affect their documentary value as historical objects? To answer these questions, I reflect on Gschwandtner’s conscious positioning of her works within a feminist history of women’s crafts, and more specifically the gendered and racialised history of quilt-making and its disregard by institutions of the art world. I discuss the way film quilts may evoke a history of feminised labour in the film and media industry. Finally, I consider the materiality of the quilts as sensorial objects, to counter understandings of film archives as disembodied and purely visual. The material display of Gschwandtner’s film quilts offer a renewed sensorial experience of the archive, one that acknowledges the copresence of viewer and object. I expand on Baron’s definition of archival footage “as a relationship produced between particular elements of a film and the film’s viewer,”[10] to consider how this relationship might develop within a material, tactile encounter such as those provided by Gschwandtner’s film quilts.

Figure 1: Sabrina Gschwandtner, What is a Dress? 2009. 16 mm film, polyamide thread, cotton thread, 72 x 48 in.

Hands at Work (2017): The Gendered and Racialised Legacy of Quilt-Making in America

For her 2017 exhibition Hands at Work at the Shoshana Wayne Gallery (Los Angeles), Gschwandtner displayed a series of film quilts composed of footage from the 1981 documentary film Quilts in Women’s Lives.[11] Directed by Pat Ferrero, the film takes part in the wave of feminist artists of the 1960s-80s that fought for the recognition of craftwork as a form of fine art grounded in a specific feminine tradition and legacy. Indeed, the 1960s onward saw a renewal of interest by feminist artists in crafts such as quilt-making, knitting, and macramé, and an attempt to legitimise their place within institutions of the art world and bring attention to centuries of anonymised labour. Particularly, as Elissa Auther notes, these fibre crafts represented an essential point of access into a genealogy of women’s productions, and “an alternative history of art making” that had remained unacknowledged for centuries.[12] Critics worked to recast these crafts away from the sphere of domesticity and anonymity and into the public light, all the while highlighting the contradictions of “seeking recognition in the mainstream art world.”[13] Auther adds that “in this context, the once negative associations of fiber or craft with femininity and the home were recast as distinctive and culturally valuable features of an artistic heritage specific to women.”[14] Artists like Judy Chicago, Tracey Emin, Joyce Wieland, Faith Ringgold, and Miriam Shapiro among others, reclaimed these crafts in their work, while questioning their association with domesticity. Most famously, Chicago’s 1979 installation The Dinner Party subverts the domestic setting of a dinner table by honouring thirty-nine women of significance in Western history, whose names are embroidered along the table runner. Chicago worked in collaboration with artisans specialising in needlework and china painting, acknowledging their names on panels that travelled with the exhibition for the first ten years of its history. Similarly, experimental feminist filmmakers turned to craftwork, like Joyce Wieland in Handtinting (1967-68), where she applies fabric dyes and needle perforations to found footage of a Job Corps documentary where disenfranchised black and white women are educated in typing.[15] Aside from filmmaking, Wieland (in collaboration with needleworkers) also produced textile works such as hanging quilts and cushions that combined traditionally female craftwork with political messages targeting issues of feminism and ecology (as with The Water Quilt, 1970–71). These feminist multimedia works of art participated in the revaluation of craftwork as a form of fine art, with a grounding in women’s work.

Among the key feminist texts centring on women’s crafts, Patricia Mainardi’s 1972 article “Quilts: The Great American Art” is commonly recognised as essential for the recognition of quilt-making as a quintessential American and women’s art, and reads as a manifesto against the institutional and ideological division of fine arts and craft:

[…] although the sexist and racist art world will, if forced, include token artists, they will never allow them to expand the definitions of art, but will include only those whose work can be used to rubber-stamp already established white male art styles. Because our female ancestors’ pieced quilts bear a superficial resemblance to the work of contemporary formalist artists […], modern male curators and critics are now capable of “seeing” the art in them.[16]

As Mainardi notes, from its origins in the 1660s, needlework was an art for and by women, where they played the roles of “audience and critics.”[17] Far from a uniquely domestic and functional use shrouded in anonymity, quilters displayed their crafts publicly in fairs, churches, and grange halls, often signing their quilts and naming their patterns in acts of recognition. Quilting bees (a get-together for people who sew and quilt, dating back to the eighteenth century) presented women the opportunity to gather in groups (that Mainardi compares to contemporary consciousness-raising groups) and discuss social and political events, as platforms to practice a form of public speech.[18]

Figure 2 : Pat Ferrero, Quilts in Women’s Lives, 1981. 16 mm, 28 mins, documentary. New Day Films.

Pat Ferrero’s film Quilts in Women’s Lives (1980) follows this commitment to providing a platform to women’s crafts by giving a voice to a series of quilters in the form of oral histories. Ferrero films each quilter in frontal shots, without offering an overarching voice to organise their individual experiences. Mirroring the structure of the quilts themselves, interviews are juxtaposed without any apparent order, leaving it to the viewers to form conclusions or “patterns” about the film’s message.[19] As Anne R. Kaplan notes, “the choice of the quilters (a black, an immigrant, unmarried sisters, an artist, a schoolteacher, early middle aged and elderly women, and so forth) makes the point that the art of quilting belongs to a great variety of women at different stages of life, who derive different kinds of gratification from it.”[20] The film seems to argue that orality is embedded within the fabric and structure of the quilts, as they become mirrors to the socio-economic background and the subjectivity of their makers. They are the material embodiment of a history of American women in their diversity.

Indeed, the women of the film choose to connect their quilt-making to questions of patterns and the choice of specific colours, of emotions embedded within the fabric of the quilt, and of the genealogy of patterns and quilts as objects passed down from generation to generation. Joan Mulholland similarly argues that quilts were a “communication genre” as early as the 1700s, through which women could transmit “patterns of speech” intergenerationally in what she terms “language lessons.”[21] Gschwandtner’s film quilts, while losing the orality of the original documentaries that are sewn together, reproduce this nearly aural quality of the quilts by returning to classical quilt patterns like crazy quilts, diamonds, log cabins, etc.[22] If we follow the rhetoric of Quilts in Women’s Lives, through her choice of materials, colours, and patterns, Gschwandtner inscribes a form of subjectivity into her quilts. Her own subjectivity is sewn into the quilts, while at the same time she carries a tradition of quilting that includes the “language” of the women that quilted and recorded these patterns before her. Film quilts take on the grammar of quilting, and apply it to a new medium that allows Gschwandtner to refer back to the voices of the women documented in Quilts in Women’s Lives.

Figure 3: Lucy Hilty remembering her Mennonite upbringing and her parents’ relation to quilting. Pat Ferrero, Quilts in Women’s Lives, 1981. 16 mm, 28 mins, documentary. New Day Films.

By choosing Ferrero’s 1981 documentary as the primary source of her film quilts, Gschwandtner participates in this larger history of feminist reflections on women’s crafts and their inclusion in fine arts settings. Before turning to quilting and experimental film, she was most famous for being the founder and editor of the activist knitting zine KnitKnit from its inception in 2002.[23] With film quilts, Gschwandtner crosses the boundaries of crafts and fine arts by bringing film and textile together, and exhibiting them as works of art in galleries. Drawing from activist documentaries such as Quilts in Women’s Lives further addresses this ideological divide. If Ferrero’s film echoes the structure and technique of quilts in its editing and structure (through a non-directive approach and the juxtaposition of interviews), the film quilts re-spatialise the footage into material objects, sewn together into visual patterns according to colours and not narration. The very fact that the Hands at Work quilts are composed of discarded found footage vividly recalls Mainardi’s attack against the disregard of women’s crafts by fine arts institutions. Gschwandtner writes that the film strips (Ferrero’s documentary, along with other short textile documentaries from the 1950s-80s) were given to her after they were de-accessioned from the Fashion Institute of Technology (FIT) following the digitisation their collections in 2009. She adds that “not only had the movies’ subject matter – mostly that of women creating textiles – been deemed unworthy of archiving, but some of the film had faded or discolored, adding an additional layer of valuelessness.”[24] First de-accessioned from the FIT, then sorted by archivists at Anthology Film Archives, these documentaries emblematise the gendered archival choices that lead to the dismissal of women’s craft as well as women’s films.[25] This narrative surrounding the rescuing of film from degradation and oblivion is common to the practice of found footage.[26] With the film quilts, this rescue from archival loss takes on a political implication, as Gschwandtner inscribes her work in the legacy of 1980s feminist art and craft historians. In the meantime, she distances herself from sacralising the film prints, by cutting and sewing them, and thus deteriorating their initial conditions. Intervening physically on archival prints through painting, puncturing, scratching, and using chemical solutions marks much of the work of found footage feminist filmmakers, such as Peggy Ahwesh, Cécile Fontaine, Annabel Nicholson, Naomi Uman, and Joyce Wieland among others. These processes enable them to alter the original message of the film and reveal its patriarchal underpinnings.[27]

If the film quilts offer a reflection on the gendered division between fine art and craftwork, they do so with a special attention to the presence of African American women in the long legacy of women quilters in American history. The film quilt that most prominently tackles this issue is Elizabeth Keckley Diamond (2014), a small format quilt depicting the black quilter Elizabeth Keckley in black-and-white film strips forming a central diamond shape. Elizabeth Hobbs Keckley (1818-1907) was born to enslaved parents and sold as a young girl to a North Carolina slave owner. She recounted her life story in her memoirs, Behind the Scenes or Thirty Years a Slave, and Four Years in the White House, first published in 1868, chronicling her journey from being enslaved to buying her freedom through her success in her trade as a “slave entrepreneur”, and becoming the dressmaker and confidant of Mary Todd Lincoln.[28] One of the most well-known black public figures of quilt-making, Keckley holds a central place in Gschwandtner’s quilt, with four film strips depicting her portrait in a medium close-up, intersecting in a cross in the centre of the composition. These four rows of quilt immediately capture the viewer’s attention and guide their gaze throughout the rest of the composition, representing an unknown African American family. The footage sets Keckley as the clear central figure of this film quilt portrait, acknowledging and asserting the importance of African American women in the history of quilt-making. As Mainardi and Lisa E. Farrington both note, quilting was never limited to a specific class or race in the United States, and the history of the craft reveals a network of influences between Indigenous, African, and European cultures as early as the 1600s.[29] Enslaved people such as Keckley often crafted numerous quilts for those who claimed ownership over them, frequently with highly creative techniques and styles, and it is through her craft as a seamstress that Keckley gained recognition and her eventual freedom. Unlike her other quilts from the series Hands at Work, Elizabeth Keckley Diamond works in a quasi-monochromatic manner, setting up a stark contrast between the warm coloured background made of film leaders and the cool-toned diamond shape depicting the quilt-maker. This striking contrast and the structure assemble a powerful portrait of Keckley through an allegory of her craft. With her film quilt, Gschwandtner pays homage to a key figure of American history and art.

Figure 4:  Sabrina Gschwandtner, Elizabeth Keckley Diamond, 2014. 16 mm film, polyester thread, lithography ink, 15 7/8 x 15 13/16 x 3 1/16 in.

Jonathan Walley notes that among the leaders surrounding the black-and-white diamond shape, a couple of celluloid strips depict an ornate coffee pot and what appears to be a painting. These objects function as indexes of wealth and privilege, starkly contrasting in colour and shape with the central imagery of paired down portraits of African Americans, seemingly isolated from this world.[30] As Walley writes, Elizabeth Keckley holds a privileged position within this composition, mirroring her social status: “Keckley stands as a mediating figure between the two worlds, more upwardly mobile than a typical black woman but still severely restricted by the structure of the society in which she lived. Her place at the centre of the quilt elevates her as subject but also emblematizes her distance from white society and power.”[31] On the other hand, these details only emerge upon close examination of the quilt, pulling the viewer into a more complex understanding of this historical figure. This playful push and pull of the quilt, between overall pattern and microscopic details, mirrors the feminist interpretation of quilts as a “secret language of women.”[32]

Quilt-Making and Film Editing as “Women’s Work”

If Gschwandtner’s film quilts offer a reflection on the gendered and racialised history of quilt-making, their structural components materialise this history in concrete forms. Made by stitching together celluloid strips of archival films, the quilts reproduce the craftwork that they depict. The delicate work performed by the artist is foregrounded when one approaches the quilts to examine their sutures. Gschwandtner purposefully uses the medium of film in order to recall the labour of film editing. Walley argues that the artisanal labour of sewing spatialises the process of editing, by “reimagin[ing] montage in spatial forms, lending them a concreteness they lose otherwise and throwing into relief the tropes of editing made invisible by narrative action.”[33] Moving beyond cinema as a projected medium, film quilts call attention to the materiality of the celluloid as well as the processes by which it is edited into narrative sequences. Pared down to film strips sewn together by hand, they offer a reflection on the specificity of cinema as an art form, and the craftwork that goes into film editing.[34]

This attention to sewing as a materialisation of the labour of editing inscribes Gschwandtner’s quilts within a feminist tradition of experimental handmade cinema dating back to the 1970s, along the works of Annabel Nicholson and Jennifer Reeves among others. These filmmakers pay specific attention to suturing and de-suturing as a feminist practice meant to defamiliarise the image of the female body, and more specifically a labouring female body.[35] With the experimental film Light Work I, Reeves sews together educational footage on a sewing machine, filming extreme close-ups of the sutures.[36] She interlaces these shots with footage of women weaving in factories in the film’s opening sequence. The extreme close-ups of the sewn footage, juxtaposed with imagery of women’s labour formulates a clear comparison between film editing and sewing, calling attention to the gendered labour of editing. Similarly, Gschwandtner often chooses footage of quilters’ hands stitching fabric together in close-ups, mirroring her own craft as a film quilter. In her 1973 performance Reel Time at the London Film-Makers’ Co-op, Annabel Nicholson ran a loop of film through a sewing machine and into a projector, slowly breaking down the celluloid by puncturing it with an unthreaded needle.[37] She placed herself in front of the projector, delineating starkly the outline of her body while operating the sewing machine, a symbol of domestic work. Here, the gendered body of the craftsperson and editor is highlighted even more. As Gregory Zinman writes: “[…] in Reel Time, in which the seams were the subject of the work and the construction/destruction of the image was laid bare for all to see, Nicholson reintroduced the labor behind filmmaking, and through sewing bound together the notion of ‘women’s work’ and filmmaking.”[38] The invisibility of the labour of film editors, once projected on screen and embodied by Nicholson, can no longer be ignored. With these experimental works, feminist filmmakers and performers recall the anonymised and unacknowledged labour of film editors, a position that women overwhelmingly occupied.

The comparison of film editing to a form of feminised domestic labour dates from the early stages of film production. As Leana Hirschfeld-Kroen notes, editors themselves compared their work to sewing and knitting, as this domestic metaphor “opened these jobs up to women”[39] while also absorbing their labour into the films themselves, essentially rendering their work unnoticed and anonymous.[40] Indeed, performing duties that were considered repetitive and technical – such as cutting and pasting negative film together – contrary to the creative work of male authors, the “cutters” were altogether absent from trade presses and film credits.[41] These tedious and labour intensive jobs fell to young working-class women. As technology advanced, and the studio system evolved in the 1930s and 1940s, working conditions changed for female “cutters.” Longer moving pictures and multiple reels made the labour of the editor more visible on screen (as it impacted the narrative more ostensibly). The studio system reacted by segregating the tasks of the editor along gendered lines “film editing split into two subfields: the individual, male-dominated mental artistry of “editing” and the mass feminized handiwork of cutting, splicing, joining, gluing, and lacing.”[42] Only very few women rose to prominent positions as recognised film editors, as for example Margaret Booth, who began her career as a cutter for D. W. Griffith.[43] This form of gendered labour falls under what Kylie Jarrett terms “women’s work,” “the social, reproductive work typically differentiated from productive economics of the industrial workplace.”[44] This category offers a critical framework to deconstruct the way that creative domestic work – such as weaving, sewing, and knitting – came to be constructed as reproductive and anonymised throughout the consolidation of the Hollywood studio system.

Figure 5: Sabrina Gschwandtner, Hands at Work (for Pat Ferrero), 2017. 16 mm film, polyester thread, 14 7/8 x 14 7/8 x 3 in.

Through the techniques that she uses, Gschwandtner inserts her work within this feminist critique of film labour, as she writes “for me, what related my work more to ‘craft critique’ and to feminist traditions was that the labor of the work was being done by me, with needle and thread or yarn – these things that signify what has historically been labelled ‘women’s work,’ just like film editing has been.”[45] While reproducing a form of gendered labour with her own body in the fabrication of film quilts, Gschwandtner transcends the reproductive aspect of editing and sewing by calling attention to it, and placing it at the centre of her works.[46] Her film quilts condense in material forms the questions of women’s work and the appropriation of domestic craft into reproductive labour. Her work often challenges the anonymity of feminised labour by naming the quilters and filmmakers that she represents and borrows from in her titles (like Elizabeth Keckley Diamond, 2014). The playful movement between the overall object of the quilt, the microscopic observation of the celluloid’s images of working craftswomen, and of the quilting technique sewing these images together formulates a critical argument tying together these elements into a feminist discourse.

Film Quilts as Sensory Vectors of Archival Knowledge

As noted above, Russell defines archiveology as self-reflective history-making process drawing from archival materials. The knowledge it produces is both historical and historiographical, reflecting on its own status as a constructed text. So far, I have shown how film quilts can produce a feminist discourse that confronts the structural absence of women’s narratives from the history of film and fine arts. While they use images as documents of a specific women’s history, the historical knowledge produced by the quilts is no longer transmitted didactically – as was the case in Ferrero’s Quilts in Women’s Lives – but through the materiality of the quilting process. Knowledge becomes embedded in the quilts’ stitches, connecting individual stories and techniques. It is through this alternation between the images and the process of their juxtaposition that Gschwandtner articulates the encounter and interaction of the feminist recovery of crafts like quilting and needlework in the 1960s onward with the contemporary reappraisal of the history of cinema as a one of gendered labour. Through this, Gschwandtner positions her work as part of the legacy of the feminist movement in both the arts and cinema. Particularly, her method of suturing images of craftwork, domesticity, and female community recalls works such as that of Chicago and Wieland, in their construction of a specific feminist history. Archival images become the grammar to articulate this history.

As objects made from cutting and stitching celluloid strips, Gschwandtner’s film quilts materialise the practice of archiveology and encourage an embodied relation to archival materials. To understand this interaction between archival images and viewers, I turn to Baron’s theorisation of the way found footage formulates this in terms of a relationship. In The Archive Effect (2013), Baron contends that archival images, because of their indexical quality, bring the viewer in “contact” with history.[47] She adds that the archive enters into a relation with the viewer through these film practices:

This reformulation of archival footage and other indexical archival documents as a relationship produced between particular elements of a film and the film’s viewer allows us to account […] for the ways in which certain documents from the past – whether found in an official archive, a family basement, or online – may be imbued by the viewer with various evidentiary values as they are appropriated and repurposed in new films.[48]

Concentrating on the meanings introduced by the confrontation of archival materials to viewers enables Baron to reflect on the multiplicity of interpretative contexts of found footage experiments. In the case of Gschwandtner’s film quilts, these contexts range from educational documentaries aimed towards young audiences and textile students, to feminist audiences engaged in the recognition of women’s work. Juxtaposed images, Baron claims, carry with them traces of their original intended context. The temporal disparity between intended context and context of reception – often intentional in found footage films and videos – creates the conditions for the recognition of multiple layers of historical experience in the viewer. Film quilts materialise the clash of these various historical and social contexts through their stitches that render visible the constructedness of the artist’s message. Elizabeth Keckley Diamond, for example, uses tinted blank leaders to enhance the darkness of the stitches juxtaposing black and white portraits of the quilter with warm coloured shots of ostentatious objects. They immediately appear to be from different class backgrounds, and archival sources, as their colours, compositions, and places in the quilt indicate. Blank leaders, in addition, recall the mediated nature of the images we encounter: they were once part of larger documentary films. This further leads viewers to question their original context of reception. Archival knowledge, in film quilts, becomes a sensory and nearly tactile experience. As I have argued, the film quilts’ stitches carry the knowledge of women’s labour, and a legacy of women’s craftwork. If Ferrero’s documentary “flattened” the quilts it depicted by recording them on film, film quilts work to re-materialise them into three-dimensional objects to be experienced physically. They invite a closer inspection, moving the viewers’ bodies in and out of their spaces of exhibition. The materiality of their fabric, highlighted by irregular stitching and bright colours, appeal to a sense of touch, especially when exhibited in front of windows.

Furthermore, the film quilts deconstruct the archive as a unified source of historical knowledge. This archival knowledge, as feminist archival theory demonstrates, is rooted in patriarchal order and can only be dismantled through a scrutiny of its constructedness.[49] As Kate Eichhorn writes: “rather than approach the archive as a site of preservation (a place to house traces of the past), feminist scholars, cultural workers, librarians, and archivists born during and after the rise of the second wave feminist movement are seizing the archive as an apparatus to legitimize new forms of knowledge and cultural production in an economically and politically precarious present.”[50] As Russell notes, Walter Benjamin approached the archive as a “construction site,” where fragmentation leads to openness and possibility.[51] Found footage, and film quilts in particular, by editing and juxtaposing images from a variety of contexts, break down the seamlessness of the archive, and expose its construction. Fragments from institutional and family archives cohabit to formulate new historical knowledge. Quilts mirror this heterogeneity by juxtaposing squares of different film sources, colours, shapes. Their organisation does not follow a narrative impulse, but, rather, it is grounded in more formal implications that hark back to traditional patterns and a legacy of women’s craft. What film quilts emphasise specifically is the materiality of archival images as objects subjected to decay and manipulation. Far from the supposed disembodied knowledge of official archives, the footage of the quilts physically reacts to its interactions with the artist and its viewers. These interactions escape the control of archives and their sanitised environment. Gschwandtner, for example, does not hesitate to paint over the footage with lithography ink to create more vivid colours over the film leaders. Her film quilts present and encourage a view of the archive as a series of objects connected by the situated voice of the artist, and as subject to interpretation and sensory encounters.

In choosing the archival material to integrate in her quilts, Gschwandtner refuses to follow an archival logic of the perfect print, favouring instead deteriorated prints and incomplete footage. Her work questions the archival choices leading to the de-accessioning of textile documentaries on women’s quilts, in the same vein as Peggy Ahwesh with her short film The Color of Love (1994), where she “rescued” degraded pornographic footage from a dumpster.[52] Ahwesh’s film focuses on the graphic patterns emerging from the mould and the leaks, covering the images of two women having sex with each other and a corpse. Both filmmakers emphasise the sensorial engagement with these images and their materiality, calling for an embodied response. If Gschwandtner’s quilts do not present the same level of degradation, they similarly reflect on the disregard of archival institutions for women-centred works. Furthermore, film quilts often make use of film leaders, lacking visual images. They sometimes include handwritten notes, or the titles of films, such as the “Discovering Form in Art” in the film quilt Arts and Crafts (2012) that ironically recalls the sudden “discovery” of the formal qualities of quilts by fine arts curators in the 1970s.[53]

Figure 6: Sabrina Gschwandtner, Arts and Crafts, 2012. 16 mm film, polyamide thread, 23 1/2 x 23 in.

By including leaders within her compositions, Gschwandtner expands the purview of the film archive, questioning what constitutes “film” as an object. In her film quilts, every inch of the film strip qualifies as archival material, carrying both formal capacities and historical information. Her work confronts viewers with archival hierarchies. One could wonder how the integration of film leaders into found footage expands the “evidentiary value” that Baron confers to archival materials.[54] What are the intended contexts of leaders? What traces of history do they carry with them? Gschwandtner’s quilting practice utilises them as she would recycle strips of fabric, granting them a new life and purpose outside of the archive, whilst acknowledging the emotional and subjective traces of history embedded in them.

Conclusion

To conclude, I propose a return to Gschwandtner’s 2009 Gustavsbergs Konsthall exhibition Watch & See, where she hung film over the windows of the gallery. For later exhibitions Gschwandtner’s quilts were displayed against light boxes for fear of their deterioration with sunlight. However, I argue that choosing to hang the quilts over windows in an otherwise empty gallery space crystallised Gschwandtner’s reflections on the history of quilt-making and women’s work in the film industry. Looking through them provided the viewer with a renewed experience of the cityscape, suddenly filtered through images of crafts and women’s hands. The patterns of the quilts overlaid the lines of rooftops, inviting the viewer to step closer and examine the details of the colourful film strips. Casting coloured lights into the gallery itself, film quilts also transcended this space, now imbued with new subjectivities. If (art) history repeatedly ignored and anonymised craftswomen’s points of view, these quilts reclaimed them as central in our experience of the city and the art world alike. As Gschwandtner writes, “[t]hey physically engaged the idea of shedding contemporary light on history.”[55] Furthermore, this display mechanism accentuated the materiality of the footage, its weight, sutures, and slow deterioration. Both quilts and celluloid film footage are fragile artefacts that require specific exhibitionary and archival treatment due to their materiality. By taking them out of storage boxes and dark rooms, Gschwandtner exposed their fragility as well as the craftwork that goes into making and conserving them. Her art practice transcends the archive while constantly returning to it, exposing its material components and the labour of its workers.

Gschwandtner’s more recent work – the Cinema Sanctuary Study series – returns more directly to a feminist film history, and the still-unrecognised labour of female cinema pioneers of the late 1800s to early 1900s, such as Alice Guy-Blaché, Germaine Dulac, and Marion E. Wong. For this new series, she searched archival collections around the world in a methodology that Russell would identify as archiveology – reprinting footage from their films onto 35mm film stock, cutting, and sewing it into entirely black and white quilt patterns.[56] She identifies her practice as a form of quilting, salvaging strips of film and fabric to create new patterns – and futures – for the history of film and craftwork. This echoes Kate Eichhorn’s call to consider archival practices as genealogical tactics. In this, Eichhorn follows Wendy Brown’s theorisation of “genealogical politics” as an inquiry into the “past of the present” that renders “the categories constitutive of the present” historical and constructed rather than natural.[57] This defamiliarising process, for Eichhorn “is not a turn toward the past but rather an essential way of understanding and imagining other ways to live in the present,” and an essential feminist tactic.[58] Gschwandtner’s archival work – whether it is centred on female cinema pioneer or the reclaiming of quilting as a feminist art – turns to a history of feminist film and artistic tradition to expose the ideology that led to their neglect, and to renew our sensorial interactions with archives in a non-hierarchical, future-oriented process.

 

Notes

[1] Sabrina Gschwandtner, “16mm Film Quilts Series (2009-2018),” https://www.sabrinag.com/filmquilts, Sabrina Gschwandtner, n.d., accessed November 11, 2021.

[2] Catherine Russell, Archiveology: Walter Benjamin and Archival Film Practices (Durham, NC: Duke University Press, 2018), 22.

[3] Jaimie Baron, The Archive Effect: Found Footage and the Audiovisual Experience of History (London; New York, NY: Routledge, 2014), 1.

[4] Russell, Archiveology, 12.

[5] Russell, Archiveology, 22.

[6] Russell, Archiveology, 6.

[7] Gschwandtner, “16mm Film Quilts Series.”

[8] Julia Bryan-Wilson, “Tactility and Transparency: An Interview with Sabrina Gschwandtner,” in Sunshine and Shadow: Film Quilts by Sabrina Gschwandtner, eds. Glenn Adamson, Sarah Archer, and Julia Bryan-Wilson, 2013, 45.

[9] Russell, Archiveology, 27.

[10] Baron, The Archive Effect, 7.

[11] Pat Ferrero, Quilts in Women’s Lives, 16 mm, documentary (Newburgh, NY: New Day Films, 1981).

[12] Elissa Auther, “Fiber Art and the Hierarchy of Art and Craft, 1960–80,” The Journal of Modern Craft 1, no. 1 (March 2008): 31, https://doi.org/10.2752/174967708783389896; See also Rozsika Parker, The Subversive Stitch: Embroidery and the Making of the Feminine (London and New York, NY: I. B. Tauris, 2010).

[13] Auther, “Fiber Art and the Hierarchy of Art and Craft,” 31.

[14] Auther, “Fiber Art and the Hierarchy of Art and Craft,” 31.00/00/0000 00:00:00

[15] Joyce Wieland, Handtinting, 1967-68, 16 mm, colour, silent. See Kay Armatage, “Joyce Wieland, Feminist Documentary, and the Body of the Work,” Canadian Journal of Political and Social Theory 13, no. 1-2 (1989): 91-101.

[16] Reproduced in Patricia Mainardi, “Quilts: The Great American Art,” in Feminism and Art History: Questioning the Litany, eds. Norma Broude and Mary D. Garrard, 1st ed (New York, NY and London: Routledge, 1982), 343.

[17] Mainardi, “Quilts: The Great American Art,” 331.

[18] Mainardi, “Quilts: The Great American Art,” 342; see also Joan Mulholland, “Patchwork: The Evolution of a Women’s Genre,” The Journal of American Culture 19, no. 4 (Winter 1996): 63, https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1542-734X.1996.1904_57.x. Mainardi recalls that Susan B. Anthony is said to have made her first public speech during a church quilting bee in Cleveland.

[19] Anne R. Kaplan, “Review: Quilts in Women’s Lives: Six Portraits [Film] by Pat Ferrero,” The Oral History Review 18, no. 1 (1990): 123.

[20] Kaplan, “Review,” 122.

[21] Mulholland, “Patchwork,” 58; 59.

[22] For further reflection on the importance of the “handmade” as a mark of authenticity and subjectivity, see Gregory Zinman, Making Images Move: Handmade Cinema and Other Arts (Oakland, CA: University of California Press, 2020).

[23] Most of the academic publications on Gschwandtner’s work focus on her knitting work and her involvement with the zine. Recently however, Jonathan Walley dedicated a chapter of his book Cinema Expanded to “Film as Weaving” and the formal experiments of Sabrina Gschwandtner, Richard Kerr, and Mary Stark, weaving film strips into sculptural forms. See Jonathan Walley, Cinema Expanded: Avant-Garde Film in the Age of Intermedia (New York, NY: Oxford University Press, 2019).

[24] Gschwandtner, “16mm Film Quilts Series.”

[25] See, for example, B. Ruby Rich, Chick Flicks: Theories and Memories of the Feminist Film Movement (Durham, NC: Duke University Press, 1998); Lauren Rabinovitz, Points of Resistance: Women, Power & Politics in the New York Avant-Garde Cinema, 1943-71, 2nd ed (Urbana, IL: University of Illinois Press, 2003); Jackie Hatfield, “Imagining Future Gardens of History,” Camera Obscura: Feminism, Culture, and Media Studies 21, no. 2 (2006): 184–91, https://doi.org/10.1215/02705346-2006-008; Robin Blaetz, ed., Women’s Experimental Cinema: Critical Frameworks (Durham, NC: Duke University Press, 2007).

[26] One can think, for example, of Peggy Ahwesh’s The Color of Love (1994), or Barbara Hammer’s Nitrate Kiss (1992).

[27] For an account of feminist uses of found footage, see for example the special issue of Feminist Media Studies, “Women Without a Movie Camera”. Monica Dall’Asta and Alessandra Chiarini, “Editors’ Introduction: Found Footage: Women Without a Movie Camera,” Feminist Media Histories 2, no. 3 (July 1, 2016): 1–10, https://doi.org/10.1525/fmh.2016.2.3.1.

[28] Elizabeth Keckley, Behind the Scenes, or, Thirty Years a Slave, and Four Years in the White House. (Chapel Hill, NC: University of North Carolina Press, 2011), http://public.ebookcentral.proquest.com/choice/publicfullrecord.aspx?p=3039500; For historical analyses of Keckley’s labour as a slave, a seamstress and a companion to Mary Todd Lincoln, see Xiomara Santamarina, Belabored Professions: Narratives of African American Working Womanhood (Chapel Hill, NC: University of North Carolina Press, 2005); Janaka B. Lewis, “Elizabeth Keckley and Freedom’s Labor,” African American Review 49, no. 1 (2016): 5–17, https://doi.org/10.1353/afa.2016.0004; Patty Wilde, “From Slave to Seamstress: Elizabeth Keckley’s Rhetoric of Emotional Labor,” in Women at Work: Rhetorics of Gender and Labor, eds. David Gold and Jessica Enoch (Pittsburgh, PA: University of Pittsburgh Press, 2019), 31–41, https://search.ebscohost.com/login.aspx?direct=true&scope=site&db=nlebk&db=nlabk&AN=2234962.

[29] See for example Mainardi, “Quilts: The Great American Art”; Lisa E. Farrington, “Creativity in the Era of Slavery,” in Creating Their Own Image: The History of African-American Women Artists (Oxford and New York, NY: Oxford University Press, 2005), 26–49.

[30] Walley, Cinema Expanded, 325.

[31] Walley, Cinema Expanded, 325.

[32] Mulholland, “Patchwork,” 68.

[33] Walley, Cinema Expanded, 327.

[34] This medium specific discourse is at the centre of Jonathan Walley’s definition of expanded cinema. He writes that “expanded cinema neither abandoned the project of specifying cinema and distinguishing it from other art forms, nor cast off cinema’s historical traditions, formal conventions, or familiar materials. After an initial, and rather brief, wave of expanded cinema that equated the term with intermedia and promoted the belief that cinema could be anything, a shift occurred whereby cinema’s unwieldy and unlimited expansion encountered a reassertion of cinema’s specificity an artistic autonomy by film makers and critics. […] expanded cinema is best seen, I argue, as negotiating between cinema’s technological and aesthetic heterogeneity under one hand, and its specificity and historical continuity on the other.” Walley, Cinema Expanded, 15–16.

[35] See Gregory Zinman, “Sewing Light and Bleaching Bodies: Feminist Handmade Film Practices,” in Making Images Move: Handmade Cinema and Other Arts (Oakland, CA: University of California Press, 2020), 138–45; and Shana MacDonald, “Voicing Dissonance: Resistant Soundscapes in 1960s Feminist Experimental Film,” Feminist Media Histories 1, no. 4 (2015): 89–107, https://doi.org/10.1525/fmh.2015.1.4.89. MacDonald analyses the ways that filmmakers Carolee Schneemann, Gunvor Nelson, and Joyce Wieland use “discordant soundtracks [to] defamiliarize the domesticity of these private spaces and critically interrogate the domestic roles of wife, muse, and mother commonly associated with the spaces” (90).

[36] Jennifer Reeves, Light Work I, 16 mm/HDCAM, 2006.

[37] Thomas Elsaesser, in his archaeological approach to the history of the cinematic apparatus, notes that the projector is closely linked to the sewing machine and borrowed from its mechanisms. Thomas Elsaesser, “Digital Cinema and the Apparatus: Archaeologies, Epistemologies, Ontologies,” in Film History as Media Archaeology (Amsterdam: Amsterdam University Press, 2017), 253–266, https://doi.org/10.1515/9789048529964-010.

[38] Zinman, “Sewing Light and Bleaching Bodies,” 140.

[39] Leana Hirschfeld-Kroen, “Weavers of Film: The Girl Operator Mends the Cut,” Feminist Media Histories 7, no. 3 (July 1, 2021): 104, https://doi.org/10.1525/fmh.2021.7.3.104.

[40] For recent accounts of women’s work in the film industry, and the feminised role of the film editor, see Erin Hill, Never Done: A History of Women’s Work in Media Production (New Brunswick, NJ: Rutgers University Press, 2016); David Meuel, Women Film Editors: Profiles in the Invisible Art of American Movies (Jefferson, IA: McFarland, 2016); Jane M. Gaines, Pink-Slipped: What Happened to Women in the Silent Film Industries? (Champaign, IL: University of Illinois Press, 2018), https://doi.org/10.5406/j.ctt212172p.

[41] Jane Gaines and Radha Vatsal, “How Women Worked in the US Silent Film Industry,” in Women Film Pioneers Project (New York, NY: Columbia University Libraries, 2011), https://academiccommons.columbia.edu/doi/10.7916/d8-nwqe-k750.

[42] Hirschfeld-Kroen, “Weavers of Film: The Girl Operator Mends the Cut,” 104–5.

[43] Margaret Booth’s interviews at the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences are an invaluable source of information on the labour of women editors in the early 20eth century. Kristen Hatch, “Cutting Women: Margaret Booth and Hollywood’s Pioneering Female Film Editors,” in Women Film Pioneers Project, ed. Radha Vatsal, Jane M. Gaines, and Monica Dall’Asta (New York, NY: Columbia University Libraries, 2013), https://academiccommons.columbia.edu/doi/10.7916/d8-t0y9-hv61

[44] Kylie Jarrett, “The Relevance of ‘Women’s Work’: Social Reproduction and Immaterial Labor in Digital Media,” Television & New Media 15, no. 1 (January 2014): 15, https://doi.org/10.1177/1527476413487607.

[45] Bryan-Wilson, “Tactility and Transparency: An Interview with Sabrina Gschwandtner,” 40.

[46] If Gschwandtner’s quilts reflect on the labour attached to analogue film editing, feminist scholars like Donna Haraway, Sadie Plant, and Lisa Nakamura expand these considerations into a critique of digital technologies and their similar reliance on racialised women’s work for reproductive tasks. Donna Haraway, Simians, Cyborgs, and Women: The Reinvention of Nature (London: Routledge, 1991); Lisa Nakamura, “Indigenous Circuits: Navajo Women and the Racialization of Early Electronic Manufacture,” American Quarterly 66, no. 4 (2014): 919-941, https://doi.org/10.1353/aq.2014.0070; Sadie Plant, Zeroes + Ones: Digital Women + the New Technoculture (New York, NY: Doubleday, 1997).

[47] Baron, The Archive Effect, 1.

[48] Baron, The Archive Effect, 7.

[49] See for example Ann Cvetkovich, An Archive of Feelings: Trauma, Sexuality, and Lesbian Public Cultures (Durham, NC: Duke University Press, 2003); Simone Osthoff, Performing the Archive: The Transformation of the Archive in Contemporary Art from Repository of Documents to Art Medium (New York, NY: Atropos Press, 2009); Kate Eichhorn, The Archival Turn in Feminism: Outrage in Order (Philadelphia, PA: Temple University Press, 2013); Russell, Archiveology.

[50] Eichhorn, The Archival Turn in Feminism, 4.

[51] Russell, Archiveology, 13.

[52] Peggy Ahwesh, The Color of Love, 16 mm, colour, sound, 1994.

[53] See Mainardi, “Quilts: The Great American Art.”

[54] Baron, The Archive Effect, 7.

[55] Bryan-Wilson, “Tactility and Transparency: An Interview with Sabrina Gschwandtner,” 43.

[56] Russell, Archiveology, 18.

[57] Wendy Brown, Politics out of History (Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 2001), 95.

[58] Eichhorn, The Archival Turn in Feminism, 9.

 

Bibliography

Armatage, Kay. “Joyce Wieland, Feminist Documentary, and the Body of the Work.” Canadian Journal of Political and Social Theory 13, no. 1-2 (1989): 91-101.

Auther, Elissa. “Fiber Art and the Hierarchy of Art and Craft, 1960–80.” The Journal of Modern Craft 1, no. 1 (March 2008): 13–33. https://doi.org/10.2752/174967708783389896.

Baron, Jaimie. The Archive Effect: Found Footage and the Audiovisual Experience of History. London and New York, NY: Routledge, 2014.

Blaetz, Robin, ed. Women’s Experimental Cinema: Critical Frameworks. Durham, NC: Duke University Press, 2007.

Brown, Wendy. Politics out of History. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 2001.

Bryan-Wilson, Julia. “Tactility and Transparency: An Interview with Sabrina Gschwandtner.” In Sunshine and Shadow: Film Quilts by Sabrina Gschwandtner, edited by Glenn Adamson, Sarah Archer, and Julia Bryan-Wilson, 39–45, 2013.

Cvetkovich, Ann. An Archive of Feelings: Trauma, Sexuality, and Lesbian Public Cultures. Durham, NC: Duke University Press, 2003.

Dall’Asta, Monica, and Alessandra Chiarini. “Editors’ Introduction: Found Footage: Women Without a Movie Camera.” Feminist Media Histories 2, no. 3 (July 1, 2016): 1–10. https://doi.org/10.1525/fmh.2016.2.3.1.

Eichhorn, Kate. The Archival Turn in Feminism: Outrage in Order. Philadelphia, PA: Temple University Press, 2013.

Elsaesser, Thomas. “Digital Cinema and the Apparatus: Archaeologies, Epistemologies, Ontologies.” In Film History as Media Archaeology, 253-266. Amsterdam: Amsterdam University Press, 2017. https://doi.org/10.1515/9789048529964-010.

Farrington, Lisa E. “Creativity in the Era of Slavery.” In Creating Their Own Image: The History of African-American Women Artists, 26–49. Oxford and New York, NY: Oxford University Press, 2005.

Gaines, Jane M. Pink-Slipped: What Happened to Women in the Silent Film Industries? Champaign, IL: University of Illinois Press, 2018. https://doi.org/10.5406/j.ctt212172p.

Gaines, Jane, and Radha Vatsal. “How Women Worked in the US Silent Film Industry.” In Women Film Pioneers Project. New York, NY: Columbia University Libraries, 2011. https://academiccommons.columbia.edu/doi/10.7916/d8-nwqe-k750.

Gschwandtner, Sabrina. “16mm Film Quilts Series (2009-2018).” https://www.sabrinag.com/filmquilts. Sabrina Gschwandtner, n.d. Accessed November 11, 2021.

Haraway, Donna. Simians, Cyborgs, and Women: The Reinvention of Nature. London: Routledge, 1991.

Hatch, Kristen. “Cutting Women: Margaret Booth and Hollywood’s Pioneering Female Film Editors.” In Women Film Pioneers Project, edited by Radha Vatsal, Jane M. Gaines, and Monica Dall’Asta. New York, NY: Columbia University Libraries, 2013. https://academiccommons.columbia.edu/doi/10.7916/d8-t0y9-hv61.

Hatfield, Jackie. “Imagining Future Gardens of History.” Camera Obscura: Feminism, Culture, and Media Studies 21, no. 2 (2006): 184–91. https://doi.org/10.1215/02705346-2006-008.

Hill, Erin. Never Done: A History of Women’s Work in Media Production. New Brunswick, NJ: Rutgers University Press, 2016.

Hirschfeld-Kroen, Leana. “Weavers of Film: The Girl Operator Mends the Cut.” Feminist Media Histories 7, no. 3 (July 1, 2021): 104–34. https://doi.org/10.1525/fmh.2021.7.3.104.

Jarrett, Kylie. “The Relevance of ‘Women’s Work’: Social Reproduction and Immaterial Labor in Digital Media.” Television & New Media 15, no. 1 (January 2014): 14–29. https://doi.org/10.1177/1527476413487607.

Kaplan, Anne R. “Review: Quilts in Women’s Lives: Six Portraits [Film] by Pat Ferrero.” The Oral History Review 18, no. 1 (1990): 122–24.

Keckley, Elizabeth. Behind the Scenes, or, Thirty Years a Slave, and Four Years in the White House. Chapel Hill, NC: University of North Carolina Press, 2011. http://public.ebookcentral.proquest.com/choice/publicfullrecord.aspx?p=3039500.

Lewis, Janaka B. “Elizabeth Keckley and Freedom’s Labor.” African American Review 49, no. 1 (2016): 5–17. https://doi.org/10.1353/afa.2016.0004.

MacDonald, Shana. “Voicing Dissonance: Resistant Soundscapes in 1960s Feminist Experimental Film,” Feminist Media Histories 1, no. 4 (2015): 89–107, https://doi.org/10.1525/fmh.2015.1.4.89.

Mainardi, Patricia. “Quilts: The Great American Art.” In Feminism and Art History: Questioning the Litany, edited by Norma Broude and Mary D. Garrard, 1st ed., 331–46. New York, NY and London: Routledge, 1982.

Meuel, David. Women Film Editors: Profiles in the Invisible Art of American Movies. Jefferson, IA: McFarland, 2016.

Mulholland, Joan. “Patchwork: The Evolution of a Women’s Genre.” The Journal of American Culture 19, no. 4 (Winter 1996): 57–69. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1542-734X.1996.1904_57.x.

Nakamura, Lisa. “Indigenous Circuits: Navajo Women and the Racialization of Early Electronic Manufacture.” American Quarterly 66, no. 4 (2014): 919–41. https://doi.org/10.1353/aq.2014.0070.

Osthoff, Simone. Performing the Archive: The Transformation of the Archive in Contemporary Art from Repository of Documents to Art Medium. New York, NY: Atropos Press, 2009.

Parker, Rozsika. The Subversive Stitch: Embroidery and the Making of the Feminine. London and New York, NY: I. B. Tauris, 2010.

Plant, Sadie. Zeroes + Ones: Digital Women + the New Technoculture. New York, NY: Doubleday, 1997.

Rabinovitz, Lauren. Points of Resistance: Women, Power & Politics in the New York Avant-Garde Cinema, 1943-71. 2nd ed. Urbana, IL: University of Illinois Press, 2003.

Rich, B. Ruby. Chick Flicks: Theories and Memories of the Feminist Film Movement. Durham, NC: Duke University Press, 1998.

Russell, Catherine. Archiveology: Walter Benjamin and Archival Film Practices. Durham, NC: Duke University Press, 2018.

Santamarina, Xiomara. Belabored Professions: Narratives of African American Working Womanhood. Chapel Hill, NC: University of North Carolina Press, 2005.

Walley, Jonathan. Cinema Expanded: Avant-Garde Film in the Age of Intermedia. New York, NY: Oxford University Press, 2019.

Wilde, Patty. “From Slave to Seamstress: Elizabeth Keckley’s Rhetoric of Emotional Labor.” In Women at Work: Rhetorics of Gender and Labor, edited by David Gold and Jessica Enoch, 31–41. Pittsburgh, PA: University of Pittsburgh Press, 2019. https://search.ebscohost.com/login.aspx?direct=true&scope=site&db=nlebk&db=nlabk&AN=2234962.

Zinman, Gregory. Making Images Move: Handmade Cinema and Other Arts. Oakland, CA: University of California Press, 2020.

 

Filmography

Ahwesh, Peggy. The Color of Love. 1994. 16 mm, colour, sound.

Ferrero, Pat. Quilts in Women’s Lives. 1981; Newburgh, NY: New Day Films. 16 mm, colour, sound.

Gschwandtner, Sabrina. Cinema Sanctuary Study series. 2019-2021. 35 mm, polyester thread. Accessed November 11, 2021. https://www.sabrinag.com/35-mm-film-quilt-series-2019-

Gschwandtner, Sabrina. Hands at Work series. 2009-2018. 16 mm, polyamide thread, cotton thread, lithography ink. Accessed November 11, 2021. https://www.sabrinag.com/filmquilts

Gschwandtner, Sabrina. Arts and Crafts. 2012. 16 mm, polyamide thread, 23 1/2 x 23 in. Accessed November 11, 2021. https://www.sabrinag.com/filmquilts

Gschwandtner, Sabrina. Elizabeth Keckley Diamond. 2014. 16 mm, polyester thread, lithography ink, 15 7/8 x 15 13/16 x 3 1/16 in. Accessed November 11, 2021. https://www.sabrinag.com/filmquilts

Hammer, Barbara. Nitrate Kiss. 1992. 16 mm, black and white, sound.

Reeves, Jennifer. Light Work I. 2006. 16 mm/HDCAM, colour, sound.

Wieland, Joyce. Handtinting. 1967-68. 16 mm, colour, silent.

 

Author biography

Lola Rémy is a PhD candidate in Film and Moving Image Studies in the Mel Hoppenheim School of Cinema at Concordia University, Montreal. She received her Master’s in History of Arts from Université Paris-Sorbonne. Her dissertation investigates and contextualises the formation of a post-war universalist discourse as expressed in experimental film practices of assemblage. She offers a decolonising perspective on the appropriation of Indigenous artefacts and imagery, at the core of this discourse. Her work has been published in NECSUS European Journal of Media Studies and Synoptique, A Journal of Film and Moving Image Studies. She is a member of the Archive/CounterArchive network, and the Global Emergent Media Lab at Concordia University.

Images Big and Soft: The Digital Archive Rendered Cinematic

DOI:10.15664/fcj.v19i0.2379

 

Figure 1: Media artist Refik Anadol uses a tool called the Latent Space Browser developed by his studio to apply machine learning to millions of images to observe a “latent cinematic dimension.” These are images created for Machine Hallucination (2021).

Introduction

In his recent project titled Machine Hallucination (2021), Los Angeles-based media artist Refik Anadol collected over 100 million images of New York City from social media and, using machine learning to “read” the images, created a 30-minute immersive experimental cinema experience that visualises the archive of snapshots. On his website, Anadol explains that computation allows “a novel form of synesthetic storytelling through its multilayered manipulation of a vast visual archive beyond the conventional limits of the camera and the existing cinematographic techniques.”[1]

In a somewhat similar gesture, in 2018, while participating in an artist’s residency in the Netherlands, artist/researcher Anna Ridler took 10,000 digital pictures of tulips, each flower centred against a black backdrop and dutifully labelled by hand. The images were gathered with an intention to demonstrate the labour, ethics, and skill associated with assembling a dataset that could be used for machine learning. The flower images became the framework for a suite of media art projects, each offering a reflection on the shifting nature of the archive with an emphasis on an in-between state, one that brings into the foreground what is so often eclipsed in the collection of data.

In yet another archive-oriented work employing computation, in a project titled Ich halte es für eine Tragödie, daß wir uns nicht gefunden haben! [I consider it a tragedy that we have not found each other!] (2016), media artist Ornella Fieres transformed a box of letters and images found at an inheritance sale, simultaneously reading and reimagining the materials through machine learning. The result is a series of almost uncanny images and text fragments that suggest not simply the as-yet imperfect rendering capacities of machine learning, but rather the potential for an aesthetic based not on mimicry but on failure.

In this essay, I argue that, while these three projects work toward disparate ends and function at radically different scales, from the massive to the intimately personal, taken together, they represent a shift in our understanding of both the cinematic moving image and the archive, and enact a set of new relationships between human vision and digital images. They showcase the image not as stable representation but as unfolding and ongoing process, and they call attention to the fact that the perspective made available to the human is but one among many possible points of view. I should note that I use the word “archive” here in a deliberately broad sense. While in the past archives denoted collections devoted to the conservation and creation of historical record based on artefacts, with digital media, notions of image collections, datasets, and archives begin to blur. For my purposes, then, the “archives” constituted by these artists are also datasets and image collections; all three meanings cohere, in part specifically to unsettle the traditional understanding of the archive itself.[2] I will note also that my emphasis on the unsettling of stability is aligned with scholars who attend to computation and technical conditions, rather than those who describe the “anarchive” as a conceptual reorientation.[3]

Figure 2: Machine Hallucination (2021), Refik Anadol.

Whereas in the past, the moving image and the archive relied on notions of linearity, organisation, stability, and a semblance of order, the digital archive as it is differently enacted in these three projects suggests contingency, permeability, and process. True, elements of the traditional archive remain in the sense that each of the projects involves collection, ordering, observing connections, and presenting forms of access. However, rather than assuring a history or preserving the past, the archive modelled by these projects is in flux, and its qualities are perhaps more correctly aligned with instantaneity. I make this argument not in order to bemoan the loss of stability in a world rife with electronic networks, but instead to suggest that this experience of instability is itself based on the visual, and through that, on a potentially obsolescent understanding of the image within the era of computation. To borrow a phrase from Daniel Rubinstein and Andy Fisher, the photograph that exists within a database is a skeuomorph, an object whose appearance masks its true makeup. In this case, it suggests the innocuous snapshot of the past while in fact functioning far more powerfully within structures of surveillance, control, and power.[4]

Indeed, the projects I have selected are significant in their evocation of what has been named by Ingrid Hoelzl the “soft-image” or “post-image,” shifting from the single image as a solid, stable representation within a collection of similarly single images, to that of the distributed, in-process experiential image.[5] Further, each artist discussed here approaches the creation of a collection of images with varied intentions that in turn illustrate a different facet of the post-image. Each also presents the material in disparate modalities that, while connected to the cinematic, produce disparate sensory experiences that point toward the post-cinematic. Most significantly, taken together, these three artworks offer a perspective on the archive in 2022 and reflect our current moment’s transition from representation to computation, as well as an experience of the archive that posits new sensorial experiences that limn the boundaries of the cinematic.

Artists and Algorithms: Technical Notes

Refik Anadol, Anna Ridler, and Ornella Fieres are just three artists are among many who have begun to explore the efficacy of what is known as Generative Adversarial Networks (GANs) in relation to moving image artwork. I highlight this point to point to the contributions artists often make in the evolution of new technologies. In summary, the GAN process generally involves two steps: in the first stage, a computational model is trained to “understand” a set of images by being “fed” a large number of reference images from a particular film or group of films; in the second step, the computer generates images with the model that are in some way related to the original images. Artists may then use the resulting material in a variety of ways.

For scholars, filmmakers, and artists unfamiliar with the brief history of the use of Generative Adversarial Networks in filmmaking, I offer a more detailed overview of the technical language and processes associated with them. Machine learning is a term developed by Arthur Samuel in the 1950s based on a program he created that learned how to play checkers. As the program played the relatively simple game, it developed improved skills, gradually surpassing the ability of human players. Machine learning, then, is a part of the larger field of artificial intelligence and describes the process through which data and algorithms emerge not simply as “recipes” that dictate a set of actions, but instead allow the machine to learn over time, based on a process of “training” using existing data. When we use Netflix, for example, the platform tracks our viewing habits and looks for connections and patterns across genres, directors, performers, and so on, and then recommends other films where it finds similarities or connections. The algorithm trains itself based on the information it gathers from users; the more data it collects, the more accurate and more effective it becomes over time.[6]

Generative adversarial networks, which have grown more sophisticated over the last five years, take machine learning a step farther. In this process, a generator network offers random image samples to what is known as a discriminator network, which in turn attempts to ascertain which images are real and which are fake. The generator grows better over time at creating images that are real enough to fool the discriminator; the back-and-forth process creates a powerful learning system.

A group of artists have been interested in the development of machine learning specifically in the context of cinema. For example, artist and researcher Terence Broad has explored the use of GANs, and, in an essay describing his process, explains his attempts to use GANs to create more realistic images. He sketches a history, noting that the adversarial process was initially developed by Ian J. Goodfellow and his colleagues in 2013, but it was not until two years later that the process was able to produce realistic images.[7] Building on the work of Goodfellow and Alex Radford, Broad tried to design a variational autoencoder in which the discriminator network could “assess how similar a reconstructed sample is to the real sample.”[8] This would allow the GAN to achieve precision more quickly. He explains that before he was able to create this adjustment, Anders Boesen Lindbo Larsen published a paper that moved the process forward.[9] In this method, the system compares “the difference in response of the real and reconstructed samples in the higher layers of a discriminator network” that creates a “learned similarity metric” that is not focused on a pixel-based reconstruction error comparison.[10] He goes on to explain that Larsen’s model relies on an encoder, decoder, and discriminator.

Broad used this method to work with Ridley Scott’s Blade Runner (1982), the experimental feature film Koyaanisqatsi (1982), and John Whitney’s Matrix III (1972), creating what he calls “reconstructed films.”[11] While it is fascinating to see how the algorithm tries to reproduce the faces of actors, scenes from nature, and computer-generated animation, the most interesting experiment conducted by Broad centres on Richard Linklater’s 2006 film A Scanner Darkly (2006). Linklater shot this project on film, and then the live action footage was transformed using software that automated the rotoscoping process to create an animated feature. In the side-by-side comparison of the film’s trailer and the autoencoded version of the trailer, the transformed version boasts a painterly blur and wash of colour absent in the original. In a sense, the new version of the trailer is somehow more animated.

As another example of artists involved in using GANs in relation to cinema, Casey Reas wrote a book titled Making Pictures With Generative Adversarial Networks (2019. In it, he describes his process, writing specifically from the perspective of an artist rather than a computer scientist. He explains, “A GAN model generates pictures by inputting a list of one hundred numbers between -1 and 1. For instance, if all one hundred numbers are set to 0, a specific picture will be produced that correlates to those values. If the first number is changed to 0.1, a similar but different picture will be generated.”[12] Like Broad, Reas has used GANs to visually reimagine existing films. For example, he trained a DCGAN model on frames from Ingmar Bergman’s 1966 film Persona. He notes that some of the images produced in this process resemble the film’s actors; others are odd hybrids of landscapes and bodies; and others are beautiful abstractions. Highlighting the images’ uncanniness, Reas writes: “A subset of images created through the GAN are an alternate way to imagine this essential aspect of the film.”[13]

In a final example, a research team composed of Anirudhan Iyengar, Yulia Marouda, and Hesham Hattab at the Interactive Architecture Lab at the Bartlett School of Architecture at University College London created a project called “Neural Kubrick” as Iyengar’s thesis project, with a very different agenda than that of Reas. The goal was to consider how AI might be used within the filmmaking process itself, focusing on 2001: A Space Odyssey (1968), A Clockwork Orange (1971), and The Shining (1980). In an interview, Iyengar describes his desire to see if three different machine learning algorithms could tackle three key aspects of the filmmaking process – namely, art direction, editing, and cinematography – by using a dataset of 115,000 frames drawn from 100 movies. As he explains:

There is a Generative Adversarial Network (GAN) that reimagines new cinematic compositions, based on the features it interprets from the input dataset of movie frames. There is a Convolutional Neural Network (CNN) that classifies visual similarities…. And there is a Recurrent Neural Network (RNN) that analyses the camera path coordinates of a cinematic sequence and generates new camera paths to reshoot the original input sequence in virtual space….[14]

While it is difficult to interpret the results of the project based on the three short videos that demonstrate the machine as art director, editor, and cinematographer, the shared impulse to collaborate with machine learning to reimagine the capacities of the moving image point to a larger cultural curiosity about the connections that might be made across extensive collections of images.

In each of these cases, artists have employed machine learning to explore cinema, in effect imagining cinema not as the linear unfolding of moving images but instead as a dataset or archive with which to experiment. This reorientation, from the representation of a film on screen to the collection of a group of images to explore, enacts the shift from cinema as story to cinema as database ripe for computational manipulation.

Machine Hallucination

Figure 3: Machine Hallucination (2021), Refik Anadol

Turkish artist Refik Anadol has long been fascinated by the intersection of computation and cinema and he is known for his large-scale public urban artworks that typically integrate and visualise data, creating a sense of correspondence between the often-invisible forces around us and our own lived experience. The works tend to borrow the scale and visual power of cinema; they are grand, extraordinarily beautiful, and captivating. As his work has developed over the last decade and his use of computation has grown more extensive, the scale of the work has also increased.

This is evident in Machine Hallucination, with its millions of photographs of New York City, culled from various social networks and fed into a GAN. By applying machine learning to the images, Anadol and his team shift attention from the traditional modes of photography and filmmaking which focus on the capture, processing, editing, and exhibition of images, instead foregrounding the collection, collation, and layering of images. The result is not an image but a phenomenon known as the post-image.[15]

Designed for Artechouse, a space designed to showcase media art in New York, the project is presented as a large-scale projection of a 30-minute video in 16K resolution that moves through three specific chapters. The installation makes use of multiple projectors to create an immersive moving image experience that fills the walls and floor of the gallery. The imagery is dazzling as thousands of shapes – suggesting individual images from the archive – swirl and dance. At times the images are presented in a grid; some showcase the animated GANs as compilations of images are layered together. As the experience grows increasingly more dramatic, the images become wave-like, resembling colourful breakers, roiling and crashing, moving from greens and blues to reds and oranges. The viewer stands in the midst of this visual cacophony, sensing the overwhelming proliferation of images. Indeed, Anadol’s work recalls a set of terms used to describe film and digital media at various points over the last century, as when Scott Bukatman writes of “technological spectacle” and “kaleidoscopic perception” in relation to media forms that “invoke heightened, even exaggerated, bodily awareness in relation to highly technologized environments” in his 2003 book Matters of Gravity: Special Effects and Supermen in the 20th Century.[16] While Bukatman discusses the sense of frenetic delirium coextensive with urban modernity of the last century, Anadol gives us the experience of the image removed from its representational role and let loose to function not only through radical mobility and kineticism, but as an immersive world – the data stream we hear of so often made manifest.

Figure 4: Machine Hallucination (2021), Refik Anadol.

Anadol’s dizzying experiences of the archive overwhelm and confuse; they remap the relationship between human and machine; they offer new experiences of space and time; the orientation of the body and the gaze in cinema here is replaced and the body is disoriented. We might initially attribute this confusion to a shift from narrative, so fundamental to notions of cinema, to the archive. As Ernst van Alphen argues, “[w]hereas the role of narrative is in decline, the role of archive, in a variety of forms, is increasing.”[17] He goes on to echo Lev Manovich and the claim that the database has become the dominant symbolic and cultural form.[18] With the waning of narrative we see, too, the dissolution of the structuring principles of story. Van Alphen continues: “[a]s a result of this cultural change the symbolic form of (syntagmatic) narrativity has a more modest role to play. It is no longer the encompassing framework in which all kinds of information is embedded, but the other way around. It is in the encompassing framework of archival organizations that (small) narratives are embedded.”[19] Van Alphen and Manovich both point to the cultural shift from narrative to database with attention specifically to narrative structures. The linear timeline of film gives way to the display of innumerable image and narrative choices, and celebrates nonlinearity, looping structures, and circularity. Where traditional storytelling, especially in classical narrative cinema, privileges causal unfolding and thematic coherence across time, database structures call forward alternative structures borrowed from the world of computation.

However, it is not simply the displacement of narrative that produces the dizzying sensation. Indeed, this sense of confusion also characterises many recent Hollywood feature films, a fact addressed by a number of writers in relation to disruptions in continuity editing and a resulting lack of spatial and temporal coherence in digital cinema and what has now been dubbed “post-cinema” by scholars Steven Shaviro, Shane Denson, Julia Leyda, among others.[20] Cameras become virtual and free-floating, no longer tethered to a perceiving body, and narratives become convoluted, resembling game structures, loops, and puzzles, not only in their challenging structures, but in their pleasures, shifting from narrative immersion to problem-solving, repetition and pattern recognition.[21]

We might also attribute the sense of disorientation to the somatic immersion of Anadol’s project. Janet Murray, writing more than 20 years ago in Hamlet on the Holodeck (1997), explores immersion in relation to its fundamental role in new media. She explains that we “seek the same feeling from a psychologically immersive experience that we do from a plunge in the ocean or swimming pool: the sensation of being surrounded by a completely other reality, as different as water is from air, that takes over all of our attention, our whole perceptual apparatus.”[22] Murray’s description captures the sense of fluidity in the cascade of images, with its swirling patterns, scale, and continual motion.

Given a cultural wariness toward the increasing sense of surveillance connoted by digital media, we may feel inclined to cast suspicion on the artist who turns images into data, seemingly using the still images as fodder to create waves of visual spectacle. However, we need to know that the images had no original pure state. They were not unique and pristine pictures that were then dissolved into the swirling stew of an immersive experience. Instead, they began as noise, perhaps were tuned toward signal, and then, with Anadol, returned to noise (albeit beautiful noise). Indeed, a computational understanding of photography offers a very different model of the visual, shifting from still image to image as process, from a picture taken to a picture produced. Ingrid Hoelzl explores this concept in her essay “Image-Transaction” (2020), in which she outlines a view of images that stems from a description of the relationship between humans and their milieu presented by pragmatist philosopher John Dewey and sociologist Arthur Bentley in their 1949 book Knowing and the Known, which they described as “transactional.”[23] Hoelzl extends Dewey and Bentley’s understanding of the entanglement of humans and world to include images, noting that she is moving beyond simply understanding the processual nature of the digital image. She describes the digital image in this way:

Image and data, screen and network are in fact part of a transactional ensemble where (when) the image, as the visible part of a given data exchange, coincides with the screen, as the local access point to the network – access understood as both a functional capacity and a process. Images are not merely outputs displaying network process on an outpost (the screen as network terminal). Indeed they stand (or rather proceed) in continuous relation with server and client computers, data and algorithms, signals and sensors).[24]

In a sense, then, we might understand Anadol’s Machine Hallucination as an enactment of the radical destabilisation of our concept of the image. While we tend to hang on to the idea that an image, even one on-screen, is a simple picture, it is in fact an entity that is processual, transactional, and surveillant. The hallucination, then, in Anadol’s project is perhaps more aptly attributable to the human. These images are often presented in a state of perpetual becoming from which it is impossible to extract a single, static, definitive frame; they are always flowing, morphing, and evolving without boundaries or fixed edges. In this regard, the comparisons with artifacts of human cognitive process seem apt, reflecting the slippage with which we recall memories, dreams, or hallucinations. Nevertheless, these metaphors for consciousness disserve and misdirect our understanding of their computational and algorithmic origins.

Tulips in the Algorithm

London-based British artist Anna Ridler has created a suite of projects that reflect on the nature of the database. Images of Ridler’s work may be viewed on her website, http://annaridler.com/. Myriad (Tulips) (2018) is a collection of ten thousand C-type digital prints annotated by hand and displayed in a grid formation on the wall of galleries and museums with magnets. Created while the artist was engaged in a residency in the Netherlands, the pictures were intended to bring forward some of the questions and issues sparked by datasets and machine learning. These include the role of the human in general in creating datasets, and the issue of labour that too often and too easily goes unnoticed or uncompensated. She brings an attention to labour in the project by emphasising her actions in taking each picture, writing on each one, and then mounting them one-by-one on the walls of the gallery for her shows. The introduction of the human – with wavering handwritten words and an inexact eye trying to align the images to create a grid – reminds us of the efficacies of each modality, the machine with its precision and the human with our fallibility.

Ridler explains that her decision to use tulips is tied to their connection to notions of speculation within the context of “tulipmania,” a moment in the mid-1600s in the Dutch Republic when the popular flower grew fashionable, which in turn drove prices for tulip bulbs exceptionally high before a dropping in a sudden collapse. While much of folklore connoted by tulipmania has been shown to be untrue or exaggerated, as historian Anne Goldgar highlights in her book, Tulipmania: Money, Honor, and Knowledge in the Dutch Golden Age, tulipmania nevertheless “gives us a chance to look in microcosm at a society that was, indeed, grappling with its material values and the relation they bore to their social ones.”[25] In drawing a connection to tulipmania, Ridler suggests a corollary between the boom and bust of the tulip between 1634 and 1637 and the often outrageous claims made today regarding the value and power of NFTs, Silicon Valley startups, algorithms, and computation itself.

Ridler expanded on her collection of tulip photographs in two subsequent video projects titled Mosaic Virus (2018) and Mosaic Virus (2019). Both use the image of tulips as their focus, and both continue the artist’s interest in drawing parallels between forms of financial speculation in the past and the present. However, for my purposes, the projects pinpoint the shifting status of the moving image as it engages computation and datasets. Mosaic Virus (2018) features a grid of tulips in bloom on a single screen. However, the images of the tulips shift and change based on the price of bitcoin. Each individual image, then, is no longer a “picture” that belongs to an “archive.” Instead, each image becomes a mutable index of value shifts, and the larger grid becomes a register of financial change across multiple inputs.

Mosaic Virus (2019) is a three-screen video installation also showing tulips; in this case, each screen features a single flower. The flowers shift and change in colour, size, and shape, again in correspondence with the price of bitcoin. Here, too, the image is no longer a photograph or even a drawing; the image instead serves as the interface between pictorial representation and computation, and as a figure for reminding us of archives of the past. The singular image gives way to the multiple; stasis succumbs to mutation.

In the introduction to their edited collection On the Verge of Photography: Imagining Beyond Representation, co-editors Daniel Rubinstein and Andy Fisher describe the contemporary photograph’s role in sustaining a “multi-layered reality” as we move seamlessly among layers of data, imagery, and matter. “It seems that the digital-born image has become a hinge between these physical and digital modes of existence,” they write, “combining as it does elements of familiar ocularcentric culture – with its trust and reliance on the true-to-life photograph – and algorithmic processes that problematize the presumption of an ontological connection between images and objects.”[26] Ridler’s projects bring to the fore the shifting nature of the image, showing us clearly that it is a construct designed specifically to enact its capacities beyond merely the realm of the visual. This is an image that is in a sense inhabited by information and is therefore ongoing and emergent rather than static and historical. As Rubinstein and Fisher note in regard to the temporality of the image, the digital networked image “is not an archive of past events but a force that shapes the present.”[27] Indeed, Ridler fed some of the images into a generative adversarial network (GAN) that she used to create a series of videos, which she then sold in 2019 in an online auction as part of the first wave of NFT art.

An Intimate Archive: Letters and Postcards

In 2016, German artist Ornella Fieres came across a box of materials that belonged to a woman who had lived in the former GDR, in East Berlin, in the 1960s and 1970s. The box contained hundreds of letters, postcards, and images. Fieres has since used this personal collection of materials to think about the ways in which artificial intelligence and computation – the infrastructures that increasingly shape our status as citizens and that scaffold our relationships to each other – might conjure unknown the woman based on a process of sifting through her intimate archive.

Three specific projects have emerged from the artist’s interactions with this box of materials. In “Postcards to M,” Fieres fed two hundred postcards from the box into a neural network and the AI generated new images of the flowers. They are at once ethereal and almost grotesque in their sense of deformation. Fieres displays the images as large-scale framed prints. The petals are mottled and uneven, and even appear fleshy in places; presented as larger-than-life, the images suggest a celebration of a kind of uncanny monstrosity, referencing both flowers and the human body but resembling neither entirely.

In a second project, titled “Letters to M_HTR,” Fieres fed over seven hundred letters from the collection into a network which tried to “read” the handwriting on old, even mouldy paper. Fieres displays the AI’s attempts at translation as a series of text fragments, shown in random order on three stacked television sets. The fragments are nonsensical and often amusing, and when they appear in black and white on the old television sets, they flicker, an uncanny hail from the past across multiple technologies to the gallery in the present.

For the third part of the project, Fieres worked with the photographs that were in the box, using artificial intelligence to interpret the images. For the gallery exhibition, Fieres shows the back of the image, along with the text fragment description of the image produced by the AI. “A white bird is standing on a ledge,” is one example of the text fragment. We do not see the images but instead try to imagine what the computer saw that would render this description.

Fieres has said that her work is concerned with occultism and technology. “I build photographic apparatuses and manipulate algorithms, artificial intelligence, or software to create images that carry traces of the past and might be a foreshadowing of events in the future.”[28] Indeed, Fieres deftly sketches a spectrum of times and technologies in these pieces, linking forms prominent in the past – letters and postcards, static images, and televisions – to present technologies of machine learning and image synthesis. Seeing the odd distortions, we at once acknowledge the limitations of the technology and its seeming inability either to render a decent image of a flower or to read handwriting, but also revel in the uncanniness of the results. We become aware of another intelligence at work, and while we cannot see it, we can sense it.

It is not insignificant that both Ridler and Fieres have chosen flowers as their subject matter for their projects. Flowers are rich metaphors for the precarity of life, as well as exemplars of the ways in which the so-called natural world is now readily industrialised and produced. Flowers, however, retain their power of allegory and representation of beauty. Offering delicate flowers into the number-crunching machine of the computer brings to the fore the symbolic violence of computation, as well as the literal environmental costs of computing in the context of climate collapse. It also serves to distinguish the characteristics of both. In her book From Point to Pixel: A Genealogy of Digital Aesthetics, Meredith Hoy references David Summers and the notion of universal metric space from his book Real Spaces: World Art History and the Rise of Western Modernism (2003). She explains that Summers develops a description of the features that make up “universal metric space” and its attendant qualities of “homogeneity, divisibility, and infinite” that she says “stand in contrast to the ‘qualitative, continuous, and unified’ spaces associated with the natural, primordial world.”[29] She continues: “[o]ne of the primary characteristics of the transition between qualitative and quantitative systems of measurement is that while qualitative systems retain some reference to the specific qualities of the particular, situated, and enworlded object subject to measurement, purely quantitative systems are notional, abstract, and separable from the format (the size, shape, volume and texture of the surface of inscription) on which an image is presented.”[30] Reading this in conjunction with the projects of Riddler and Fieres, we can see how both stage a confrontation between these two spaces; the flower, in its particularity and situatedness becomes abstract and notional, which is further represented in the fact that, in Ridler’s work,  it becomes animated.

A final point contributes to my broader argument: the imagery presented in these artworks hovers somewhere between photograph and illustration, between live action and animation, and indeed, the categories begin to lose their valence altogether. While in each case, the images are rooted in history in some manner, they lose their historical status in their lack of indexical legibility. In this way, the projects serve yet another function in this transitional moment. I turn to James J. Hodge to address this shift. In his recent book on contemporary digital media, Hodge argues that animation in particular offers a modality best suited to expressing contemporary historical experience.[31] His argument is that language-based narrative representation was the modality deployed to write history in a previous century, while animation steps forward as the appropriate form for a new era. “Animation allows for phenomenal encounters with the experiential opacity of digital media precisely without dispelling that opacity,” he writes, adding that, “[a]s a field of aesthetic forms based on the perception of absent causes, animation instantiates the very character of a digital output whose origin is always and fundamentally ever hidden from view.”[32] Hodge is referring to the ways in which computation remains invisible to us; we see only its effects. Similarly, animation obscures its substrate. He explains that animation points to what he calls the “experiential opacity of digital media,” and further, it captures its “time-based volatility.”[33]

Taken together, the artworks by Anadol, Ridler, and Fieres explicitly engage with the proliferation of data in the 21st century, and indeed, as computational artworks, are uniquely able to draw connections between contemporary experiences of the visible and invisible, skeuomorph and data. The three projects in a sense offer instruction in how to rethink the cinematic image, not as a complete and coherent entity but as archive-in-process, continually transforming, mutating, and shifting perspective, not as human-oriented point-of-view but as fluid morph with its own machinic sense of time and space.

 

Notes

[1] Refik Anadol, https://refikanadol.com/works/machine-hallucination/

[2] David M. Berry addresses this shift in his essay “The Post-Archival Constellation: The Archive Under the Technical Conditions of Computational Media” He writes, “Computation therefore threatens to de-archive the archive, disintermediating the memory institutions and undermining the curatorial functions associated with archives.” In Memory in Motion: Archives, Technology and the Social, Ina Blom, Trond Lundeno and Eivind Røssaak (Amsterdam: Amsterdam University Press, 2016) 117.

[3] See, for example, The Go-To How To Book of Anarchiving (2016) created at Concordia University’s Senselab; it describes the anarchive as “an excess energy of the archive,” as the archive’s supplement, and as a technique “for making research-creation and process-making engine.” Brian Massumi, “Working Principles,” The Go-To How To Book of Anarchiving (Montreal: The Senselab, 2016), 7. http://senselab.ca/wp2/immediations/upcoming-distributing-the-insensible-dec-10-20-2016/the-go-to-how-to-guide-to-anarchiving/. My rethinking of the archive is also very different from the questions oriented toward the power and exclusions of the archive. See, for example, Mandeeq Mohamed’s “Somehow I Found You: On Black Archival Practices,” in which the author notes, “I want to look at black lives as the excess of the archive, the messiness of histories that cannot be so easily recorded and understood, simply because there is far too much at stake to ever assign anything like humanity to black life.” In C  Magazine, Issue 137, Spring 2018, np.

[4] In the introduction to their book, Daniel Rubinstein and Andy Fisher write, “[i]n contrast to earlier forms of photography, the digital-born image seems defined by how it exceeds familiar terms of visual experience. What one sees as an image on-screen for instance, is only conventionally presented to appear the same as the analogue photograph: it is actually a skeuomorph.” They go on to explain that the image is in fact “a variegated field of data that is not bound to obey the material and visual logic often take to be defining of photography.” “Introduction,” On the Verge of Photography: Imagining Beyond Representation, edited by Rubinstein, Fisher and Johnny Golding  (Birmingham, UK: ARTicle Press, 2013), 11-12.

[5] See Ingrid Hoelzl and Rémi Marie’s Softimage: Towards a new Theory of the Digital Image (Bristol, UK: Intellect Books, 2015).

[6] See Sara Brown’s very clear overview of machine learning in “Machine Learning, Explained,” MIT Sloane School of Management, Ideas Made to Matter, April 21, 2021. https://mitsloan.mit.edu/ideas-made-to-matter/machine-learning-explained

[7] “Autoencoding Blade Runner: Reconstructing Films With Artificial Neural Networks,” Medium, May 24, 2016. Broad references the research article “Generative Adversarial Nets” by Ian J. Goodfellow, Jean Pouget-Abadie, Mehdi Mirza, Bing Xu, David Warde-Farley, Sherjil Ozair, Aaron Courvell and Yoshua Bengio, University of Montreal, 2014.

[8] Broad, “Autoencoding Blade Runner,” np. Broad is referencing the research paper titled “Unsupervised Representation Learning with Deep Convoluted Adversarial Networks” by Alex Radford, Luke Metz and Soumith Chintala, 2015.

[9] Anders Boesen Lindbo Larsen, Søren Kaae Sønderby, Hugo Larochelle, and Ole Winther, “Autoencoding Beyond Pixels Using a Learned Similarity Metric,” 2015.

[10] Broad, “Autoencoding Blade Runner,” np.

[11] Broad, “Autoencoding Blade Runner,” np.

[12] Casey Reas, Making Pictures With Generative Adversarial Networks (Montreal: Anteism Books, 2019) 17.

[13] Reas, 20.

[14] Luke Dormehl, “See What Happens When AI Tries to Reimagine Stanley Kubrick’s Films,” Digital Trends, November 23, 2017, no page number. https://www.digitaltrends.com/cool-tech/neural-kubrick-project/ See Iyengar’s personal website as well: https://www.anirudhaniyengar.com/neuralkubrick

[15] See Softimage: Towards a New Theory of the Digital Image, Ingrid Hoelzl and Remi Marie (Bristol, UK: Intellect, 2015); Fragmentation of the Photographic Image in the Digital Age, Daniel Rubinstein, ed. (New York, NY: Routledge, 2020); and Discorrelated Images, Shane Denson (Raleigh, NC: Duke University Press, 2020).

[16] Scott Bukatman, Matters of Gravity: Special Effects and Supermen in the 20th Century (Durham, NC: Duke University Press, 2003) 2.

[17] Ernst van Alphen, Staging the Archive: Art and Photography in the Age of New Media (London: Reaktion Books, 2014), 7.

[18] Ernst van Alphen, Staging the Archive, 7.

[19] Van Alphen, 12.

[20] See, for example, Post-Cinematic Affect, Steven Shaviro (Washington, DC: O Books, 2010); Post-Cinema: Theorizing 21st Century Film, Shane Denson and Julia Leyda, co-editors (Palo Alto, CA: Stanford University Press, 2016); The State of Postcinema: Tracing the Moving Image in the State of Digital Dissemination, Malte Hagener, Vinzenz Hediger, and Alena Strohmaier, eds. (London: Palgrave Macmillan, 2016); Post-cinema: Cinema in the Post-art Era, José Moure and Dominique Chateau, co-editors (Amsterdam: Amsterdam University Press, 2020); and Discorrelated Images, Shane Denson (Durham, NC: Duke University Press, 2020).

[21] See Warren Buckland’s edited collection of essays titled Puzzle Films: Complex Storytelling in Contemporary Cinema (West Sussex, UK: Wiley-Blackwell, 2009), and especially Thomas Elsaesser’s “The Mind-Game Film.”

[22] Janet Murray, Hamlet on the Holodeck: The Future of Narrative in Cyberspace (Cambridge, MA: The MIT Press, 1997; updated and reissued 2016) 98-99. See also “Immersivity: An Interdisciplinary Approach to Spaces of Immersion” for an interdisciplinary approach to the concepts of immersion and immersivity. By Florian Freitag, Céline Molter, Laura Katharina Mücke, Helena Rapp, Damien B. Schlarb, Elisabeth Sommerlad, Clemens Spahr, and Dominic Zerhoch, Ambiances: International Journal of Sensory Environment, Architecture and Urban Space, 2020. https://journals.openedition.org/ambiances/3233

[23] Ingrid Hoelzl, “Image-Transaction,” in Parallax, 2020, Vol. 26, No. 1, 20-33, Networked Liminality.

[24] Hoelzl, “Image-Transaction,” 24.

[25] Anne Goldgar, Tulipmania: Money, Honor, and Knowledge in the Dutch Golden Age (Chicago, IL: The University of Chicago Press, 2017) 18.

[26] Rubinstein and Fisher, eds., On the Verge of Photography: Imagining Beyond Representation, 8.

[27] Rubeinstein and Fisher, 10.

[28] Ornella Fieres, “Artist Statement,” in the artist’s Portfolio 2021.

[29] Meredith Hoy, From Point to Pixel: A Genealogy of Digital Aesthetics (Hanover, NH: Dartmouth College Press, 2017) 114.

[30] Hoy, From Point to Pixel, 114.

[31] James J. Hodge, Sensations of History: Animation and New Media Art (Minneapolis, MN: University of Minnesota Press, 2019).

[32] Hodge, 15-16.

[33] Hodge, 16.

 

Bibliography

Alphen, Ernst van, Staging the Archive: Art and Photography in the Age of New Media. London: Reaktion Books, 2014.

Blom, Ina, Trond Lundeno and Eivind Røssaak. Memory in Motion: Archives, Technology and the Social. Amsterdam: Amsterdam University Press, 2016.

Broad, Terence. “Autoencoding Blade Runner: Reconstructing Films With Artificial Neural Networks.” Medium, May 24, 2016. https://medium.com/@terencebroad/autoencoding-blade-runner-88941213abbe

Brown, Sara. “Machine Learning, Explained.” MIT Sloane School of Management, Ideas Made to Matter, April 21, 2021. https://mitsloan.mit.edu/ideas-made-to-matter/machine-learning-explained

Buckland, Warren, ed. Films: Complex Storytelling in Contemporary Cinema. West Sussex, UK: Wiley-Blackwell, 2009.

Bukatman, Scott. Matters of Gravity: Special Effects and Supermen in the 20th Century. Durham, NC: Duke University Press, 2003.

Denson, Shane. Discorrelated Images. Raleigh, NC: Duke University Press, 2020.

Dormehl, Luke. “See What Happens When AI Tries to Reimagine Stanley Kubrick’s Films.” Digital Trends, November 23, 2017, no page number. https://www.digitaltrends.com/cool-tech/neural-kubrick-project/

Fieres, Ornella. “Artist Statement.” In the artist’s Portfolio 2021: https://ornellafieres.com/

Freitag, Florian, Céline Molter, Laura Katharina Mücke, Helena Rapp, Damien B. Schlarb, Elisabeth Sommerlad, Clemens Spahr, and Dominic Zerhoch. “Immersivity: An Interdisciplinary Approach to Spaces of Immersion.” Ambiances: International Journal of Sensory Environment, Architecture and Urban Space, 2020. https://journals.openedition.org/ambiances/3233

Goldgar, Anne. Tulipmania: Money, Honor, and Knowledge in the Dutch Golden Age. Chicago, IL: The University of Chicago Press, 2017.

Goodfellow, Ian J., Jean Pouget-Abadie, Mehdi Mirza, Bing Xu, David Warde-Farley, Sherjil Ozair, Aaron Courvell and Yoshua Bengio. “Generative Adversarial Nets.” University of Montreal, 2014.

Hodge, James J. Sensations of History: Animation and New Media Art. Minneapolis, MN: University of Minnesota Press, 2019.

Hoelzl, Ingrid and Rémi Marie. Softimage: Towards a new Theory of the Digital Image. Bristol, UK: Intellect Books, 2015.

Hoelzl, Ingrid. “Image-Transaction,” in Parallax, 2020, Vol. 26, No. 1, 20-33, Networked Liminality.

Hoy, Meredith. From Point to Pixel: A Genealogy of Digital Aesthetics. Hanover, NH: Dartmouth College Press, 2017.

Larsen, Anders Boesen Lindbo, Søren Kaae Sønderby, Hugo Larochelle, and Ole Winther. “Autoencoding Beyond Pixels Using a Learned Similarity Metric.” 2015.

Murray, Janet.  Hamlet on the Holodeck: The Future of Narrative in Cyberspace. Cambridge, MA: The MIT Press, 1997; updated and reissued 2016.

Reas, Casey. Making Pictures With Generative Adversarial Networks. Quebec: Anteism Books, 2019.

Rubinstein, Daniel. Fragmentation of the Photographic Image in the Digital Age. New York: Routledge, 2020.

Rubinstein, Daniel, Andy Fisher and Johnny Golding, eds. On the Verge of Photography: Imagining Beyond Representation. Birmingham, UK: ARTicle Press, 2013.

 

Author Biography

Holly Willis is the Chair of the Media Arts + Practice Division in USC’s School of Cinematic Arts, where she teaches classes on digital media, post-cinema and feminist film. She is the author of Fast Forward: The Future(s) of the Cinematic Arts and New Digital Cinema: Reinventing the Moving Image, as well as Björk Digital, and the editor of The New Ecology of Things, a collection of essays about ubiquitous computing, and David O. Russell: Interviews. She is also the co-founder of Filmmaker Magazine, dedicated to independent film; she served as editor of RES Magazine and co-curator of RESFEST, a festival of experimental media, for several years; and she writes frequently for diverse publications about experimental film, video and new media, while also exploring experimental nonfiction and poetry. Her work has appeared in publications such as Film Comment, Afterimage, Los Angeles Review of Books, Variety, River Teeth and carte blanche.

Diasporic Archives and Hauntological Accretions

DOI:10.15664/fcj.v19i0.2383

 

Introduction

Archives exclude as much as they include, eliminate as much as they preserve. The confluence of both increased technological access and social pressures have led to recent counter-archival explorations of and by communities long kept out of official archives. Centring on two participatory archival projects, Jacqueline Hoàng Nguyễn’s The Making of An Archive (2014-present), and Regent Park Film Festival’s Home Made Visible (2017-2019), this essay argues that diasporic archives can “densify” authoritative records, and allow us to think generatively about archival movements and accretions. Both of these projects focus predominantly on gathering and digitising archives from members of diasporic and racialised communities. Through public calls and workshops soliciting amateur archivists’ personal and familial troves of still and moving images, these participatory archiving projects excavate and inscribe “minor,” quotidian, and ephemeral records as a response to Canadian multiculturalism’s many lacunae and imposed silences. The projects also capture the material traces of complex migration histories and transnational entanglements that exceed the limits of national archival narratives. In what follows, I approach diaspora – and diasporic archives – not (just) through rubrics of loss and obsolescence, but through the concept of hauntological thickening, which refers to the melancholies, disturbances, and traumas that diasporic subjects inherit and carry with them, as well as how these affects accrete and congeal in the media produced by their creators. Far from static, these archives are constantly in-transit, gathering and reverberating histories as they move across spatial and temporal registers.

The first section of this paper focuses on the counter-archival impulses at work in The Making of An Archive (MoaA) and Home Made Visible (HMV) and considers how heteroglossic and mobile archives exceed the boundaries of nation. Next, the paper explores diasporic archives through the concept of hauntological accretion, and argues that these two projects intervene on authoritative archives by thickening the latter with occluded histories, dust, noise, grain, and other textural traces of spatial and temporal transfer. This is followed by an examination of how quotidian visual records offer hauntological refractions of official narratives, and become vehicles for complex imbrications of personal, familial, and national histories and discourses. Finally, the paper concludes with an exploration of how the archives engage audiences through affective and sensorial registers.

MoaA is an ongoing project by artist, Jacqueline Hoàng Nguyễn, focused on archives of migrants who identify as POC (People of Colour).[1] The project was spurred both by the artist’s encounter with the paucity of visual documents tracing the history of multiculturalism and immigration in official Canadian archives, as well as her perusal of photographic albums of her own father, who immigrated to Canada from Vietnam in 1974.[2] The project has organised workshops across Canada, to which participants are invited to bring their family albums for digitisation and to contribute personal and familial narratives that help contextualise these visual archives. HMV was a similar project by the Regent Park Film Festival, a community film festival in Toronto, which invited IBPOC (Indigenous, Black, People of Colour) participants across Canada to donate home videos for digitisation.[3] Additionally, seven IBPOC artists were also commissioned to develop projects centred on the exploration of archives.[4] Built around ideals of community engagement, HMV included a national tour across Canada, consisting of screenings of digitised home movies, workshops, and the presentation of artworks by the commissioned artists. Altogether, HMV garnered a total of 294 magnetic and analogue (videotape and film) items collected from 39 donors, which they then digitised. Donors were also interviewed, and some of their narratives were included along with their home movies. Altogether, there are over nine hours of donated footage, of which a portion has been made available on the HMV website, where users are able to view the digitised archives of fifteen families.[5]

While similar, these are not identical projects. Whereas the entire collection of digitised home movies garnered by HMV were acquired by York University Libraries, where they will be held in perpetuity in the Clara Thomas Archives & Special Collection, the photographs for MoaA are part of a more amorphous and ongoing artist project.[6] Further, while HMV also has a number of the digitised collections available on their website in a systematised yet incomplete archive, the MoaA website does not contain a publicly accessible archive. Nonetheless, both projects are mobilised around the stated importance of excavating and protecting the quotidian histories of minoritised communities across Canada, and recontextualising these histories for an expanded public imaginary.

Counter-Archives

HMV and MoaA are examples of counter-archives, or creative remonstrances against national archives shaped by longstanding settler colonial histories.[7] The counter-archive, Brett Kashmere writes, “represents an incomplete and unstable repository, an entity to be contested and expanded through clandestine acts, a space of impermanence and play.”[8] Similarly, Paula Amad describes the counter-archive as a “challenge to the positivist archive’s sacred myths of order, exhaustiveness, and objective neutrality.”[9] Counter-archiving thus implies an insurgent action or hermeneutics that approaches archives as paradoxically structured around the very qualities they attempt to negate or repress: (im)permanence, (in)stability, (in)completeness. Crucially, in Kashmere’s conceptualisation, the counter-archive is less about complete opposition to any official archive, than an invitation to directly engage official archives through creative experimentation, negotiation, and potential subversion.[10] In this vein, HMV and MoaA do not renounce the nation so much as they exist in tension alongside it, and point to its inherent contradictions and intractabilities.

Considerations regarding these projects’ in/direct relationship to nation are especially complex given that they are both funded by federal arts grants.[11] One assumes that HMV in particular needed to be legible in specific ways to be granted the significant amount of Sesquicentennial federal funding that it received. Official recognition through a federal arts grant would seem to hinge on the project’s demonstrated adherence to the aim of archival accommodation for the minoritised presence – a decipherable aim within the liberal multicultural model of inclusion catalysed around perpetual promises of minor reforms rather than structural overhauls. Strategic legibility can thus provide a vehicle for more complex and even potentially fugitive elements within the archive – those counter-archival threads inadvertently filed alongside more sanctioned artefacts and histories. Thus, while counter-archives can exist external to state support, they can also channel received state resources towards challenging the state’s inviolability, including through focusing on histories and narratives typically excluded from institutional archives. Further, rather than being permanently housed in institutional settings, counter-archives can be enacted in more mobile and ephemeral contexts, including through digital platforms, community gatherings, workshops, performances, etc. These more flexible and informal configurations allow for capillary dispersions of archival knowledge back to communities. Relatedly, counter-archives often depend on alternate networks of care and relationality. The endurance of the records held by HMV and MoaA indicate how counter and amateur archives can bypass official archival structures and travel along divergent routes of care and stewardship, with family and community members often becoming inadvertent archivists whose labours enable the records’ survival.

Counter-archives emerge from particular technological, social, and political contexts. In her study of the history of amateur film, Patricia R. Zimmermann explains how the momentous convergence of consumer culture and the nuclear family gave rise to recognisable discursive and aesthetic forms in home videos from the 1950s-1960s.[12] Amateur film can be considered counter-archival insofar as it falls outside the traditional ambit of institutional support and capture. Certainly, much of HMV’s home movies, gathered between the 1960s to the mid-2000s, dovetail with the emergence of portable film cameras from the 1960s and video from the 1970s-80s, and waned with the inundation of digital self-imaging, which irrevocably altered the processes of personal and familial “archiving.” Alongside this convergence of technological and social formations, the HMV’s and MoaA’s visual records were also produced in specific political and economic contexts. Much of these projects’ still and moving images emerged from post-1960s Canada, an era marked by a shift in immigration policy, resultant demographic changes, and the inauguration of state multiculturalism.[13] As counter-archival projects, HMV and MoaA call attention to the contradictions inherent in official state multiculturalism’s public declarations and private erasures, echoing broader critiques of the ways in which state multiculturalism masks distinctly colonial and neoliberal imperatives through a façade of benevolence and inclusion.[14] More specifically, both projects aim to rectify multiculturalism’s lacunae and elisions by helping to safeguard minoritised archives.

In contextualising her contributions, HMV participant Stella Isaac describes the importance of inscribing experiences of Black families in Canada and making their presence visible to wider publics: “It’s great to allow families the opportunity to revisit old footage, explore their history and share that. A lot of people don’t think of Black people in Canada just existing. It’s a great way to change the Canadian narrative.”[15] Another contributor from the Khmer-Krom community, an ethnic minority group from South Vietnam, recounts how their mother, Trinh Nha Truong, views their footage as a reminder that members of their community “live in Canada too.”[16] Likewise, Nguyễn’s project through MoaA is explicitly mobilised around the need to preserve narratives that disclose the “complicated histories of migration.”[17] These are histories that, along with the analogue and celluloid media on which they are carried, face obsolescence in the absence of institutional recognition and support. Nguyễn’s aim is thus to create “a new archive that seeks to represent the fractured ideology of multiculturalism from the bottom up.”[18] Departing from multiculturalism as official state technology and discourse, then, this “new archive” is understood as the potential site for more contingent and complex articulations of multiculturalism as lived difference.

In Zimmermann’s consideration of the ways in which amateur film prompts a rethinking of the archive, she points to how “the multiplication of practices, technologies, zones, and representations” can work to move us “beyond the repression of difference.”[19] Further, these heteroglossic articulations can, among other things, serve “as a corrective to nationalised representational systems” and the models of homogeneity they promote.[20] Zimmermann goes on to posit that amateur films pluralise national myths and narratives by “perform[ing] a form of psychic history-writing, a making legible of the invisible history of fantasies and social relations, a knitting of the local to the global.”[21] While official national archives work to stabilise a historical and narratological perspective, counter-archival projects like HMV and MoaA point us towards the archive’s refractions and instabilities. These films effectively become the archival shadows – the hauntological stutters and excesses that fall outside the official scope of the nation.

Hauntings and Accretions

Sociologist Avery Gordon’s influential conceptualisation of haunting can help us apprehend the heteroglossic shadows of nation and its official records and narratives. Gordon argues that haunting is “a constituent element” of contemporary life.[22] Rather than signalling absence or disavowal, haunting points us towards the “seething presence” that presses against our understanding and experience of history.[23] As Gordon notes, haunting thickens social life, because it points to the bodies, histories, and multiple forces that endure, despite the efforts to erase them. Such spectral forces speak of how different transparencies of power circulate in late capitalism. A hauntological approach would thus entail engaging with the “affective, historical, and mnemonic structures” of social forces and power relations that are often not seen, but felt.[24] Taking a lead from Gordon, I argue that we can approach diaspora and diasporic media not (just) in terms of loss and longing, but also as a process of hauntological thickening, especially through examinations of how material densities, narratives, silences, and affects accumulate in the archives.

First, we can consider the material accretions at the surface of the image itself, or what we can term “poor” images.[25] These textures, like Gordon’s historical spectres, densify the present; they accentuate the material imprints that disturb the present, thus challenging an understanding of history as unitary and progressive. Laura U. Marks notes that both film and video “become more haptic as they die.”[26] In other words, as they age, analogue formats accumulate material deteriorations, including scratches, colour distortions, bleeds, image ringing/ghosting. Recontextualised through the digital platform, HMV’s home videos and MoaA’s still images preserve these material markings and, in effect, their swelling accumulations of temporal densities. These densities are reminiscent of Lily Cho’s discussion of how diasporic subjectivity coalesces around the imbrication of past and future. Cho offers the insight that “[d]iasporas emerge through losses which have already happened but which also define the future. These losses come both before and after the emergence of diasporic subjectivity.”[27] Here, Cho expresses the contradictions of diasporas being shaped by futures that remain haunted by antecedent losses and pasts that perpetually ripple forward. Collapsing tidy narratives of survival and closure, the HMV and MoaA archives similarly assemble spectres of past, present, and future that remain unresolvable.

In addition to temporal accretions, HMV’s and MoaA’s archives also capture the material traces of complex migration histories and transnational entanglements. In her examination of how self-documentation has become a constituent element of modern migration and the growing ubiquity of portable recording devices, Alisa Lebow argues that the cinematic has become part and parcel of how we imagine diaspora.[28] Alongside their transient creators, visual archives migrate across spatial terrains, assembling and resonating histories as they move. For Arjun Appadurai, diasporic public spheres arise when “moving images meet deterritorialized viewers.”[29] Materialising through circulations of media, these diasporic public spheres move us decidedly beyond the fixed boundaries of nation. Many of the HMV home movies – captured precisely mid-flight – become the visual appendages accompanying families along protracted transnational journeys. For example, we see the Valcin family move between New York City and Montreal in the late 1960s and early 1970s, before settling in the predominantly Italian suburb of St. Leonard, where they were one of the only Black families in the neighbourhood.[30] The Burkes, a Jamaican and Guyanese family, are shown with family in Bristol, England, where their father grew up and where their young family lived before moving to Canada in the early 1970s. In another example, the Husain family are shown in Iraq, where they lived shortly between the U.K. and Canada. These particular home videos are archives-in-transit – created, carried, and cared for by families along their journeys across what T. J. Demos might designate as the “psychogeography[ies] of fundamental ambivalence.”[31] This ambivalence arises precisely from migration as the experience of perpetual oscillation between home and elsewhere, loss and anticipation, severance and settlement. These archives embody the perpetual flux that makes up what Avtar Brah calls the “multi-placedness of home” for diasporic peoples,[32] while also disclosing how these communities are deeply embedded within intricate transnational affiliative and kinship webs.

Quotidian Archives

Spatial and temporal movements and accretions are also captured by HMV and MoaA’s quotidian visual records, which fracture and blur authoritative archival narratives. These quotidian archives become vehicles for hauntological imbrications of the personal, familial, and national. At times, the HMV home videos capture moments with broader historical significance, including the “storm of the century” that dumped over 40cm of snow in Montreal during the winter of 1971, captured by the Valcin family; and some of the inaugural occurrences of the Montreal Caribbean Carnival (Carifiesta) during the mid-1970s, captured by the Seaman family. Most of the footage, however, focuses on details of everyday life: family meals, weekends at amusement parks, children’s birthday parties, picnics in the park, and a summer backyard barbeque. Similarly, for MoaA, Nguyễn reveals that the “visual deficiency” she encountered in national archives made her “increasingly interested in the everyday routines, daily realities, and struggles of immigrants, particularly in its ordinary context.”[33] The images collected through this project include family portraits, social gatherings, and scenes of ordinary life. At the same time, Nguyễn also assembles certain collections to highlight particular underexamined historical narratives, including the images from donor Tatsuo Kage, who in the 1970s migrated to Canada, where he became involved in community organising, especially through the Japanese Canadian Citizens’ Association (JCCA). Kage’s images document his involvement in the Redress movement, as well as the JCCA protests in support of the Kanehsatake Resistance at Oka in 1990. One of Kage’s photographs captures a man at a protest holding a sign that reads, “Greater Vancouver Japanese Canadian Citizens’ Assn. Supports Mohawks.” As Liz Park notes, even amidst the media deluge coming out of Oka at the time, this single visual document offers significant testimony of “public contestation” and solidarity against the colonial state.[34]

Figure 1: JCCC’s protester supports the Mohawks, BC, 1990. Image courtesy of Tatsuo Kage and The Making of an Archive.

Kage’s photograph is an unassuming visual trace that aids in fleshing out the predominantly overlooked histories of Asian-Indigenous solidarity and activism. It calls to mind Tina Campt’s examination of the power of the vernacular – or “‘less eventful’ photographs” – in constructing a politicised “counterimage” of Black diasporic communities.[35] Taken together, the “less eventful” moments accumulated by HMV and MoaA also speak of the radicality of the unextraordinary, the power of witnessing racialised communities simply moving through the vicissitudes and rhythms of ordinary life. At times, these quotidian scenes also coalesce with broader histories of resistance, affiliation, and survival, even potentially challenging hegemonic visual regimes. Critics argue that state multiculturalism is a technology of discipline that functions through the spectacularisation of otherness to maintain whiteness at its unspoken core.[36] If multiculturalism demands deracinated and commodified difference, or recitals of identity that slot neatly into well-rehearsed categories, we could argue that HMV’s and MoaA’s archival projects subvert this disciplinary gaze and focus instead on the ephemeral, contradictory, and mundane murmur of everyday life for racialised communities.

While distinctions between state or “top-down” multiculturalism and “bottom up” lived diversity are important, it remains necessary to contend with the ways that these are not always easy to pry apart. As Chinese-Trinidadian-Canadian filmmaker Richard Fung reminds us, the everyday, as captured in home videos, is not an impenetrable sphere, but one rife with the inherited forms and textures of larger ideologies. Fung, whose experimental works often return to and reengage his own home videos, writes about being unsettled when he first “reencountered” some of these archives as an adult, and was struck by how his own Chinese-Trinidadian family had been cast “to the template of suburban America.”[37] He notes that home videos reproduce the likeness of the “right family” especially across markers of social class and gender. The family he found reflected back through the celluloid seemed to resemble a heterosexual nuclear family unit as shaped through the creeping influence of US military and consumer culture on the Trinidad & Tobago of his childhood.[38] As the HMV and MoaA archives also illustrate, hegemonic forms have the tendency to infiltrate the quotidian, and vice versa.

One of the most fascinating home videos available on the HMV website features the Azure/Chan family, and reveals how the personal, domestic, familial, and national are tightly interwoven.[39] The Chans are a mixed Chinese and Russian family who lived in the small prairie town of Virden, Manitoba in the 1950s-1960s, when their footage was recorded. Running over twenty minutes in length, this celluloid footage is a collage of scenes that disclose how patriarch George Chan was ostensibly a chronicler of both his family and his small town, an amateur filmmaker and an archivist who simultaneously documented personal and collective histories. The sequence opens with a compilation of four different local RCMP (Royal Canadian Mounted Police) weddings which took place in Virden’s St Paul’s United Church. From here, the footage cuts to an RCMP Christmas dinner held at a local café owned by the Chans. The accompanying text provided by the daughter of the family, Kate, describes how her father, George, developed a relationship with the RCMP, which “helped him maintain his business,” the family-run Virden Café.[40] She also notes that the Chans were the only Chinese family in their small town of Virden, Manitoba, at the time. Following the scene at the Café, George takes his camera on a tour of the town’s Christmas lights and decorations, before heading into the Chan home, where the family is celebrating Christmas. The house is decked in a mix of Christmas decorations as well as elaborate Chinese lanterns. The Queen delivers her annual Christmas Message on the television. George’s wife, four young Chan children, and an older child from George’s first marriage are all present. The family sings carols, opens presents, and sits down to their Christmas dinner. We never catch a glimpse of George, who remains ensconced behind the camera. We are however privy to his cinematographic perspective from behind the camera, his dextrous use of various camera angles and movements and even title cards to set the scene. During the family’s Christmas celebrations, George also directs and films his children in a family play, entitled “Fun with Toy,” whose plot centres on the children nursing a sick child (a doll) back to health.

The viewer can weave rich narratives from these fleeting glimpses and unspoken subtexts woven into the Chans’ home videos. They hint at larger historical tracts – including the Western oil boom, the experience of the sole Asian family in a small Manitoban town in the mid-twentieth century, the role of the RCMP in the colonial settlement of the prairie provinces – which infiltrate seemingly mundane scenes of domestic life. But if these larger narratives of nation bear down on the quotidian, the latter also haunts the former by proliferating its shadows and contradictions. As Zimmermann notes, home movies and amateur records challenge the unity of national mythology through the unveiling of recalcitrant histories, fantasies, social relations, and popular memories.[41] The tapestry of ostensibly minor details in the Chans’ home movies – including the family’s relationship with the RCMP, the Chan children’s silk qipao dresses donned for Christmas – lead one to conjecture about experiences of racial discrimination, the hazards of assimilation, and the ambivalences wrought through cultural hybridity, which may have informed the family’s life on the prairies during the mid-20th century. Hence, traces of the quotidian have the potential to densify authoritative records of nation and multiply the latter’s spectres.

Accumulated Affects

Alongside the accretions of the quotidian traces and textures of temporal and spatial transfers, haunting also can be thought of as the thickening of affects that shape our understanding of diasporic archives. Returning to the earlier description of how material losses accumulate on the surface of the poor image, we can examine how noise and glitches introduce opacities into the otherwise smooth image and interrupt the ease or facility with which diasporic archival images are made available to their audiences. However, such losses can also affectively impel us. Imperfect visual access, for Marks, prompts a haptic engagement that can usurp visual mastery, which Marks describes as the process through which the other is “killed into knowledge.”[42] Haptic engagement is a mode that implicates the whole body in the act of perceiving. The quality of low-fidelity formats like video preserves the impenetrability of the image, so that the eye is moved to skim across surfaces as opposed to “plung[ing] into depth.”[43] This more reciprocal embodied relation with the image leaves the object of knowledge, or the “other,” intact. At the same time, the ungraspability of the poor image propels the viewer to intend ever-forward, thus dissolving sensorial and bodily boundaries in a co-implication of intimacies: “[i]n a haptic relationship our self rushes up to the surface to interact with another surface.”[44] This subversion of power relations – evanescent as it may be – is, for Marks, the crux of the haptic as a generative mode of being and knowing, especially for minoritised communities.

Alongside the denial of visual transparency through poor images, the home movies collected through HMV also prevent the viewer from complete narrative access. In the absence of narrative structuring, the audience pieces together clues from fragments of quotidian ephemera. The descriptive texts offered alongside the archives provides some framework for decipherment, but they also leave much unsaid. For example, the Baksh family videos include a two-minute clip entitled “Road Trip” (2008). It is time-lapse footage of a car ride between the Scarborough and North York suburbs of Toronto shot on Super 8. Shenaz Baksh has mounted the camera on the dashboard of the car, first trained on her aunt in the passenger seat. After her aunt exits the car at some point along the journey, Shenaz points the camera at herself as she drives to pick up her next passenger, her father. When he enters the car, she again readjusts the camera to focus on him now. Her father does not speak, but looks straight at the road ahead, sometimes rubbing his chin, seemingly deep in thought. We read consternation on his face. Regarding this segment of the footage, the accompanying text simply reads: “[t]he camera is later refocused on her father in the passenger seat, as she drives him to his chemotherapy session. For the last portion of the road trip, Shenaz turns the camera onto the road itself, finally parking in front of her home where she began.”[45] We perhaps lose details and information in the quickened pace and dropped frames of time-lapse; but this acceleration also condenses time and meaning. Here, it saturates the short sequence with inferred meanings and a silence that hangs in the air dense with affect. Such silences are markers of counter-archives, which denounce the authoritative archive’s aims of completion and objectivity. They also compel their audiences by extending a space for our affective and sensorial participation.

Figure 2 and 3: Stills from Baksh Family Road Trip, 2008. Image courtesy of Shenaz Baksh and Home Made Visible.

Both HMV and MoaA seem to serve a therapeutic function organised around the aim to rectify the exclusions of official archives through processes of community engaged archival affirmations. These include the creation of collective spaces for participants to remember, share personal and familial memories, as well as exercise some form of agency over how these remembrances are then preserved and reanimated. For diasporic audiences, access to these home videos of others can also be therapeutic. The digital platform allows encounters with others’ once-private scenes of domestic life, and also becomes a site of affective engagement, knowledge production, and communal recognition. As Appadurai notes, interactive media can help construct and mobilise diasporic public spheres through acts of “reading together” that have the potential to be more meaningfully participatory than those elucidated in Benedict Anderson’s now-fraught model of “imagined communities.”[46] The quotidian archives agglomerated through HMV and MoaA form flexible communities of shared intimacies, incorporating material traces of life that seem familiar, and might fill the lacunae in the audiences’ own memories. However, rather than filling up archival gaps and silences, both HMV and MoaA instead linger on them, even drawing them out.

Extending Laura Wexler’s idea that photographs are a “record of choices,” Tina Campt argues that they are also “records of intentions.”[47] The notion of intentionality requires us to consider “the social, cultural, and historical relationships figured in the image, as well as a larger set of relationships outside and beyond the frame – relationships we might think of as the social life of the photo.”[48] We can therefore think of these images as records of affects that extend far beyond the images themselves. They are documents containing residues of feelings half observed, half repressed. They also beg questions around the affective charge of their capture – about what exactly prompted their makers’ desire to document. Many of the photographs from MoaA invite these queries. One image captures a young man, perhaps in his 20s, posed casually in a shirt and trousers, leaning by a sign that reads “Philippine Refugee Processing Centre: Freedom Plaza.” Another image shows a small child in a mushroom cut perched atop a gleaming Ford Torino, gazing slightly quizzically off camera, as if awaiting a cue from a nearby adult. In yet another photo, a teenager in sunglasses flashes a grin at the camera with one arm resting on a towering store mannequin donning an RCMP uniform. These are likely snapshots of people caught in the throes of arrival/departure/settlement, the act of documenting perhaps urged by the need to momentarily stabilise the tenuousness of being on the threshold. Appadurai claims that citizenship in modern nation-states hinges on a “tight fit between plot and character (or story and actor, or narrative and identity),” and that state mechanisms provide the “territorial ground for stabilising and connecting plot and character in verifying legitimate citizens.”[49] This suggests that plot and character are subsequently de-synchronised for migrant communities, such that the narrative and emotional scaffoldings that furnish one’s sense of “territorial, personal, and sanguinary stability” are uprooted.[50] Diasporic archives such as those captured by HMV and MoaA can thus be understood as communities’ inscriptions of narratives of historical and affective emplacement for themselves, especially in the absence of state-sanctioned technologies of narratological confirmation.

Subsequent decisions regarding whether or not to digitise and make these archives publicly available are no doubt equally affectively laden. In other words, these records gathered by MoaA and HMV all bear affective imprints – the often tacit emotional and textural modalities that are especially recognisable to others who have experienced dislocation. These imprints echo the accretions of traumas and melancholies that diasporic subjects inherit and bear with them – disturbances which Shantel Martinez refers to as the “generational hauntings” that “imprint” the body.[51] We can think of these as the dense narratives of arrival, loss, settlement, and survival that accrue along migratory journeys. The accumulated after-effects of dispersal and displacement thus mark this trove with a hauntological stain. As Lily Cho describes, diaspora rests not on definitional stability but on subjective experiences of unarticulated losses: “Diaspora is not a function of socio-historical and disciplinary phenomena, but emerges from deeply subjective processes of racial memory, of grieving for losses which cannot always be articulated and longings which hang at the edge of possibility. It is constituted in the spectrality of sorrow and the pleasures of ‘obscure miracles of connection.’”[52] These “condition[s] of subjectivity” can form a relational nexus for diasporic audiences, who might arrive at these archives with a ready store of their own emotional histories enfolded upon the body, and who, through the refraction of these histories, might recognise a familiar glance, silence, or gesture in the cacophony of the quotidian.

Conclusion

As populations become increasingly transient, so too are the accumulated images that accompany their movements dislodged from any unitary or stable point of origin. Participatory diasporic archives like HMV and MoaA provide vehicles to, at least momentarily, encapsulate and stabilise material, temporal, and spatial movements and accretions, while at the same time allowing for quotidian histories to be recirculated, and put into emergent orbits. Focusing on these two archival projects, this paper has explored how diasporic archives can challenge and redress the elisions and exclusions in official records, especially by capturing the ephemeral and quotidian to push back against multiculturalism’s regimes of visibility. MoaA and HMV are projects that aim to gather and hold space for the still and moving image archives produced through migrations and dislocations. They have gathered a significant trove of archival materials from minoritised communities and mobilised them in an effort to insert overlooked images, narratives, and histories into public imaginaries. At the same time, one could argue that both projects also point to the impossibility of this task, or that gaps and elisions themselves paradoxically become the structuring force of the archival project, as well as counter-archival endeavours of collecting and accounting for occluded histories. This is why approaching diasporic archives through the orientation of hauntological thickening might prove useful, for it allows us to think beyond loss and trauma to the ambivalent accumulations of discourses, temporalities, and affects that bear down on the everyday. It allows us to not just come up against absence, but to reorient around an understanding of absences as potentially replete.

 

Notes

[1] “About the Making of an Archive website,” The Making of an Archive, accessed November 20, 2021, http://themakingofanarchive.com/about/#faq.

[2] Nguyễn describes how she was prompted to embark on this project partly because of how difficult it was to find actual images of the multiculturalism touted by Canada in its archives, including the Libraries and Archives Canada, the National Film Board, the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation. Rachel Sanders, “She didn’t find much multiculturalism in Canada’s official archives — so she made her own,” CBC, October 17, 2017. https://www.cbc.ca/arts/she-didn-t-find-much-multiculturalism-in-canada-s-official-archives-so-she-made-her-own-1.4358628.

[3] HMV organizers note that it was a challenge acquiring Indigenous submissions, partly due to the fact that outreach was done through Regent Park Film Festival’s existing networks, and the Festival serves predominantly Black and other racialised communities. See “Project Report,” Home Made Visible, accessed November 20, 2021,  http://homemadevisible.ca/wp-content/uploads/2020/05/HMV-Project-Report.pdf. There are some home movies donated by Indigenous families to the project, but none of these are available on the HMV website, as yet.

[4] Parastoo Anoushahpour, Faraz Anoushahpour Nadine Arpin, Maya Bastian, Jennifer Dysart, Aeyliya Husain, Lisa Jodoin, and Melisse Watson were the artists commissioned by HMV.

[5] At the time of this writing, there are fifteen families whose home videos are available on the HMV website. As noted by project archivist, Katrina Cohen-Palacios, the choice regarding access was up to the individual donors and families. In Cohen-Palacios, “Home Made Visible: Partnering with a Film Festival to Preserve IBPOC Home Movies,” Archives Association of Ontario Conference: Building Bridges, Connecting Communities, October 2020. http://hdl.handle.net/10315/38531.

[6] Nguyễn also produced an artists’ book as part of this project: Jacqueline Hoàng Nguyễn, Vanessa Kwan, and Dan Pon, eds., The Making of An Archive (Vancouver: grunt gallery, 2018).

[7] Adele Perry, “The Colonial Archive on Trial: Possession, Dispossession, and History in Delgamuukw v. British Columbia,” Archive Stories: Facts, Fictions, and the Writing of History (Durham, NC: Duke University Press, 2005).

[8] Brett Kashmere, “Cache Rules Everything Around Me,” Incite! Journal of Experimental Media and Radical Aesthetics 2 (2010), accessed November 15, 2021. http://www.incite-online.net/intro2.html.

[9] Paula Amad, Counter-Archive: Film, the Everyday, and Albert Kahn’s Archives de la Planète (New York, NY: Columbia University Press, 2010), 4.

[10] Kashmere, “Cache Rules Everything.”

[11] MoaA was funded by Canada Council for the Arts, as well as Södertälje kommun, a municipal fund. HMV was funded by the Toronto Arts Council, and Canada Council for the Arts’s New Chapter grant, a one-time grant program commemorating the 150th anniversary of Confederation in 2017.

[12] Patricia R. Zimmermann, Reel Families: A Social History of Amateur Film (Bloomington & Indianapolis, IN: Indiana University Press, 1995).

[13] I am tracing the enshrinement of Canadian multiculturalism to the Royal Commission on Bilingualism and Biculturalism established in 1963. Other important milestones leading up to the official adoption of the Canadian Multiculturalism Act by Parliament in 1988 include: the transition from an overtly racist immigration policy to the Immigration Points System (1967), Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s declaration of Canada as a multicultural nation within the bilingual framework (1971), and the inclusion of multiculturalism in the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms (1982).

[14] See for example Eve Haque, Multiculturalism Within a Bilingual Framework; Sunera Thobani, Exalted Subjects: Studies in the Making of Race and Nation in Canada (Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 2007); Himani Bannerji, The Dark Side of the Nation: Essays on Multiculturalism, Nationalism, and Gender (Toronto: Canadian Scholars’ Press Inc, 2000).

[15] “Isaac Family – Sacré-Coeur Christmas Concert (2004),” Home Made Visible, accessed November 20, 2021, http://homemadevisible.ca/home-movie/isaac-family-sacre-coeur-christmas-concert-2004/.

[16] “Truong/Tram Family – 1 Month old Birthday (1992),” Home Made Visible, accessed November 20, 2021, http://homemadevisible.ca/home-movie/trinh-nha-truong-6-2-of-3/.

[17] “About the Making of an Archive,” The Making of an Archive.

[18] Ibid.

[19] Patricia R. Zimmermann, “Morphing History into Histories: From Amateur Film to the Archive of the Future,” The Moving Image: The Journal of the Association of Moving Image Archivists 1.1 (2001): 110.

[20] Zimmermann, “Morphing History,” 110.

[21] Zimmermann, “Morphing History,” 127.

[22] Avery F. Gordon, Ghostly Matters: Haunting and the Sociological Imagination (Minneapolis, MN:  University of Minnesota Press, 2008), 7.

[23] Gordon, Ghostly Matters, 8.

[24] Gordon, Ghostly Matters, 18.

[25] See Hito Steyerl, “In Defense of the Poor Image,” e-flux 10 (2009), accessed January 15, 2021. https://www.e-flux.com/journal/10/61362/in-defense-of-the-poor-image/.

[26] Laura U. Marks. The Skin of the Film: Intercultural Cinema, Embodiment, and the Senses (Durham, NC: Duke University Press, 2000), 172.

[27] Lily Cho, “The Turn to Diaspora,” TOPIA 17 (2918): 17.

[28] Alisa Lebow, “The Camera as Peripatetic Migration Machine,” Cinema of Me: The Self and Subjectivity in First Person Documentary, ed. Alisa Lebow (London: Wallflower Press, 2012), 219-232, 230-1.

[29] Arjun Appadurai, Modernity at Large: Cultural Dimensions of Globalization (Minneapolis, MN & London: University of Minnesota Press, 1996), 4.

[30] The Valcin family’s home videos were donated by filmmaker Nadine Valcin, who is shown as a young child in the videos.

[31] T. J. Demos, The Migrant Image: The Art and Politics of Documentary during Global Crisis (Durham, NC & London: Duke University Press, 2013), 4.

[32] Avtar Brah, Cartographies of Diaspora: Contesting Identities (New York, NY: Routledge, 1996), 197.

[33] “About,” The Making of an Archive.

[34] Liz Park, “The Telling Details in Jacqueline Hoàng Nguyễn’s The Making of An Archive,” The Making of An Archive, ed. Jacqueline Hoàng Nguyễn, Vanessa Kwan, Dan Pon (Vancouver: grunt gallery, 2018), 29-30.

[35] Tina Campt, Image Matters: Archive, Photography, and the African Diaspora in Europe (Durham, NC and London: Duke University Press, 2012), 6-8. See also Brian Wallis argument about the political function of African American vernacular photography in Brian Wallis and Deborah Willis, African American Vernacular Photography: Selections from the Daniel Cowin Collection (New York, NY: International Center of Photography, 2005).

[36] See for example Bannerji, The Dark Side of the Nation; Ghassen Hage, “Republicanism, Multiculturalism, Zoology,” Communal Plural 2 (1993): 113–37.

[37] Richard Fung, “Remaking Home Movies,” Mining Home Movies: Excavations into Historical and Cultural Memories, ed. Karen L. Ishizuka and Patricia R. Zimmermann (Berkeley, CA: University of California Press, 2008), 33.

[38] Ibid.

[39] The Chan family videos are labelled as a contribution from the “Azure family” on the HMV website, presumably after the donor, Kate Azure.

[40] “Azure Family – RCMP Wedding & Christmas (1962),” Home Made Visible, accessed November 29, 2021, http://homemadevisible.ca/home-movie/azure-family-rcmp-wedding-christmas-1962/.

[41] Zimmermann, “Introduction. The Home Movie Movement: Excavations, Artifacts, Minings,” Mining Home Movies: Excavations into Historical and Cultural Memories, ed. Karen L. Ishizuka and Patricia R. Zimmermann (Berkeley, CA: University of California Press, 2008).

[42] Marks, The Skin of the Film, 193.

[43] Marks, Touch: Sensuous Theory and Multisensory Media (Minneapolis, MN & London: University of Minnesota Press, 2002), 8.

[44] Marks, Touch, xvi

[45] “Baksh family – Road Trip (2008),” Home Made Visible, accessed November 29, 2021, http://homemadevisible.ca/home-movie/shenaz-baksh-family-road-trip/.

[46] Appadurai, “Traumatic Exit, Identity Narratives, and the Ethics of Hospitality,” Television & New Media 20.6 (2019): 562.

[47] Campt, Image Matters, 6.

[48] Ibid.

[49] Appadurai, “Traumatic Exit,” 563.

[50] Ibid.

[51] Shantel Martinez, “(Re)Animated Pasts: Diasporic Visions of Longing and Belonging,” Qualitative Inquiry 22.4 (2016): 281.

[52] Cho, “The Turn to Diaspora,” 15.

 

Bibliography

Amad, Paula. Counter-Archive: Film, the Everyday, and Albert Kahn’s Archives de la Planète. New York, NY: Columbia University Press, 2010.

Appadurai, Arjun. Modernity at Large: Cultural Dimensions of Globalization. Minneapolis, MN & London: University of Minnesota Press, 1996.

—. “Traumatic Exit, Identity Narratives, and the Ethics of Hospitality,” Television & New Media 20, no. 6 (2019): 558-565.

Bannerji, Himani. The Dark Side of the Nation: Essays on Multiculturalism, Nationalism, and Gender. Toronto: Canadian Scholars’ Press Inc, 2000.

Brah, Avtar. Cartographies of Diaspora: Contesting Identities. New York, NY: Routledge, 1996.

Campt, Tina. Image Matters: Archive, Photography, and the African Diaspora in Europe Durham, NC and London: Duke University Press, 2012.

Cho, Lily. “The Turn to Diaspora.” TOPIA 17 (2018): 11-30.

Cohen-Palacios, Katrina. “Home Made Visible: Partnering with a Film Festival to Preserve IBPOC Home Movies,” Archives Association of Ontario Conference: Building Bridges, Connecting Communities, October 2020. Accessed November 20, 2021. http://hdl.handle.net/10315/38531.

Demos, T.J. The Migrant Image: The Art and Politics of Documentary during Global Crisis.

Durham, NC & London: Duke University Press, 2013.

Fung, Richard. “Remaking Home Movies.” In Mining Home Movies: Excavations into Historical

and Cultural Memories, edited by Karen L. Ishizuka and Patricia R. Zimmermann, 29-40. Berkeley, CA: University of California Press, 2008.

Gordon, Avery. Ghostly Matters: Haunting and the Sociological Imagination. Minneapolis, MN: University of Minnesota Press, 1997.

Hage, Ghassen. “Republicanism, Multiculturalism, Zoology,” Communal/Plural 2 (1993): 113-37.

Haque, Eve. Multiculturalism Within a Bilingual Framework: Language, Race, and Belonging in Canada. Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 2013.

Home Made Visible. Accessed November 20, 2021. http://homemadevisible.ca/

Huyssen, Andreas. “Diaspora and Nation: Migration into Other Pasts,” New German Critique 88 (Winter 2003): 147-164.

Kashmere, Brett. “Cache Rules Everything Around Me,” Incite! Journal of Experimental Media and Radical Aesthetics 2 (2010), http://www.incite-online.net/intro2.html.

Lebow, Alisa. “The Camera as Peripatetic Migration Machine.” In Cinema of Me: The Self and Subjectivity in First Person Documentary, edited by Alisa Lebow, 219-232. London: Wallflower Press, 2012.

Marks, Laura U. The Skin of the Film: Intercultural Cinema, Embodiment, and the Senses. Durham, NC: Duke University Press, 2000.

—. “Video haptics and erotics,” Screen 39.4 (1998): 331-348.

Martinez, Shantel. “(Re)Animated Pasts: Diasporic Visions of Longing and Belonging,” Qualitative Inquiry 22, no. 4 (2016): 280–86.

Nguyễn, Jacqueline Hoàng, Vanessa Kwan, and Dan Pon, eds., The Making of An Archive. Vancouver: grunt gallery, 2018.

Park, Liz. “The Telling Details in Jacqueline Hoàng Nguyễn’s The Making of An Archive.” In

The Making of An Archive, edited by Jacqueline Hoàng Nguyễn, Vanessa Kwan, and Dan Pon, 1945. Vancouver: grunt gallery, 2018.

Perry, Adele. “The Colonial Archive on Trial: Possession, Dispossession, and History in Delgamuukw v. British Columbia.” In Archive Stories: Facts, Fictions, and the Writing of History, edited by Antoinette Burton, 325-350. Durham, NC: Duke University Press, 2005.

Steyerl, Hito. “In Defense of the Poor Image,” e-flux 10 (2009). https://www.e-flux.com/journal/10/61362/in-defense-of-the-poor-image/.

Stoler, Ann Laura. “Imperial Debris: Reflections on Ruins and Ruination,” Cultural Anthropology 23, no. 2 (2008): 191-219.

The Making of an Archive. “About the Making of an Archive website.” Accessed November 20, 2021. http://themakingofanarchive.com/about/#faq.

Thobani, Sunera. Exalted Subjects: Studies in the Making of Race and Nation in Canada Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 2007.

Wallis, Brian, and Deborah Willis. African American Vernacular Photography: Selections from the Daniel Cowin Collection. New York, NY: International Center of Photography, 2005.

Zimmermann, Patricia R. “Introduction. The Home Movie Movement: Excavations, Artifacts,Minings.” In Mining Home Movies: Excavations into Historical and Cultural Memories, edited by Karen L. Ishizuka and Patricia R. Zimmermann, 1-28. Berkeley, CA: University of California Press, 2008.

—. “Morphing History into Histories: From Amateur Film to the Archive of the Future,” The Moving Image: The Journal of the Association of Moving Image Archivists 1, no. 1 (2001): 108-130.

—. Reel Families: A Social History of Amateur Film. Bloomington & Indianapolis, IN: Indiana University Press, 1995.

 

Author Biography

May Chew is an Assistant Professor at the Mel Hoppenheim School of Cinema and Department of Art History at Concordia University. Her current research focuses on diasporic media and archives, haunting, decolonial aesthetics, and critical genealogies of immersion. Her work appears in Imaginations, the International Journal of Heritage Studies, the Journal of Canadian Art History, and an issue of the journal PUBLIC on the theme of “Archives/Counter-Archives,” which she co-edited with Janine Marchessault and Susan Lord. She also collaborates on Ethnocultural Art Histories Research in Media, Worlding Public Cultures and Archive/Counter-Archive.

Anarchiving the New York Avant-Garde: The Phantom of Barbara Rubin’s Christmas on Earth

DOI:10.15664/fcj.v19i0.2389

*This article contains images of nudity and sexual behaviour*

Barbara Rubin’s Christmas on Earth (1963-1965) is one of the most transgressive and provocative films of the North American avant-garde. Just a seventeen-year-old “woman with a movie camera”, Rubin shot the film on a 16mm Bell and Howell borrowed from none other than Jonas Mekas, the “midwife”, in his own words, of the New York avant-garde.[1] The 20-minute short film is considered “one of the most sexually explicit, beautifully hallucinatory films to come out of the 1960s” as it powerfully conveys the inexhaustible romanticism, physical experimentation and cultural desires of the era.[2]  Filmed over just a few days, at a drug-fuelled party in John Cale and Tony Conrad’s New York City apartment, it features three men and one or possibly two women engaged in various acts of lovemaking.[3] The film’s psychedelic editing was further complicated by Rubin’s instructions for its screening, which involved two layered reels, coloured gels of the projectionists’ preference, and also the projectionist’s choice of live rock radio “played loud”, so that the audience’s experience was never twice the same.[4]

In this featurette, I employ the methodology of anarchiving as devised by Brian Massumi and Erin Manning, which considers the archive as “a repertory of traces [that are] carriers of potential. They are reactivatable, and their reactivation helps trigger a new event which continues the creative process from which they came, but in a new iteration.”[5] Through it, I interrogate the significance of Rubin’s contribution to the American avant-garde, anarchiving Christmas on Earth by examining its dissident potential. Because the anarchive refers to the innate unruliness of the archive in the digital age and its constant variation through encounters, I reflect on how the event of watching Christmas on Earth lets the film “loose to proliferate through networks, mutating as [it] goes, and triggering follow-on events.”[6] Finally, reading Rubin’s work as a process of becoming, I question the spectral status of her legacy.

Figure 1: Christmas on Earth (Rubin, 1963-65). Courtesy of The New American Cinema Group, Inc./The Film-Makers’ Cooperative.

Rubin is a ghost in the archives: only Christmas on Earth fully survives of her works and biographical references are scattered in the testimonies of the many characters she drew to herself in the 1960s, including Bob Dylan and Andy Warhol.[7] These fragmented references, according to Ara Osterweil, are “proof that she existed, but also evidence of how she disappeared”.[8] Overshadowed in the male-dominated milieu in which she operated, Rubin’s legacy has for the most part gone unrecorded and it is hard not to think that the surviving documents attest to a loss more than a fully realised presence. As So Mayer writes: “these traces […] are separated out from a living artistic culture. […] Their visibility amid scarcity creates an ambiguous image, where it’s hard not to see them as evidence of loss, rather than engage with the fullness of their presence”.[9] It is indeed difficult not to draw a connection between the nature of Rubin’s work and the scarcity of its availability.

In 2019, Rubin seemed for a moment to finally get her due. The documentary Barbara Rubin and the Exploding NY Underground by scholar and director Chuck Smith recounts Rubin’s troubled life and bold artistic pursuits through the testimonies of Jonas Mekas, film critic Amy Taubin and some of Rubin’s relatives and friends. Despite being made for an audience larger than the fans of avant-garde cinema, who would not need the background information on Warhol’s Factory, Allen Ginsberg and the Filmmakers’ Co-Op the documentary zealously provides, the film is a compelling portrait of the artist as a young woman. Rubin is nonetheless heavily mediated by impressions and memories, overshadowed by boy geniuses such as Bob Dylan and Lou Reed who receive more attention than Christmas on Earth. What is most fascinating about the documentary is the fate it has suffered. Having been originally released on DVD and made available for streaming rental on Amazon, it vanished from Prime video in August 2020. In an interview, Smith explained that the film had received complaints for its “pornographic content”, and Amazon had decided to make streaming unavailable.[10] The ghost of Barbara Rubin is still fighting the same battles she was in 1964 when she wrote: “do not baby the people. […] Let all art be free. Let all life expressions be free”.[11] More recently, Barbara Rubin’s image appears in Todd Hayne’s documentary The Velvet Underground (2021), and she is mentioned in passing for having introduced the band members to Andy Warhol. Rubin is constructed as a marginal character, and her crucial role in the scene is grossly understated, portraying her as an eccentric groupie. The documentary makes no mention of her own artistic production.

Partly at fault for Christmas on Earth’s invisibility is the refusal of a feminist label, although Rubin embodied the quest for liberation and self-determination of many young women her contemporaries, as Joyce Johnson recounts in her Beat Generation memoir Minor Characters.[12] “Barbara, like Maya Deren”, remembers Taubin, “didn’t have any way to articulate that they were feminists. It was inchoate, their sense of, ‘oh, there’s patriarchy and it makes us feel bad, or inferior.’ I mean it was even more inchoate than that”.[13] Had Rubin survived long enough, she would have perhaps found the home she craved in the radical feminism of the 1970s. Her aspirations towards the body and its representation were deeply anarchic: Christmas on Earth polemically asserts the multiplicity and freedom of the human body, de-essentialising the flesh through a fantastical ever-changing metamorphosis. The film could be best classified as queer cinema when considering the radical artistic and sexual vision it enacts, offering an erotic utopia that exceeds the “then and there” – to borrow José Esteban Muñoz phrase- of the 1960s.[14] Rubin herself, despite eventually marrying and having children as part of her Hasidic conversion, loved and lived with queer men and women, performing a fluid sexual identity. Just like its maker, Christmas on Earth is in a constant state of becoming.

Christmas on Earth pushed the boundaries of the representation of the male and female nude, especially of the depiction of sexual acts on screen, and pioneered hallucinatory editing techniques such as the blinking format or double exposure. More explicit than its better-known contemporaries, Kenneth Anger’s Scorpio Rising (1963) and Jack Smith’s Flaming Creatures (1963), Christmas on Earth neither suffered nor benefited from the same level of censorship or reputation, despite Rubin’ best efforts to screen it illegally at the most inopportune venues and times.[15] Yet Christmas on Earth remains “one of the most compelling testaments to the spirit of experimental cinema of the 1960s and the counterculture, as well as a work of unparalleled formal and aesthetic consequence”, despite seldom being referenced by authors interested in the movement and receiving only a quick mention in David E. James’ seminal Allegories of Cinema.[16] A film as famed as it is invisible – although its fate might be about to change.

The original print of Christmas on Earth preserved at the Filmmakers Co-op in New York City was recently digitised and made available for rental, but the opportunity to stream it added up to about 200 USD – a prohibitive price for personal viewing. The decision was apparently not without controversy. Taubin criticized the arrangement of separate reels into one digital file, which froze the film into a definitive form rather than leaving the images to interact differently depending on exhibition circumstances.[17] The same argument was made for the choice to add a set soundtrack of music by The Velvet Underground and other bands associated with the scene, which again deprived the film of its characteristically free-form nature.[18]

This immaterial version of the film was soon crystalised and democratised when it appeared on an illegal streaming website free of charge. The digital ghost of Christmas on Earth is now a runaway document rebelling from official histories of the New York avant-garde, which seem to neglect the importance of Rubin. It reclaims the leftovers of her legacy and carves out the “intangible anarchivic materialities of the doing, thinking, feeling, touching vibrations [that] do resonate in the folds of whatever it ends up being”.[19] Digital files are undoubtedly easier to watch and show, but the loss of the material components of such an interactive film implies a degree of mourning for the absent body of the reels, the gels, the radio. The physical connection with Christmas on Earth in its online archival format becomes then between the body of the audience and those of the performers, distant in time but sensually evoked in the experience of viewership so that nothing of the original intent is truly missing. The low resolution, digitised version of the film actualises Gilles Deleuze’s idea that one must subtract to compose well as it loses in materiality, but peaks in the coming together of a hauntingly erotic encounter in which the affects unfolding from the film combine with the power of the bodies of the audience, giving rise to unpredictable and collaborative articulations of meaning.[20]

The film emerged from dynamic interactions with the footage, as it was spontaneously shot, edited, and re-edited for each performance. The method behind the fragmentation of the material is unconventional: Rubin, high on amphetamines “absently enchanted” spent months cutting up the film strips and throwing them in a basket, to then put them back together randomly to create two different reels, one half the size of the other.[21] If the impulsiveness of the editing comes through in the film’s whirlwind rhythm and its speed, it is nonetheless evident that the two reels, Reel A and Reel B, are composed of a somewhat consistent themes, identifiable if one watches the reels individually.

Reel A privileges fragmented bodies and details, delivering extreme close-ups of vaginas, mouths, anuses, and male genitalia. The camera’s unashamed look brings the spectator so close to the actors’ bodies that one feels almost swallowed by the action. Reel B, by contrast, features more complete bodies and group shots. The performers are covered in extravagant make-up and veils and are indistinguishable and unrecognisable. The female character is slathered almost completely in what looks like black paint in the black-and-white film, apart from her breasts and belly which remain “negative” spaces and take on the appearance of a grotesque mask. The masquerade element of Christmas on Earth powerfully situates the events in an exotic fantasy setting, transforming the sexual acts into primitive and esoteric rituals. The eccentricity of the film’s content and form functions to estrange the spectators from the taboos of bourgeoise society and to surrender to the hypnotic and shocking beauty of the human body.

Figure 2: Still from Christmas on Earth (Barbara Rubin, 1963-65) showing the female character’s body paint. Courtesy of The New American Cinema Group, Inc./The Film-Makers’ Cooperative

Figure 3: Still from Christmas on Earth (Rubin, 1963-65) showing one of the male character’s make-up. Courtesy of The New American Cinema Group, Inc./The Film-Makers’ Cooperative.

In Christmas on Earth, faces overlap with genitalia, limbs become entangled and indistinguishable, and couples penetrate every orifice. While Reel B records specific, real time sexual encounters, Reel A abstracts the flesh to create a hallucinatory spectacle. The film’s extraordinary visual pleasure exceeds the boundary of male and female, subject and object, documentary and performance and mirrors the contingent, excessive and joyful quality of the love-making event. The intermingling that happens through the superimposed projection of two different reels of unequal size is the key formal innovation of the film. Through this optical effect, whereby bodies transcend spatial and temporal boundaries, surrender their unitary identity and constantly become-other and immaterial in the extreme abstraction of the close-up, the audience is “moved towards a sense of love’s limitlessness”.[22] The two reels produce a “kinesthetic frisson” which gives way to an erotic dialectic.[23] The film’s frame-within-a-frame format reimagines the possibilities for penetration, as noted by scholars Sally Banes and David James[24]. Osterweil furthers this argument by considering the frenzied camera movements and the thrusting motion that mimics the viewers’ immersion in the on-screen sexual acts.[25] I would add to her analysis the haptic quality of Christmas on Earth, which paired with the fragmentation and multiplication of images of the body, contributes to Rubin’s intention of expanding the viewers’ thoughts to encompass the experience of both the surface and the depth of the performers’ bodies.

Figure 4: Still from Christmas on Earth (Rubin, 1963-65) of layered Reel A, a detail close-up, and Reel B a group shot. Courtesy of The New American Cinema Group, Inc./The Film-Makers’ Cooperative

The subjective exchange that derives from watching Christmas on Earth simulates the sensation of being haunted, as the audience’s emotional and physical boundaries are breeched, and they experience the moment in communion with another whom they have never met. The erotic quality of Christmas on Earth derives therefore not only from its obvious sexual content, but from its formal design too. The visual style requires the spectator to surrender control and to experience desire and pleasure along with the performers rather than for them as objects. Individual distinctions are muddled by Rubin’s superimpositions and swinging camera movements, so that while the characters remain unknowable, the spectators delight in the overwhelming sensorium of alterity. The film is doubly intimate: on one hand it offers an erotic textual experience, in which the penetrative reciprocity shatters the audience’s sense of self and allows for the emergence of a “ghost”, here meaning the unfulfilled possibility of Rubin’s legacy and her intention to dispel sexual taboos. On the other, engaging with the film in its online form is a flirtation, a romance with the “spectral messianicity” of the digital archive which directs desire towards actualising forgotten histories and participating in a connection that will liberate images from silence and place them in a constellation with the viewers’ pre-existing knowledge.[26] Such duplicity confirms Christmas on Earth’s status as an anarchive, because the film is a “feed-forward mechanism for lines of creative process, under continuing variation”.19 The digital version furthers the process of improvisation that Rubin intended for her screenings, making itself available to infinite audiences and in a myriad of locations. Watching the film in this format, albeit deviating from the original projection instructions, becomes a “militantly melancholic practice that struggles against amnesiac history”, a productive nostalgia that ignites a renewed curiosity for Rubin’s intents.[27]

Rubin constructed the “fantastical, Orientalist sexual space” in which the action takes place as a 1960s wonderland in which dichotomies cease to exist and gender roles collapse.[28] The men in Christmas on Earth are relieved of the pornographic mandate that the male orgasm should be the ultimate teleological impulse. The film insists on the continuity instead of the ending of sexual pleasure implied by orgasm, and recasts male sexual climax as only one possibility of bodily ecstasy. Christmas on Earth features several sequences of male genitalia undergoing transformations, from swelling erections to relaxed stasis and even a penis being hidden behind one of the performer’s scrotum, only to return into view a few seconds later. These images denounce masculinity as a form of masquerade just as constructed as femininity and question the traditional portrayal of male bodies. Furthermore, the representation of homosexual coupling as well as heterosexual acts implies a kind of unthreatening and celebratory bisexuality and positions men’s bodies as available for penetration too. The relations structured by anatomical difference are discounted and prescribed sexual roles collapse in a pervasive desire of being spread and occupied, of being made multiple and more than oneself. It is also important to note that throughout the film sexuality is never associated with violence or discomfort. Rather, the “polymorphous pleasures of eccentric embodiment” are enjoyed consensually and enthusiastically.[29]

The uninhibited expression of sexual desire at play in Christmas on Earth attempts to shed the constraints of erotic taboos, imagining a “sexual utopia, unpolluted by the political economy of the present”.[30] In its treatment of multifaced interactions and blurred identities, the film asserts the triumph of plurality and alterity over the phallomorphism of both mainstream cinema and the underground scene of New York in the 1960s. It critiques and furthers the formal experiments of the American avant-garde, contributing a young woman’s perspective, and challenges the viewer to welcome the repressed. It is no surprise then that “the silence surrounding Christmas on Earth is at once appropriate and appalling, for the film more than delivers on the promise… of its wonderful title”.[31] The teenage babushka “angel of Love”, Barbara Rubin was committed to eradicating the same censorship that has obscured the significance of her contribution to the New York art scene.[32]

Nevertheless, she pervades scholarship and pop culture alike in absentia, so that forgetting her only leaves traces of her presence. Her image haunts the memory of the men she supported, infecting all those around her with a feverish sensation that there is somebody to be remembered, a symptom of Derrida’s mal d’archive, translated by So Mayer as “the phantom ache of the lost limb, the history that can be accessed only through its absence”.[33] Barbara Rubin, like a true “wretched of the screen”, disrupts the persistence of vision so that we witness at once the existence of alternative histories and their erasure.[34]

The fragments that make up Rubin’s legacy constitute a repertoire of traces which survives as an anarchive, a surplus-value testimony of the official histories of the New York underground.

Albeit existing in the interstice of memory, Rubin and her art are not inert, but rather are reactivatable. They “serve as a springboard” because they are “compositional forces seeking a new taking-form; lures for further process”.[35] Seeking out Christmas on Earth disturbs the established archive through a desire to look for what has been obscured, as it reactivates traces in an anarchival process of research-creation: reclaiming erased histories is not only an act of resistance, but of becoming differently in light of what has been learnt. Encountering the ghost of Rubin and loving her disappearing image invites us into a physical collaboration with her work. The radical sensuousness of her art is constantly remade through the spectators, so that our “collective sensory experience respond[s] to the exile” of her memory, closing the distance in space and time that separates us from her by completing the filmic event in our bodies.[36] Perhaps Christmas on Earth has been an anarchive from its inception, because “anything that structures the potential for feeling – and thus action, remembering, thinking – could be thought of as an anarchive” and the film is about possible actions and visions for the future, a time to come not-yet-here as its title suggests.[37]

Today, Christmas on Earth conjures an alternative history within easily accessible archival film collections, and to view it is a “process of deviation from the ordered, of the seeking for the new within or around the old”.[38] The inevitable melancholia derived from watching a low-resolution copy of Christmas on Earth available illegally online is a perpetual mourning for a loss of visual plenitude and for the contingencies of live screenings, but also a call to action that reaches out across time. Witnessing the disappearance of images with which we identify our most vulnerable identities gives us a sense of our own possible erasure because, in the words of Laura U. Marks: “cinema disappears as we watch, and indeed as we do not watch”.[39] This leads one to wonder whether it is not the film’s inconsequentiality that has led to its silencing, but rather the dangerous energy it contains. The persistent ache that occupies the empty space of the lost object can give us a clue: attending to the phantom of Barbara Rubin, there is a feeling of possibility that something is still virtual and waiting to be actualised. The experience of watching Christmas on Earth and losing oneself to its psychedelic pleasures is a beginning, an early unmasking of the hegemonic notions of identity and the stereotypes it maintains. While many have dismissed Rubin’s apocryphal career for her young age and the unique performance of her vision of art as community, it would be a mistake not to allow her to queer our understanding of the New York avant-garde. Engaging with her legacy and liberating Christmas on Earth from the interstice of forgetting is to give in to the same ardent yearning the film awakes in us and to release the force of Rubin’s imaginary by putting it in contact with viewer’s own dissident potential.

 

Notes

[1] Ara Osterweil, “Absently Enchanted, in Women’s Experimental Cinema, ed. Robin Blaetz (Durham, DC: Duke University Press, 2007), 127; Jonas Mekas, Movie Journal: The Rise of a New American Cinema, 1959 – 1971 (New York: Macmillan, 1972), ix.

[2] Osterweil, “Absently Enchanted”, 128.

[3] John Cale (b. 1942) is a musician, member of The Dream Syndicate in the early 1960s, then of The Theater of Eternal Music with Tony Conrad, and eventually of The Velvet Underground. Tony Conrad (1940 – 2016) was a musician and structuralist video artist member of The Theater of Eternal Music with John Cale. Recognizable performers in Christmas on Earth include Gerard Malanga (b. 1943), American poet, photographer, filmmaker and archivist, and Barbara Rubin’s friend Debra Feiner Coddington.

[4] Barbara Rubin, “Christmas on Earth [Projection Instructions for her film Christmas on Earth, ca. 1965]” in Film Culture 80, ed. Jonas Mekas and Chuck Smith (Leipzig: Specter Books, 2018), 163.

[5] Brian Massumi, “Working Principles” in The Go-To How-To Book of Anarchiving, ed. Andrew Murphie (Montreal: The SenseLab, 2016), 6.

[6] Leslie Plumb, “Immediations Partnership Grant Proposal, 2013”, accessed January 31st 2022. http://leslieplumb.com/webdev-front.html

[7] Barbara Rubin appears for example on the back cover of Bob Dylan’s record Bringing it All Back Home (1965), in Andy Warhol’s film Screen Test [st286] (1965), in Jonas Mekas’ Walden (1964-9). Most recently her photos were featured in Todd Haynes’s documentary The Velvet Underground (2021), and testimonies in the film briefly mentioned her contribution to the band’s climb to fame and iconic aesthetics.

[8] Ara Osterweil, Flesh Cinema: The Corporeal Turn in American Avant-Garde Film (Manchester: Manchester University Press, 2014), 27.

[9] So Mayer, A Nazi Word for a Nazi Thing (London: Peninsula Press, 2020), 95.

[10] Fisher, “Her Incantatory Voice”, 4.

[11] Barbara Rubin, “Co-Op Declaration”, May 23, 1964. The Barbara Rubin Papers, #8612. Division of Rare and Manuscript Collections, Cornell University Library, Ithaca, NY.

[12] Joyce Johnson, Minor Characters (London: Methuen Publishing Ltd, 1983).

[13] Amy Taubin, “She Picked Up a Camera and Decided to be a Filmmaker. Amy Taubin on Barbara Rubin” in Film Culture 80, ed. Jonas Mekas and Chuck Smith (Leipzig: Specter Books, 2018), 48-9.

[14] José Esteban Muñoz, Cruising Utopian, The Then and There of Queer Futurity (New York: New York University Press, 2009). For a reading of Christmas on Earth’s soundtrack through Queer Theory see: Lucas Hilderbrand, “Sex Out of Sync: Christmas on Earth’s and Couch’s Queer Sound Tracks”, Camera Obscura, 28, no. 2 (2013): 44 -75.

[15] Jonas Mekas, Movie Journal (New York, NY: MacMillan, 1972), pp. 111-2.  See here for the story of Rubin fighting the censorship imposed by the Belgian Minister of Culture on the Third International Experimental Film Exposition.

[16] Osterweil, Flesh Cinema, 147; David James, Allegories of Cinema (Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1989).

[17] Craig Fischer, “Her Incantatory Voice: Barbara Rubin and Christmas on Earth”, Bright Lights Film Journal (2020): 5-6. Accessed January 20th, 2022, https://brightlightsfilm.com/her-incantatory-voice-barbara-rubin-and-christmas-on-earth/#film.

[18] Fisher, “Her Incantatory Voice”, 6; David Tetzlaff, “Re: [Frameworks]: Christmas on Earth: Audio, Randomness, Cinema”. Frameworks listserv (2010). Accessed January 20th, 2022, http://www.hi-beam.net/fw/fw43/0323.html

[19] Thea Patterson, “Deliverables” in The Go-To How-To Book of Anarchiving, ed. Andrew Murphie (Montreal: The SenseLab, 2016), 51.

[20] Massumi, Brian, “THE PROCESS SEED BANK, THE ANARCHIVE AND SUBTRACTION (Excerpt from a conversation at the Distributing the Insensible event) Erin Manning and Brian Massumi” in The Go-To How-To Book of Anarchiving, ed. Andrew Murphie (Montreal: The SenseLab, 2016), 48.

[21] Gordon Ball, 66 Frames (Minneapolis, MN: Coffee House Press, 1999), 232.

[22] Osterweil, Flesh Cinema, 31.

[23] Daniel Belasco, “The Vanished Prodigy”, Art in America (2005), 63.

[24] Sally Banes, Sally Banes, Greenwich Village 1963: Avant-Garde Performances and the Effervescent Body (Durham, NC: Duke University Press, 1993); David James, Allegories of Cinema: American Film in the 1960s (Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1989).

[25] Osterweil, Flesh Cinema, 34.

[26] Jaques Derrida, “Archive Fever: a Freudian Impression” in diactritics 25, no.2 (1995), 27.

[27] Laura U. Marks, The Skin of the Film: Intercultural Cinema, Embodiment, and the Senses (Durham, NC: Duke University Press, 2000), 132.

[28] Sally Banes, Greenwich Village 1963: Avant-Garde Performances and the Effervescent Body (Durham, NC: Duke University Press, 1993), 224.

[29] Osterweil, Flesh Cinema, 36.

[30] Ara Osterweil, “Absently Enchanted”, 139.

[31] James Hoberman, Vulgar Modernism: Writing on Movies and Other Media (Philadelphia, PA: Temple University Press, 1991), 141.

[32] Jonas Mekas, “Notes on Some New Movies and Happiness” in Film Culture Reader, ed. Adam P. Sitney (New York, NY: Praeger, 1970), 323.

[33] Derrida, “Archive Fever”; So Mayer, A Nazi Word for a Nazi Thing, 57.

[34] Hito Steyerl, “In Defense of the Poor Image’, e-flux, 10 (2009), accessed January 20th, 2022 https://www.e-flux.com/journal/10/61362/in-defense-of-the-poor-image

[35] Massumi, “Working Principles”, 6.

[36] Marks, Skin of the Film, 231.

[37] Andrew Murphie, “Where Are the Other Places? (Archives and Anarchives)” in The Go-To How-To Book of Anarchiving, ed. Andrew Murphie (Montreal: The SenseLab, 2016), 41.

[38] Murphie, “Where Are the Other Places?”, 43.

[39] Laura U. Marks, Touch: Sensuous Theory and Multisensory Media (Minneapolis, MN: Minnesota University Press, 2002), 92.

 

Bibliography

Belasco, Daniel. ‘The Vanished Prodigy’, Art in America, (January 2005): 61-65.

Ball, Gordon. 66 Frames. Minneapolis, MN: Coffee House Press, 1999.

Banes, Sally. Greenwich Village 1963: Avant-Garde Performance and the Effervescent Body. Durham, NC: Duke University Press, 1993.

Derrida, Jaques. “Archive Fever: A Freudian Impression”. Diactritics, Vol 25, N. 2, (1995): 9-63.

Fischer, Craig. “Her Incantatory Voice: Barbara Rubin and Christmas on Earth”, Bright Lights Film Journal (2020): 5-6. https://brightlightsfilm.com/her-incantatory-voice-barbara-rubin-and-christmas-on-earth/#film

James, David. Allegories of Cinema: American Film in the 1960s. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1989.

Hilderbrand, Lucas. “Sex Out of Sync: Christmas on Earth’s and Couch’s Queer Sound Tracks.” Camera Obscura, Vol. 28, N. 2, (2013): 44 -75.

Hoberman, James. Vulgar Modernism: Writing on Movies and Other Media. Philadelphia, PA: Temple University Press, 1991.

Marks, Laura U. The Skin of the Film: Intercultural Cinema, Embodiment, and the Senses. Durham, NC: Duke University Press, 2000.

Marks, Laura U. Touch: Sensuous Theory and Multisensory Media. Minneapolis, MN: Minnesota University Press, 2002.

Massumi, Brian. “Working Principles” in The Go-To How-To Book of Anarchiving, ed. Andrew Murphie, 6-7. Montreal: The SenseLab, 2016.

Mayer, So. A Nazi Word for a Nazi Thing. London: Peninsula Press, 2020.

Mekas, Jonas. “Notes on Some New Movies and Happiness” in Film Culture Reader, ed. Adam P. Sitney, 317-325. New York, NY: Praeger, 1970.

Mekas, Jonas, Movie Journal. New York, NY: MacMillan, 1972.

Muñoz, José Esteban. Cruising Utopian, The Then and There of Queer Futurity. New York: New York University Press, 2009.

Murphie, Andrew. “Where Are the Other Places? (Archives and Anarchives)” in The Go-To How-To Book of Anarchiving, ed. Andrew Murphie, 41-43. Montreal: The SenseLab, 2016.

Osterweil, Ara. ‘‘Absently Enchanted: The Apocryphal, Ecstatic Cinema of Barbara Rubin” in Women’s Experimental Cinema, ed. by Robin Blaetz. 127-151. Durham, NC: Duke University Press, 2007.

Osterweil, Ara. Flesh Cinema: The Corporeal Turn in American Avant-Garde Film. Manchester: Manchester University Press, 2014.

Patterson, Thea. “Deliverables” in The Go-To How-To Book of Anarchiving, ed. Andrew Murphie, 51. Montreal: The SenseLab, 2016.

Plumb, Leslie. “Immediations Partnership Grant Proposal, 2013”. Leslie Plumb. February 4, 2022. http://leslieplumb.com/webdev-front.html.

Rubin, Barbara. “Co-Op Declaration”. The Barbara Rubin Papers. Division of Rare and Manuscript Collections, Cornell University Library, Ithaca, NY.

Rubin, Barbara. ‘Christmas on Earth [Projection Instructions for her film Christmas on Earth, ca. 1965]’ in Film Culture 80: The Legend of Barbara Rubin, edited by Jonas Mekas and Chuck Smith, p. 163. Leipzig: Specter Books, 2018.

Steyerl, Hito,‘In Defense of the Poor Image’, e-flux, 10 (November 2009). https://www.e-flux.com/journal/10/61362/in-defense-of-the-poor-image.

Taubin, Amy. ‘She Picked up a Camera and Decided to be a Filmmaker. Amy Taubin on Barbara Rubin’ in Film Culture 80: The Legend of Barbara Rubin, edited by Jonas Mekas and Chuck Smith, p. 41 -52. Leipzig: Specter Books, 2018.

Tetzlaff, David. “Re: [Frameworks]: Christmas on Earth: Audio, Randomness, Cinema”. Frameworks listserv (2010). http://www.hi-beam.net/fw/fw43/0323.html.

 

Filmography

Barbara Rubin and the Exploding NY Underground, Chuck Smith, 2019.

Christmas on Earth, Barbara Rubin, 1963-65.

Flaming Creatures, Jack Smith, 1963.

Scorpio Rising, Kenneth Anger, 1963.

Screen Test [ST286]: Barbara Rubin, Andy Warhol, 1965.

The Velvet Underground, Todd Haynes, 2021.

Walden, Jonas Mekas, 1964-69.

 

Author Biography

Giulia Rho is a PhD Candidate and Teaching Associate of the Film Studies Department at Queen Mary University of London (QMUL). Her research investigates the American avant-garde and LA Rebellion, Queer Time, Feminist Phenomenology, and French Feminism. Publications include ‘American Avant-Garde Cinema’s Philosophy of the In-Between’ in Film Philosophy (upcoming)

Double Vision: Encountering Early Ethnographic Films in the Digital Archive

DOI:10.15664/fcj.v19i0.2390

 

the circulation of images presupposed by the archive implicates social, historical, and political relations of dominance.” (Fatimah Tobing Rony)[1]

Ethnographic filmmaking contributes greatly to the variety and complexity of modern visual culture. In the early days of cinematography “a remarkable parallel development in anthropology and cinema” can be observed,[2] starting with the first film screenings by the Lumière brothers in Paris in 1895 and the Torres Strait expedition to Papua New Guinea led by British anthropologist Alfred Cord Haddon in 1898, who declared the film camera “an indispensable piece of anthropological apparatus”.[3] However, mastering the new technology was a demanding task for the scientists who were not trained as cinematographers in the first place. Moreover, the specific climatic and light conditions expedition teams had to face in the tropics, for instance, presented a challenge for them. It is no wonder that many attempts to film the everyday life of indigenous people as part of ethnographic fieldwork failed, with only a few 35mm film reels surviving in museum collections and archives.

Early ethnographic films, always on the margins of film history and widely dispersed across various archival institutions, challenge conceptions of film historical artifacts as well as “the methodological mythologies of archival encounters.”[4] Many of these largely “unseen and unused” films have only recently been digitised and are now available on the websites of institutional or popular digital platforms such as the Library of Congress or YouTube.[5] Thus, archival encounters are increasingly mediated by digital technologies and infrastructures. Although more accessible, digitised films are often presented on websites without valid information about the circumstances of the filming and the captured subjects.

The question remains how the digitisation of marginalised early ethnographic films changes the way they are perceived as archival objects. In this featurette, I choose the archived filmic outcome of the so-called “Hamburger Südsee-Expedition” from 1908 to 1910 as an example. The surviving eleven minutes of the original 35mm footage was digitised in 2018-19 by the Technical Information Library (TIB) in Hanover. I will analyse this footage both as an event of early ethnographic filmmaking and as a specific archival object. In doing so I will argue for a relational understanding of ethnographic filmmaking and its preservation that accounts for the responsibilities, constraints, and different interests of the people and institutions involved in capturing, distributing, and transforming moving images into an archival object.

The eventful history of the Hamburg films raises questions about the significance of film recordings for ethnographic research, the role of archives and museums in their preservation or digitisation, and, not least, their entanglement in German colonial politics. In the following, I will reconstruct the object biography of the Hamburg films based on signatures, inventory lists, and descriptions of the expedition members to shed light on this entanglement and to question its status as an archival object. I am explicitly interested in the material condition of the archived films and will discuss their specificity in relation to their accessible digital supplement.

In 1908, Georg Thilenius, director of the Hamburg Museum für Völkerkunde, sent a group of researchers on an expedition to the then-German colonies in Melanesia and Micronesia. The team was equipped with several still cameras, two phonographs and a film camera. The goal was to make as many recordings of indigenous people – their bodies and lifestyles, their crafts, rituals, and languages – as possible. Already in an unpublished letter dating from 1907, Thilenius declared that the film camera should be used to “record dances, working methods, etc.”[6] After two years of exploring the Pacific islands of Papua New Guinea, New Britain, New Ireland, the Caroline and Marshall Islands, the German scientists brought back several thousand photographs, sketches, and notes, filling twenty-four printed volumes with their findings. In comparison, the quantity of film produced was very low: only around eleven minutes could be shot on 35mm footage.

In contrast to the photographs taken during the expedition, these early attempts in ethnographic filmmaking played only a minor role in the volumes of the expedition’s results published later. When Herbert Tischner, an expert on the arts and crafts of the Pacific islands who had worked for the Hamburg Museum since 1933, viewed the footage again, he did not even know who from the expedition team had taken the moving images. Moreover, after only twenty years of storage, Tischner had to lament the poor condition of the footage already affected by deterioration.[7] By this time, the films had become a marginal archival object. In 1941, the easily combustible 35mm nitrate film was sent to the Berlin Reichsanstalt für Film und Bild in Wissenschaft und Unterricht (RWU) where they were copied to the then-prevalent 16mm film format. This Nazi regime institution first produced and distributed educational films on 16mm, but it also had scientific research films in its portfolio.[8]

Although the Hamburg films are mentioned in historical outlines of ethnographic film, no attention is paid to either the individual films or their potential for ethnographic research.[9] This is even more surprising considering their diverse subjects. It can be assumed that Tischner arranged the total of eleven individual films, ranging in length from fifteen seconds to one minute and fifteen seconds, according to the primary research interests of ethnographic filmmaking at the time, namely visible daily life and public activities that could easily be captured on film. However, this arrangement as a series raises questions – not least since it does not correspond to the chronology in which the films were originally recorded. This can be determined by comparing the location information of the film titles with the expedition diary.

After the war, in 1956, the films were kept in the newly founded Institute for Scientific Film in Göttingen (IWF). On the hardboard boxes in which the film copies are stored, damage to the negative and loan data are also recorded. Since the liquidation of the IWF in 2001, the TIB in Hanover took over its collection of 1,953 copies, the world’s largest collection of ethnographic films. In 2018-19, the TIB also handled their digitisation as part of the large-scale DELFT project, which aims at long-term archiving, DOI assignment, indexing of metadata and integration of the digital copies into its portal for audio-visual media. Due to this institutional shift, the digitised Hamburg films can also be viewed on the TIB’s website accompanied by some basic information.[10] However, I first encountered them at the Hamburg Museum am Rothenbaum (MARKK) when I visited the South Seas section of the permanent exhibition, along with Tischner’s explanatory notes written in 1939 and published in 1941. Here, the films were shown until recently on a small screen surrounded by vitrines with ethnographic objects collected on Pacific islands, such as masks and ancestral images.[11] When I happened to come across the film footage in the museum, I was struck by the fact that it was displayed without commentary next to the material artefacts. In fact, I wondered what the films were supposed to show or explain in comparison to the ethnographic artefacts on display.    

Figure 1: Hardboard boxes of the Hamburg films with IWF inventory number B 524.

After this first encounter in the museum space, I watched the digitised film compilation several times at the TIB’s website, and focused on its subjects and the way they were filmed. Analysing the digitised films today, one cannot but notice the unevenly developed film emulsion, as well as numerous scratches and fingerprints, which are certainly traces from the original 35mm film. It is obvious that the films have not been restored prior to their digitisation. In addition, slight frame jumps repeatedly occur during playback. As indicated by the inscription on the film can, the footage was shot at 18 frames per second and played back at 24 frames per second, making all movements appear frantic and accelerated.

Figure 2: Film can containing the Hamburg films (IWF Göttingen).

According to the intertitles, the first two short films in the compilation show a masked dance and a stick dance in the Mortlock Islands of Micronesia. In the first film, six men wearing large, white-painted masks and carrying long dancing sticks appear in two rows facing each other. The masked men frequently change their positions, shaking their sticks and looking, from time to time, in the direction of the camera, aware of its presence. To learn more about the date, the site, and the circumstances of shooting, I consulted the printed version of the expedition’s official diary. It was kept by expedition member Franz Emil Hellwig and printed only in 1927, in the first volume of the results of the Hamburg South Seas Expedition. In it, one also finds Thilenius’ detailed outline of the expedition where he specified the required photographic and filmic equipment for the expedition. According to this source, they must have been made on 26 or 28 March 1910. As Hellwig reports, on 25 March the expedition ship Peiho reached the three atolls of the Namoi or Mortlock and anchored in Chamisso Harbor. On the same day, expedition leader Augustin Krämer received the “ordered Mortlock dance masks” from Satawan islanders, and on the afternoon of 26 March, a stick dance performance took place on Tā “with the masks made for us”.[12] Whether this performance was filmed is not stated. Hellwig only mentions that expedition member Elisabeth Krämer-Bannow would have made photographs on this occasion, and reports that also on 28 March, Krämer and his fellows witnessed another stick dance performance on the coral island of Nama.[13]

In the second film in the compilation, another stick dance is performed by six unmasked men, some wearing long white trousers. Again, the camera, typically mounted on a tripod, is positioned at a distance from the dancers. This time, however, other indigenous people – women dressed in capes and unclothed children – enter the scene, passing the dancers and disappearing into the palm grove, paying no attention to the performance. At the edge of that grove, a woman in a long dark Western dress stands with her back to the camera observing the dancers. This woman could have been Krämer-Bannow, who is reported to have participated in the trip to Tā on 26 March 1910 to take photographs. Just before the film ends, after only 27 seconds, the camera shakes briefly and moves from its rigid position, as if the cameraman had been jostled by one of the bystanders. These small incidents indicate that the filming was influenced and, to some degree, disturbed by both islanders and Westerners who were watching the performance at the same time it was being filmed. As is often the case in ethnographic filmmaking, there is no clear distinction between the observer and the observed, or between the filmic space and the filmic “off.”

Figure 3 and 4: Mask Dance and Stick Dance on Mortlock Islands (Hamburg Südsee Expedition, 1910).

Five more shots of dances follow, representing various dances as one of the major themes of early ethnographic filmmaking. All these films are of a very poor visual quality; the images are blurred and show hardly any contrasts. Again, the body movements captured appear accelerated. I noticed that in the shots of a spear dance, the camera was positioned closer to the action: a group of men dance alternately on the spot, back and forth, finally passing the camera and leaving the frame. This movement toward the camera gives the impression that the ethnographer who is filming has become part of the situation being filmed. Even though recordings of dance performances had to be planned, they rarely met the Western ethnographers’ high expectations: lacking the necessary preparation time, they “turned out rather flat”.[14] They did not consider the moving images to be of high scientific value.

The last three films in the compilation capture the making of pottery in East Guinea and on the Admiralty Islands, the preparation for fire in the same location, and the practice of weaving on St. Matthias, focusing on the loom and the weaver’s hands almost cutting off the head of the weaving woman sitting on the floor. The visual quality of the images in these films is also very poor; they have very low contrast and look overexposed, as if the film stock had been improperly handled and previously exposed. Apart from the poor condition of the original 35mm film stock, which gives the performing bodies a ghostly appearance, what strikes me most is that the films have not been arranged according to the chronology of the expedition. Their order follows Western ethnographic categories such as “ritual” or “everyday life” and fields of interest such as “dance”, “pottery” or “weaving”, which detach the footage from the concrete date, place, and situation, as well as from the people involved. Subsumed under these categories of knowledge, the films enter the dominant sphere of Western science as a specific “epistemological thing”.[15]

As is shown by the official diary and the maps accompanying the publication (on which all the stations of the expedition are dated),[16] these last three films of the series from East Guinea and the Bismarck Archipelago must have been shot in the first year.[17] According to Hellwig, the Peiho had been anchored off St. Matthias since 9 August 1908.[18] On 30 August, he reports the recording of a war dance performed by 15 men.[19] According to this source, on 5 September it was possible to photograph and film a spear dance performed by 20 men and on 19 September, despite persistent rain, photographs and films of weaving women could be taken in the village of Pálakau.[20] The official diary also states that some expedition members attended a dance celebration in Möve Harbor on the south coast of New Pomerania (New Britain) on 13 December: “FÜLLEBORN photographed, MÜLLER tried to determine the dances in the notebook. A cinematographic recording by VOGEL failed.”[21] The young, unexperienced artist Hans Vogel was hired by Thilenius to be the official painter, photographer, and cinematographer of the Hamburg expedition. However, the next day Hellwig proudly remarked that he succeeded in photographing “some dances performed even with the participation of the women”.[22] Surprisingly, none of these photographs are included in the volume, in contrast to images presenting weaving practices on several islands.[23]

These reports reveal that dance performances had to be negotiated with the Pacific islanders, who not only supplied masks “ordered” for these occasions, but also performed for a Western audience. At the same time, the film recordings had to be carefully planned by the expedition team and in some cases did not eventually take place: for instance, filming failed because landings were not possible or pre-announced celebrations did not take place at the expected time. The accounts also affirm that Pacific Island communities contributed to the success or failure of ethnographic filming and were integral part of the “complex social interactions around visual technologies” framed by the hierarchies and dynamics of colonial power.[24] This becomes evident when Krämer notes that dance ceremonies were banned by the colonial administration during his stay on the Caroline Islands in 1910 because they had to be elaborately prepared and often lasted for days, so that people could not work on the plantations during this time, and openly complains that indigenous ritualised dances disappeared because of colonisation and missionisation.[25] However, the blind spot of ethnographers like Krämer is that collecting artifacts and recording scenes of indigenous life as part of “salvage ethnography” helps to destroy what it wants to preserve.[26]

With Thilenius’ support, Vogel published a popular book shortly after the end of the expedition, in which the ambitious artist described his tasks in detail: “I had to record house types and village views, groups of people and population, people at work, etc., had to sketch the construction of houses and objects, as well as boat types and ornaments. Of dances and working methods I made moving images (Kinematogramme).”[27] He also confessed that some of the films “survived the transport to Germany badly”, suggesting difficulties not only in mastering the camera and the film material, but also in preserving the captured images.[28] The poor visual quality of the images supposedly taken by the inexperienced cinematographer Hans Vogel, or the lack of ethnographic value simply had to be accepted.

Experienced researchers and photographers such as Krämer made detailed claims about how to take pictures in the tropics and preserve them correctly. He had already taken part in an expedition to Micronesia from 1906 to 1907 on the steamer Planet. In his expedition report, he describes how the exposed plates should be developed and how they should best be stored and shipped.[29] Krämer also mentions the particular climatic difficulties under which photographs are to be taken and processed in the tropics: “But it is not to be developed for long at all in the tropics. Everything depends on finding out the right lighting (Beleuchtung).”[30]

It comes as no surprise that many of the attempts to take photographs and especially moving images during the rather short field trips failed or remained unsatisfactory – especially since the scientists were in many respects not well prepared to produce such images. Under such pressure, filming dance performances must have been quite a difficult endeavour, perpetually affected by colonial governance and third-party interests. In his critical study on the Hamburg expedition, ethnographer Hans Fischer revealed that, in addition to their research duties, the expedition members had a “colonial task” to which they agreed.[31] Colonial power relations had an impact on the filming in many ways: they not only dominated the contact and interaction with indigenous communities, but also influenced the situations and circumstances of the shooting.

After being stored in the Hamburg Museum für Völkerkunde, the films began a separate “life” as distributed archival objects stored in various institutions, from the RWU in Berlin (1941) and the IWF in Göttingen (1956) to the TIB in Hanover (2001), and finally the Bundesarchiv in Berlin (2010), where today there are two 35mm copies as well as a 16mm copy and two further DVDs.[32] Stored on different media formats and in different institutions, the object biography of the Hamburg films to date shows significant changes of their materiality and no less important ruptures concerning their preserving archives. As an archival object, the films are a multiplicity of separate entities – they coexist as a material thing and a digital file. Their archival “life” (or “afterlife”) continued and continues as a (decaying) material thing sealed in a state archive and as a digital file accessible on the TIB’s website. Their spectral longevity oscillates between visibility and invisibility, between presence and absence underlining the institutional power of Western archives and their inevitable desire to preserve. The digital archive also produces absences in reproducing the epistemological gaps of Western colonial archives and ethnographic image production. Today, when encountering early ethnographic films, one cannot help but note the absence of expressions by the people who were filmed a century ago and feel the need to counter the prevailing Western archival modes: cataloguing, sorting (out), and preserving. What these films can reveal to researchers today depends at the same time on the courage to decolonise Western categories of knowledge and on the recognition of the ever-changing media condition of archival things.[33]

 

Notes

[1] Fatimah Tobing Rony, The Third Eye: Race, Cinema, and Ethnographic Spectacle (Durham, NC: Duke University Press, 1996), 68.

[2] Anna Grimshaw, “The Eye in the Door: Anthropology, Film, and the Exploration of Inner Space,“ in Rethinking Visual Anthropology (New Haven and London: Yale University Press, 1997), 37.

[3] Ibid., 41.

[4] Katherine Groo, Bad Films Histories. Ethnography and the Early Archive (Minneapolis and London: University of Minnesota Press, 2019), 5. For a critical discussion of the term “early ethnographic film” see ibid., 6–7.

[5] David MacDougall, “The Visual in Anthropology,“ in Rethinking Visual Anthropology (New Haven and London: Yale University Press, 1997), 283.

[6] Cited in Hans Fischer, Randfiguren der Ethnologie. Gelehrte und Amateure, Schwindler und Phantasten [Marginal Figures in Ethnology. Scholars and Amateurs, Tricksters and Visionaries], (Berlin: Dietrich Reimer Verlag, 2003), 76.

[7] Herbert Tischner, “Völkerkundliche Filmdokumente aus der Südsee aus den Jahren 1908-1910 [Ethnographic Film Documents from the South Seas 1908-1910],“ in Reichsanstalt für Film und Bild in Wissenschaft und Unterricht. Archivfilm B 524/1941 (1941), 1.

[8] It is worth remembering that 16mm film, together with corresponding cameras, was developed by Eastman-Kodak in 1923 specifically for educational purposes and that only few ethnographers were using 16mm film in the following decade, amongst them Franz Boas in the Kwakiutl region of Northwest America in 1930 and Gregory Bateson in Bali in 1936-39 (See Werner Petermann “Geschichte des ethnographischen Films. Ein Überblick [History of Ethnographic Film. An Overview],“ in Die Fremden sehen. Ethnologie und Film [Seeing the Strangers. Ethnology and Film] (Munich: Trickster, 1984, 38).

[9] See, for instance, Karl G. Heider, Ethnographic Film (Austin: University of Texas Press, 1996), 18; Werner Petermann, “Geschichte des ethnographischen Films. Ein Überblick,“ 22-23; Assenka Oksiloff, Picturing the Primitive. Visual Culture, Ethnography, and Early German Cinema (New York: Palgrave, 2001), 54.

[10] For information on the origin and condition of the copies, I thank the TIB archivists Paul Feindt and Miriam Reiche, who also provided the photographs. For more information on the films, see (https://av.tib.eu/media/22265?hl=Tischner accessed 11/14/2021).

[11] The films were removed in December 2021 as part of a critical revision of the permanent exhibition.

[12] Georg Thilenius, Ergebnisse der Südsee-Expedition 1908-1910 [Results of the South Seas Expedition 1908-1910] (Hamburg: L. Friederichsen & Co, 1927), 338, 339.

[13] Ibid., 342.

[14] Ibid.

[15] See Hans-Jörg Rheinberger, Toward a History of Epistemic Things. Synthesizing Proteins in the Test Tube (Stanford: Stanford University Press, 1997).

[16] Thilenius, Ergebnisse der Südsee-Expedition 1908-1910, maps 2 and 3.

[17] For a detailed account of the locations and dates of the visit, see M. L. Berg, “The Wandering Life Among Unreliable Islanders: The Hamburg Sudsee-Expedition in Micronesia,“ in The Journal of Pacific History 23, no. 1 (1988): 97–98.

[18] Thilenius, Ergebnisse der Südsee-Expedition 1908-1910, 47.

[19] See ibid., 58.

[20] See ibid., 70.

[21] Ibid., 95.

[22] Ibid., 96.

[23] See ibid., plate 10 and 19.

[24] Alison Griffith, Wondrous Difference: Cinema, Anthropology, and Turn-of-the-Century Visual Culture (New York: Columbia University Press, 2002), 105.

[25] Augustin Krämer, Truk. Ergebnisse der Südsee-Expedition 1908-1910 [Truk. Results of the South Seas Expedition 1908-1910] (Hamburg: Friederichsen, De Gruyter & Co, 1932), 277, 284.

[26] See Jacob W. Gruber, “Ethnographic Salvage and the Shaping of Anthropology,” in American Anthropologist 172 (1970): 1289–99 and Rony, The Third Eye, 90–92.  

[27] Hans Vogel, Eine Forschungsreise im Bismarck-Archipel. Bearbeitet von Hans Vogel. Mit einer Einführung von Prof. Dr. G. Thilenius [An Expedition in the Bismarck Archipelago. Edited by Hans Vogel. With an Introduction by Prof. Dr. G. Thilenius] (Hamburg: L. Friederichsen & Co, 1911), 35.

[28] Ibid.

[29] Augustin Krämer, Forschungsreise S.M.S. „Planet“ 1906/07 [Expedition S.M.S. „Planet“ 1906/07] (Berlin: Verlag von Karl Siegismund, 1909), 30.

[30] Ibid.

[31] Hans Fischer, Die Hamburger Südsee-Expedition. Über Ethnographie und Kolonialismus [The Hamburg South Seas Expedition. On Ethnography and Colonialism] (Frankfurt/Main: Syndikat, 1981), 38–48.

[32] For information on the film formats stored in the Bundesarchiv in Berlin, I thank the archivist Justus Wörmann.

[33] Here I refer to Derrida’s insight that “the technical structure of the archiving archive also determines the structure of the archivable content;” see Jacques Derrida, Archive Fever. A Freudian Impression. Transl. Eric Prenowitz (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1996), 17.

 

Bibliography

Berg, M. L. “The Wandering Life Among Unreliable Islanders: The Hamburg Sudsee-Expedition in Micronesia.” In The Journal of Pacific History 23, no. 1 (1988): 95–101.

Derrida, Jacques. Archive Fever. A Freudian Impression. Transl. Eric Prenowitz. Chicago, IL: University of Chicago Press, 1996.

Fischer, Hans. Die Hamburger Südsee-Expedition. Über Ethnographie und Kolonialismus. Frankfurt/Main: Syndikat, 1981.

Fischer, Hans. Randfiguren der Ethnologie. Gelehrte und Amateure, Schwindler und Phantasten. Berlin: Dietrich Reimer Verlag, 2003.

Griffith, Alison. Wondrous Difference: Cinema, Anthropology, and Turn-of-the-Century Visual Culture. New York, NY: Columbia University Press, 2002.

Grimshaw, Anna. “The Eye in the Door: Anthropology, Film, and the Exploration of Inner Space.” In Rethinking Visual Anthropology, ed. Marcus Banks, Howard Morphy, 36–52. New Haven, CT and London: Yale University Press, 1997.

Groo, Katherine. Bad Films Histories. Ethnography and the Early Archive. Minneapolis, MN and London: University of Minnesota Press, 2019.

Gruber, Jacob W. “Ethnographic Salvage and the Shaping of Anthropology.” In American Anthropologist 172 (1970): 1289–99.

Heider, Karl G. Ethnographic Film. Austin, TX: University of Texas Press, 1996.

Krämer, Augustin. Forschungsreise S.M.S. „Planet“ 1906/07, vol. V. Berlin: Verlag von Karl Siegismund, 1909.

Krämer, Augustin. Truk. Ergebnisse der Südsee-Expedition 1908-1910, vol. 5, ed. Georg Thilenius. Hamburg: Friederichsen, De Gruyter & Co, 1932.

MacDougall, David. “The Visual in Anthropology.” In Rethinking Visual Anthropology, ed. Marcus Banks, Howard Morphy, 276–295. New Haven, CT and London: Yale University Press, 1997.

Oksiloff, Assenka. Picturing the Primitive. Visual Culture, Ethnography, and Early German Cinema. New York, NY: Palgrave, 2001.

Petermann, Werner. “Geschichte des ethnographischen Films. Ein Überblick.” In Die Fremden sehen. Ethnologie und Film, ed. Margarete Friedrich et al., 17–53. Munich: Trickster, 1984.

Rheinberger, Hans-Jörg. Toward a History of Epistemic Things. Synthesizing Proteins in the Test Tube. Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press, 1997.

Rony, Fatimah Tobing. The Third Eye: Race, Cinema, and Ethnographic Spectacle. Durham, NC: Duke University Press, 1996

Thilenius, Georg, Ed. Ergebnisse der Südsee-Expedition 1908-1910, vol. 1. Hamburg: L. Friederichsen & Co, 1927.

Tischner, Herbert. “Völkerkundliche Filmdokumente aus der Südsee aus den Jahren 1908-1910.” In Reichsanstalt für Film und Bild in Wissenschaft und Unterricht. Archivfilm B 524/1941, 1–8. 1941.

Vogel, Hans. Eine Forschungsreise im Bismarck-Archipel. Bearbeitet von Hans Vogel. Mit einer Einführung von Prof. Dr. G. Thilenius. Hamburg: L. Friederichsen & Co, 1911.

 

Author Biography

Petra Löffler is Professor of History and Theory of Contemporary Media at the Carl von Ossietzky University of Oldenburg. She is author of several edited volumes and books on media archaeology, ecology, and media practices: Bilder verteilen. Fotografische Praktiken in der digitalen Kultur (2018), Earth and Beyond in Tumultuous Times. A Critical Atlas of the Anthropocene (2021) and Materials, Practices, and Politics of Shine in Modern Art and Popular Culture (2021), among others. She has also recently published articles on the materiality of decayed film footage in Cinéma & Cie. International Film Studies Journal and on colonial histories of photography in Zeitschrift für Medienwissenschaft.

Borrowed Dreams: Joseph Cornell and the Archive as Psychic Imprint

DOI:10.15664/fcj.v19i0.2391

 

Borrowed Dreams: Joseph Cornell and the Archive as Psychic Imprint by Stephen Broomer from Frames Cinema Journal on Vimeo.

This video essay is occasioned by a groundswell of scholarship on the interrelated fields of the found footage experimental film, the compilation film, and the motion picture archive. This scholarship is reflected in recent publications by Catherine Russell and Jaimie Baron and attended to in the broader critical climate by the proliferation of exhibitions and articles that have attempted in recent years to address the historical impetus for this growing body of work. The neologism archiveology denotes a practice that draws from, as Catherine Russell puts it, “an ‘image bank’ of collective memories,” declaring that the moving image collection has been cast far from the rigid formality of the museum, and is now a process in itself of uncovering and exploring.[1] Such practice finds a natural parallel in the curio-hunting Big Digs of eighteenth- and nineteenth-century colonial archaeology. The archaeological metaphor and its mystical portents are uniquely suitable for the subject at hand, Joseph Cornell, the Howard Carter of the twentieth-century American junk shop. While this video essay features discursive narration, it is simultaneously engaged in remixing the poetic properties of images – by mirroring and building upon Cornell’s aesthetic strategies. In his reflections on Joseph Cornell, poet Charles Simic offers this metaphor: “the near darkness of old churches and old movies is that of dreams,” a suggestion of the reciprocity between the archive and the talismanic depths of modern art.[2]

Joseph Cornell remains most widely recognised for his boxed assemblages. The neglect of his films relative to his boxes may invite dismissal as novelty, as a prototype for what would follow, be that the found footage experimental film, or in more contemporary terms, fandom and the supercut. In response to this limited perspective, Borrowed Dreams begins with a prologue that joins crucial passages from Cornell’s Rose Hobart (1936) with dialogue from its source, East of Borneo (1931). Much has been made of the identification between Cornell and Hobart, of Hobart as symbol and as a woman recovered from the artifice of cinema itself, what Catherine Russell has identified as “the awakening of the woman and an inscription of her everyday humanity into film history.”[3] However, Rose Hobart has eclipsed both its namesake and the film from which it is derived. This prologue, in which Linda Randolph (Rose Hobart) empathises with a chimp over their shared predicament of being held against their will, underscores not only themes that are poignant in light of Cornell’s project (“they like making things captive in this place”), but is also likely to give the majority of viewers their first experience of hearing Hobart’s voice. Such is the neglect of her own work, in the shadow of Cornell’s tribute to her face.

Borrowed Dreams explores the foundations of Cornell’s filmmaking, focusing on his films that are most open in their construction – those begun in his pre-war phase, often imprecisely dated and, in some cases, abandoned for decades.[4] This video essay inquires into his process, theme, and technique, and in doing so, it offers the archive as a site of psychic provocation. It considers Cornell’s processes of collaboration and interaction with the image, with history, and with individuals. It addresses his themes of sacred innocence found in the avatars and entertainments of children. Finally, it addresses his use of a plate of tinted glass to cast a nocturnal atmosphere onto the image, and his use of the splice as a means to join disparate spaces (as in Kuleshov’s concept of creative geography) and eyelines (as in Kuleshov’s theory of montage), a simple means of opening onto new perceptions. Cornell’s splice, made with an openness to the inference of the viewer, plots new and flexible meanings into his root images.[5] It is this last matter, of technique, that is communicated formally throughout Borrowed Dreams, a means of clarifying Cornell’s approach, which Marjorie Keller has described as an equivocating edit, by remixing his films and integrating them with other related objects of study. This can be seen in the intercutting of Un Chien Andalou with Rose Hobart, through which Pierre Batcheff and Luis Buñuel both stand in for temperamental Salvador Dalì as they observe Hobart, and in the intercutting of naval scenes from The Fall of the Romanov Dynasty (1927) with scenes of marine exploration taken from Cornell’s Bookstalls (ca. 1930s). Such splices demonstrate the psychic impressions that appropriated images conjure when positioned in new sequences.

The structure of this video essay is episodic, with each of its three parts dealing with a distinctive aspect of Cornell’s films. Part one, preceding and following a quotation from Jodi Hauptman on the thematic potency of the eclipse, deals with Rose Hobart, its relation to Surrealism, the particular impact of its gesture, and the nocturnal spell of its tinting. Part two, marked by a quotation from Standish Lawder on the ambiguous purpose of the recycled image, deals with the legacy of the compilation film and Cornell’s formal and thematic distinction from that field and, in particular, the work of Esfir Shub. Part three begins with a quotation from Marjorie Keller, on Cornell’s approach to editing as a means of equivocating subjects, and it involves the material Keller was primarily responding to, the films known as The Children’s Trilogy (ca. 1940s, finished 1969), bringing them into dialogue with the concept of deriving meaning from the impact of sequential ordering.

Borrowed Dreams argues on behalf of the unique power of the hard cut, of a splice to join presences across space and time. The splice is integral to the psychic properties of Cornell’s work, which ties his films to the oneiric dimensions of the Surrealists and to the psychological interiority of the American trance film.[6] The imagery and atmosphere that he develops may suggest reverie or the dream, while the hard cut is an unambiguous act of cinema. Those closest to Cornell have attested in the years since his death that he occupied “the thin line between dreaming and waking.”[7] The bulk of Cornell’s films liberally borrow from scraps of industrial cinema, but there is no illusion of what Jaimie Baron refers to as the “truth-value” and “evidentiary authority” of the archival image, with Cornell focused solely on the patterns and relations formed by newfound contexts.[8] The psychic imprint of the archival image holds through his disciplined restraint and the slow unfolding of imagery in long and patient takes, an operation brought on by the complex interiority of shot relations. The found footage film would shift in another direction forty years after Rose Hobart, influenced by the unlikely combination of both Stan Brakhage and the structuralists, abandoning the psychic trinity of Cornell and his successors Bruce Conner and Arthur Lipsett (an archival cinema that gives way instead to the readymade form of the “perfect film”, via Ken Jacobs) in favour of a plastic turn, marking the image in violent ways with paint and chemistry, or by further machining an image’s rhythm through optical printers. These psychic and plastic strains in found footage filmmaking can be best understood in relationship to one another, with the psychic interiorising history and images past, and the plastic externalising the rage and pleasure of the present moment.

In the oneiric patchwork of his subject matter, Cornell invites comparisons to his contemporaries and fellow New Yorkers Joe Gould and Harry Smith, amateur archivists of a similar mentality for whom daily experience became a storehouse of observations worthy of transcription and recall. Cornell’s relation to his materials might be further clarified by considering the collections of Gould and Smith. Gould, notoriously exposed as the naked emperor of Greenwich Village, had claimed to have spent decades writing An Oral History of Our Time. It was endorsed by his patrons and friends as an epic work, but when he died it came out that there was no intact manuscript.[9] Smith, known between spheres as one of American folk culture’s great chroniclers and as a maker of experimental films, is also known to have collected string figures and paper airplanes and other, more sundry and intimate specimens.[10] As Borrowed Dreams demonstrates in the thread of his recycled images, Cornell, like Gould and Smith, maintained a passion for the ephemeral. Cornell’s films had transient, anonymous, dreamlike tendencies that testify to a willingness he had, by contrast to Smith and in accord with Gould, to loosen the reins, to allow the debris of incomplete gestures to gather in his wake.

 

Notes

[1] Catherine Russell, Archiveology: Walter Benjamin and Archival Film Practices (Durham, NC: Duke University Press, 2018), 1.

[2] Charles Simic, Dime-Story Alchemy: The Art of Joseph Cornell (Hopewell, NJ: Ecco Press, 1992), 57.

[3] Russell, 205.

[4] Without a definitive catalogue raisonné of his films, Cornell’s consideration by archives is far from authoritative. In the absence of authority, objects from Cornell’s film collection, works in progress, and possibly finished films have all at times been treated as finished works, as in the case of The Children’s Jury, dated 1938 but only regarded as ‘attributed to’ Cornell.

[5] Throughout Borrowed Dreams and in this text, Cornell’s work features in a context that includes Soviet compilation filmmaking and montage theory; while there are no definitive claims to be made about his awareness of the dynamic strategies developing in Russia, it seems likely from his broad reading, his moviegoing, and his friendships with critics such as Jay Leyda that he would have an active awareness of the discourse. This work makes no claim that Cornell is interacting with these theories with intention, let alone precision: Cornell’s filmmaking, judging by the films he made alone – Rose Hobart, Bookstalls, By Night with Torch and Spear – was intuitive and improvisatory, not an act of theoretical proofing.

[6] P. Adams Sitney, who coined the term, defines the trance film as featuring “a somnambulistic hero wandering through an imposing landscape.” P. Adams Sitney, “The Idea of Morphology,” Film Culture 53-55 (Spring 1972).

[7] Catherine Corman, Joseph Cornell’s Dreams (Cambridge, MA: Exact Change, 2007), 134. Corman quotes Lawrence Jordan at length, as he describes Cornell’s navigation of dream and waking life: “He took naps on the front room sofa for three or four hours and would get up directly out of a dream and put something together. He didn’t come out of that world like you or I do.”

[8] Jaimie Baron, The Archive Effect: Found Footage and the Audiovisual Experience of History (London: Routledge, 2014).

[9] Gould, made famous and exposed through Joseph Mitchell’s Joe Gould’s Secret, was defended in Jill Lepore’s Joe Gould’s Teeth (New York, NY: Alfred A. Knopf, 2016), which provides evidentiary benchmarks for the premise that Gould’s manuscript existed in many different forms over decades.

[10] Smith’s collections present a fascinating challenge to valuations of objects in relation to the history of the motion picture. An argument could be made that his collections of paper string figures and paper airplanes are, as dynamic found objects, paracinematic.

 

Bibliography

Baron, Jaimie. The Archive Effect: Found Footage and the Audiovisual Experience of History. London: Routledge, 2014.

Corman, Catherine. Joseph Cornell’s Dreams. Cambridge, MA: Exact Change, 2007.

Dyshlyuk, Liubov. “Esfir Shub: Selected Writings.” Feminist Media Histories 2 (3) (2016): 11–28.

Hauptman, Jodi. Joseph Cornell: Stargazing in the Cinema. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 1999.

Keller, Marjorie. The Untutored Eye: Childhood in the Films of Cocteau, Cornell, and Brakhage. Rutherford, NJ: Fairleigh Dickinson University Press, 1986.

Lawder, Standish. “Comments on the Collage Film,” in Found Footage Film. Lucerne: VIPER/zyklop, 1992.

Lepore, Jill. Joe Gould’s Teeth. New York, NY: Alfred A. Knopf, 2016.

Leyda, Jay. Films Beget Films: a study of the compilation film. New York, NY: Hill and Wang, 1964.

Russell, Catherine. Archiveology: Walter Benjamin and Archival Film Practices. Durham, NC: Duke University Press, 2018.

Simic, Charles. Dime-Story Alchemy: The Art of Joseph Cornell. Hopewell, NJ: Ecco Press, 1992.

 

Filmography

Auguste and Louis Lumìere, L’Arrivée d’un train en gare de La Ciotat, directed by Auguste and Louis Lumìere (1895; La Ciotat; Société Lumière; home video release 2015), 35mm.

Frederick S. Armitage, Davy Jones’s Locker, directed by Frederick S. Armitage (1903; production location unknown; American Mutoscope & Biograph; home video release 2008), 35mm.

Frederick S. Armitage, Neptune’s Daughters, directed by Frederick S. Armitage (1903; production location unknown; American Mutoscope & Biograph; home video release 2008), 35mm.

Frederick S. Armitage, Nymph of the Waves, directed by Frederick S. Armitage (1903; production location unknown; American Mutoscope & Biograph; home video release 2008), 35mm.

Esfir Shub, The Fall of the Romanov Dynasty, directed by Esfir Shub (1927; Moscow; Sovkino; home video release 2002), 35mm.

Luis Buñuel and Salvador Dalì, Un chien andalou, directed by Luis Buñuel (1929; Le Havre and Paris; Les Grands Films Classiques; home video release 2011), 35mm.

Joseph Cornell, Bookstalls, directed by Joseph Cornell (undated, circa 1930s; New York; The Voyager Foundation; home video release 2004), 16mm.

George Melford, East of Borneo, directed by George Melford (1931; Los Angeles; Universal Studios; home video release 2004), 35mm.

Joseph Cornell, Rose Hobart, directed by Joseph Cornell (1936; New York; The Voyager Foundation; home video release 2004), 16mm.

Joseph Cornell, The Children’s Jury, directed by Joseph Cornell (1938; New York; ; home video release), 16mm.

Joseph Cornell, Cotillion, directed by Joseph Cornell (undated, circa 1940s, finished 1968; New York; The Voyager Foundation; home video release 2004), 16mm.

Joseph Cornell, The Midnight Party, directed by Joseph Cornell (undated, circa 1940s, finished 1968; New York; The Voyager Foundation; home video release 2004), 16mm.

Joseph Cornell, The Children’s Party, directed by Joseph Cornell (undated, circa 1940s, finished 1968; New York; Image Entertainment; home video release 2008), 16mm.

Joseph Cornell, By Night with Torch and Spear, directed by Joseph Cornell (undated, circa 1940s, finished 1972; New York; Image Entertainment; home video release 2008), 16mm.

Maya Deren, At Land, directed by Maya Deren (1944; Amangansett, Long Island; Re:voir; home video release 2020), 16mm.

Kenneth Anger, Fireworks, directed by Kenneth Anger (1947; Los Angeles; Puck Film Productions; home video release 2011), 16mm.

 

Author Biography

Stephen Broomer is a filmmaker and writer. His books include Hamilton Babylon: A History of the McMaster Film Board (University of Toronto Press, 2016) and Codes for North: Foundations of the Canadian Avant-Garde Film (CFMDC, 2017), and he is presently completing a critical biography of collage filmmaker Arthur Lipsett. His films were recently the subject of a retrospective at the Anthology Film Archives in New York City. He has taught video essaying at University of Toronto. Broomer is also the host of Art & Trash, an ongoing web series on underground, avant-garde, psychotronic and outsider media. In 2020, he began a study of the poetics of home movies while serving as a Fulbright visiting scholar at University of California Santa Cruz and the Prelinger Library. Most recently, he was a postdoctoral fellow at the Centre for Canadian Studies at Brock University, sponsored by the International Council for Canadian Studies.

ORCID: 0000-0003-4923-9197

 

Uploading the Archive, Copy/Pasting the “Classical”

DOI:10.15664/fcj.v19i0.2392

Uploading the Archive, Copy/Pasting the “Classical” by Eleni Palis from Frames Cinema Journal on Vimeo.

This video essay  combines a series of fiction feature films, made between the late-1990s and 2010s, in which futuristic androids and robots trade in digitised classical Hollywood archival film fragments as pedagogical and expressive traces, amassing an amateur archive. I call these fragments “film quotations” to denote the process of selection, citation, and reappropriation in these film-within-a-film moments.[1] In this video essay, Flubber (Mayfield, 1997), S1m0ne (Niccol, 2002), Teknolust (Leeson, 2002), WALL-E (Stanton, 2008), and Prometheus (Scott, 2012) all “quote” classical Hollywood films, in the form of short excerpts of sound and image, projecting (or uploading?) Hollywood’s archival past onto their imagined versions of the future. As this cohort of robots explore and amass personal visual archives, mining Hollywood history for meaning and mimicry, their viewership reveals several interrelated classical Hollywood ideologies and biases: the robot-amassed archives replicate hyper-traditional behaviour, both in conforming to strict copyright rules and in depictions of gender, sexuality, and monogamy. While only Teknolust self-consciously and critically replicates hegemonic, heteronormative media logics, this essay seeks to reveal how these robots’ sensorial experience of the archive select and project a misleading selection of history into the future. While touting a paradoxically easy-to-access Hollywood history, these robots cling to a tightly limited, licensed, entirely white and compulsorily cis-het digitised Hollywood archive.

Repeated shots of the “MIMIC” button (pulled from S1M0NE) emphasise the pedagogical mimicry in each film, as robots replicate gestures, dialogue, and gender roles communicated by classical Hollywood film fragments. As Barbara Klinger argues, “movie re-enactments demonstrate the strategic importance of ephemera’s tangled relationship with its apparent opposite – the iconic and canonical…As literal ‘re-doings,’ re-enactments help to preserve a film’s place in cultural memory.”[2] The films in this essay extend the preservation and memorialisation of film clips by staging the on-screen reenactment as copy/pasting the filmic past into the future, a sensorial archive-making. These supposedly representative fragments of the past, repositories of cultural memory that command rapt robot attention, claim a kind of universal appeal (as in, even a robot can love it!). Yet, as Janet Staiger remarks of film canons, “claims for universality are disguises for achieving uniformity, for suppressing through the power of canonic discourse optional value systems…It is a politics of power.”[3] In other words, the robots’ uninterrogated fascination with the classical Hollywood archive disguises the intense selectivity therein. The value system communicated in this digitised archive projects the fantasy/fallacy of going back to a previously less complex, less diverse, less divisive time, as though the archive could ever project hegemonic uniformity.

The covertly curtailed archive, as viewed and remembered by these filmic robots, is shaped most insistently by film licensing and intellectual property laws. Most of these films flaunt easy archival access, whether via WALL-E’s VHS, a wall-mounted screen in Prometheus, a computer in S1M0NE, or within Flubber’s personal robot interface. Yet, in reality, each and every film quotation bears a legal, contractual, negotiated backstory with rights holders. Using Flubber, a Disney Production, this essay emphasises the brand-name boundaries in which Disney’s robot exists, revealing how Weebo co-opts the Disney back catalogue into her sensorial reactions and emotions. This video essay reveals the paradox of supposed expressive freedom in an on-screen “future,” while off-screen, Disney owns each of Weebo’s projected images. As a rebuttal, a spectating android from Teknolust confronts a more realistic digital archive when she meets with “Access Denied,” a brief acknowledgement of paywalls, subscription siloes, and digital prosecution of “piracy.” By flattening the classical Hollywood archive into digital files to be uploaded, copied, and pasted, Flubber, S1M0NE, and WALL-E, especially, obscure the strict licensing and stark selectivity of these supposedly open archives.

Building from the conservative adherence to studio properties, these on-screen archives tout similar values in representing gender, sexuality, and cis-heterosexual desire. Troublingly, both S1M0NE and Flubber feature similar scenes in which the Hollywood archive appears to include only white women, offering a model of Eurocentric beauty from which a robot is programmed. These depictions fit Richard Dyer’s assessment of the trope of “the white woman as angel,” constituting “both the symbol of white virtuousness and the last word in the claim that what made white special as a race was their non-physical, spiritual, indeed ethereal qualities.”[4] Flubber fits this ethereal archetype in the glowing white human that Weebo programs for herself,  a ghostly haunting, while S1M0NE programs its robotic actress from an exclusively white digital archive. In Steven Cohan’s assessment, S1M0NE’s programming scene “derives from both a misogynist and contradictory anxiety about powerful, unregulated women in present-day Hollywood and a yearning for the old days of the studio-era star system.”[5] This combination of present fear and nostalgia for the past, Cohan argues, might contain a critique of the masculine hunger for control over women, past and present. Yet, S1M0NE’s copy/paste scenes, as Al Pacino programs his computerised actress, prioritises appropriative opportunities over any critique of gender or agency therein. In this video essay, only Teknolust critiques the reappropriation of this limited archive, revealing the absurdity of copy/pasting “classical” romance into the contemporary. Teknolust counters nostalgia for a false cohesive past by making heterosexual tropes strange, in part through Tilda Swinton’s star image. As So Mayor argues, “Swinton is often able to make sense where others cannot, and she fuses the bizarre with the serene.”[6] This seems the precise combination with which Swinton reframes Novak’s original lines from The Man With the Golden Arm (Preminger, 1955) into a strange, strained pick-up line. Following Mihaela Mihailova, this archive-informed style of production should raise “concerns about the gendering of digital labour along familiar patriarchal power structures,” such that, “as novel and exciting as the creative possibilities opened up by digital technologies may be, they continue to be shaped by sexism and capitalist exploitation.”[7] With this in mind, the co-opted voices of Audrey Hepburn, Shirley MacLaine, Kim Novak, and even the racialised Alec Guinness, as Prince Feisal in Lawrence of Arabia (Lean, 1962), echo across the robots’ repetitions as a gendered, racialised, and capitalist appropriations.

This narrow archive also communicates compulsory heterosexuality, transposing sexist film grammars, including the male gaze and objectifying fragmentation of female-presenting bodies, into the imagined future. In this way, WALL-E (perhaps surprisingly!) fits with Jason Lee’s theorisation of the sex robot when he argues, “the sex robot challenges what it means to be human and simultaneously enables us to reflect on human nature itself.”[8] In this case, WALL-E’s robot desires, reframed in this essay, reveal some heterosexual strangeness. WALL-E learns heteronormativity, including a desiring, stalking gaze to cast upon his co-star, a (gendered female?) robot named EVE, from viewing Hello, Dolly! (Kelly, 1969). While Eric Herhuth registers no discomfort when he recounts how “WALL-E continues to court the unresponsive EVE,” I see this disregard for consent, personal space, and autonomy, as lessons in WALL-E’s Hollywood-facilitated heteronormative education.[9] As WALL-E replays and then re-enacts heteronormative desire and romantic pursuit from Hello, Dolly!, he wields a voyeuristic, scopophilic gaze over EVE, dramatising the “politics of power” within the Hollywood archive, ripe for replicating masculine domination. Again, as rebuttal, Teknolust (the only female-directed film of this essay) critiques the use of classical Hollywood as heterosexual blueprint. Discussing how Teknolust’s robots repeat lines from classical Hollywood films, Jackie Stacey argues that “the film plays sexual stereotypes and cinematic cliches back to its audience in a deadpan style. The human and the nonhuman become almost indistinguishable here …The cinema as a technology of idealized feminine heterosexuality is taken to comic absurdity.”[10] This brief denaturalisation reveals how heteronormative logics, gendered roleplay, and sexist film grammars demand critical interrogation. By attending to the conservative media politics regarding copyright and sexuality in these on-screen archives, this essay hopes to dramatise the dangers of an uninterrogated assemblage. As a sensory experience of the archive at one remove, through the eyes of the on-screen robot, this essay demonstrates how a delimited archive transmutes a stunted, strained version of visual culture.

Notes

[1] For a broader theorisation of “film quotation” see Palis, “Race, Authorship, and Film Quotation,” Screen 61.2 (2020): 230-254. Briefly, I position film quotation within the umbrella of what Noël Carroll calls “allusion.” Though Carroll himself mentions quotation, he does not consider how physical archival presence offers unique potentialities as allusive practice. Noël Carroll, “The Future of Allusion: Hollywood in the Seventies (and Beyond),” October 20 (1982): 51-81.

[2] Barbara Klinger, “Re-enactment: Fans Performing Movie Scenes from the Stage to YouTube,” in Ephemeral Media: Transitory Screen Cultures from Television to YouTube, ed. Paul Grainge (London: British Film Institute, 2012), 196.

[3] Janet Staiger, “The Politics of Film Canons,” Cinema Journal 24, no. 3 (1985): 10.

[4] Richard Dyer, White: Essays on Race and Culture, (London: Routledge, 1997), 122, 127.

[5] Steven Cohan, Hollywood by Hollywood: The Backstudio Picture and the Mystique of Making Movies (New York: Oxford University Press, 2018), 143.

[6] So Mayer, “Holy Tilda Swinton!” in Cléo: A Journal of Film and Feminism 3 no. 3 (2015).

[7] Mihaela Mihailova, “Collaboration without Representation: Labor Issues in Motion and Performance Capture,” Animation: An Interdisciplinary Journal 11 no.1 (2016): 52.

[8] Jason Lee, Sex Robots: The Future of Desire (Cham: Palgrave MacMillan, 2017), 1.

[9] Eric Herhuth, “Life, Love, and Programming: The Culture and Politics of WALL-E and Pixar Computer Animation,” Cinema Journal 53, no.4 (2014): 57.

[10] Jackie Stacey, The Cinematic Life of a Gene (Durham: Duke University Press, 2010), 207.

 

 

 

Filmography

Hershman-Leeson, Lynn. Teknolust. Performed by Tilda Swinton, Jeremy Davies, James Urbaniak. 2002; Park City: Strand Releasing, 2020. DVD.

Lean, David. Lawrence of Arabia. Performed by Peter O’Toole, Omar Sharif, Alec Guinness, Anthony Quinn. 1962; London: Sony Pictures Home Entertainment, 2007. DVD.

Mayfield, Les. Flubber. Performed by Robin Williams, Marcia Gay Harden, Christopher McDonald. 1997; New York: Buena Vista Home Video, 1998. DVD.

Niccol, Andrew. S1m0ne. Performed by Al Pacino, Catherine Keener, Rachel Roberts. 2002; New York: New Line Home Entertainment, 2003. DVD.

Scott, Ridley. Prometheus. Performed by Noomi Rapace, Logan Marshall-Green, Michael Fassbender. 2012; Paris: 20th Century Fox Home Entertainment, 2012. DVD.

Stanton, Andrew. WALL-E. Performed by Ben Burtt, Elissa Knight, Jeff Garlin. 2008; Los Angeles: Walt Disney Studios Home Entertainment, 2008. DVD.

 

Bibliography

Cohan, Steven. Hollywood by Hollywood: The Backstudio Picture and the Mystique of Making    Movies. New York, NY: Oxford University Press, 2018.

Dyer, Richard. White: Essays on Race and Culture. London: Routledge, 1997.

Herhuth, Eric. “Life, Love, and Programming: The Culture and Politics of WALL-E and Pixar      Computer Animation.” Cinema Journal 53.4 (2014): 53-75.

Klinger, Barbara. “Re-enactment: Fans Performing Movie Scenes from the Stage to YouTube.”

                Ephemeral Media: Transitory Screen Cultures from Television to YouTube, edited by   Paul Grainge, British Film Institute, 2012, 195-213.

Lee, Jason. Sex Robots: The Future of Desire. Cham: Palgrave MacMillan, 2017.

Mayer, So. “Holy Tilda Swinton!” Cléo: A Journal of Film and Feminism 3 no. 3 (2015).

Mihailova, Mihaela. “Collaboration without Representation: Labor Issues in Motion and Performance Capture.” Animation: An Interdisciplinary Journal 11.1 (2016): 40-58.

Sperb, Jason. “I’ll (Always) Be Back: Virtual Performance and Post- Human Labor in the Age of             Digital Cinema.” Culture, Theory and Critique 53.3 (2012): 383-397.

Stacey, Jackie. The Cinematic Life of a Gene. Durham, NC: Duke University Press, 2010.

Staiger, Janet. “The Politics of Film Canons.” Cinema Journal 24.3 (1985): 4-23.

 

Author Biography

Eleni Palis is an assistant professor of English and Cinema Studies at the University of Tennessee. She earned her Ph.D. from the University of Pennsylvania. Her work has appeared in Screen, The Journal of Cinema and Media Studies (Cinema Journal), [in]Transition: Journal of Videographic Film and Moving Image Studies, and Oxford Bibliographies Online.

 

Paris in the Dark: Going to the Movies in the City of Light, 1930-1950

DOI:10.15664/fcj.v19i0.2400

By Eric Smoodin
Duke University Press, 2020

Reviewed by Wesley Kirkpatrick, University of St Andrews

 

In Paris in the Dark: Going to the Movies in the City of Light, 1930-1950, Eric Smoodin embarks upon a journey across Paris’ vast urban landscape, introducing the reader to the “ways that movies came and went through the city, the relationships of cinemas to the movies that they showed, to their neighbourhoods, and to their audiences” (1). Reflecting upon these matters across a city “largely unexamined” in film studies (4), Smoodin navigates a turbulent period in Parisian and French history, from the arrival of synchronised sound to cinema, to the political turmoil defining the 1930s and the military defeat and ensuing Nazi Occupation across the first half of the 1940s, all the way through to the post-war industrial and infrastructural rebuild that takes place by 1950. Paris in the Dark provides a much-needed re-evaluation of the archaic concept of a “national cinema” revolving around production practices, opting instead for an approach prioritising film exhibition, and reception. As such, Smoodin demonstrates the existence of numerous, and diverse film cultures cohabiting within the French capital in the 1930s and 1940s, showcasing the broader applicability of this efficient methodology towards future considerations of intra-city film cultures nationwide.[1]

Throughout his study, Smoodin relies heavily upon historical information preserved within invaluable archival records of newspapers, magazines, and film tabloids. Amongst these, the surviving issues of the popular film tabloid, Pour Vous, testify to the movement of films across Paris’ cinematic landscape, yielding detailed recordings of the precise films showing at specific establishments, as well as their exact screening schedules. A good example of Smoodin’s assured mastery over his vast and diverse pool of archival materials here is when he successfully pinpoints the precise theatrical establishment frequented by Walter Benjamin for a screening of Bringing Up Baby (1938) in the summer of 1938. Operating with a brief extract from one of Benjamin’s private correspondences in which the German philosopher relays the awe-inducing experience of seeing “Katharine Hepburn for the first time”, Smoodin sieves through his sizeable heap of archival documents, narrowing the extensive list down to a singular plausible suspect: the Ermitage, on the Champs-Élysées (17).[2]

Indeed, whether catching the latest release at a cinéma d’exclusivité like Benjamin does, or frequenting one of the cheaper cinémas des quartiers, or heading to one of the city’s multifarious ciné-clubs, Smoodin shows that the act of going to the movies ultimately held a central position within the daily lives of the majority of the city’s inhabitants. However, Smoodin debates the existence of a monolithic Parisian film culture here. Would a Parisian living in the 9th arrondissement have seen, or liked, the same films as their neighbour in the 18th? Would this individual have even considered venturing beyond the geographical confines of their local neighbourhood for the sole purpose of viewing a particular film showing? In search of answers, Smoodin builds recent trends in film studies whereby scholars have begun considering film audiences’ behavioural patterns, and taste preferences, from a focalised, micro scale (38).[3] Through this consideration of the metropolitan area’s fragmented “cinematic geography” (61), local film cultures are revealed, as particular movies and film stars seemingly enjoyed singular appeal within certain neighbourhoods over others. As demonstrated at the dawn of the 1930s with the asymmetrical introduction of synchronised sound cinema across the city – for instance, cinemas in the predominantly working-class 20th arrondissement were not fully equipped with the necessary technology until 1931-32 – Smoodin’s innovative lens unveils a class-based map of Paris (24). This map particularly highlights the importance of moviegoing in the daily lives of the city’s working-class inhabitants – as showcased through the heavy concentration of cinemas in the city’s outskirts – in contrast to wealthier, “elite” areas such as in the 1st arrondissement in which one would have inevitably failed in their quest to locate any such establishment.

Paris in the Dark also extends its consideration of Parisian moviegoing to the city’s diverse non-theatrical sites of film exhibition, and reception. This is highlighted through the in-depth analysis of that which Smoodin considers to be the most elaborate network of ciné-clubs of any city in the world at the time (5). These neglected non-theatrical spaces are repositioned at the heart of the city’s multiple and diverse film cultures, seemingly “overlapping” rather than appearing in “binary opposition” to the mainstream film culture available through the commercial theatrical circuit (46). A re-assessment of these oftentimes overlooked spaces highlights a transnational circulation of foreign films beyond merely the mainstream Hollywood imports, as ciné-clubs such as Cercle du Cinéma showcased British propaganda films in February 1940, the likes of those produced by Humphrey Jennings, and the GPO Film Unit (50).

However, despite the significant degree of attention awarded to the ciné-clubs – spanning from the 1930s to the curious establishment of the corporate ciné-club Air France in the late 1940s (145) – one is left slightly dissatisfied with the brevity of the author’s allusions to Paris’ peripheral non-theatrical film circuit. For instance, Smoodin provides a fleeting mention of the French fascist group, Croix de Feu’s profound “understanding of motion pictures” which seemingly expanded into the production of its own fascist propaganda films (84). In Chapter 2, discussing Parisian cinema spaces as the historical witnesses of recurring exertions of fascist violence, a contrast would certainly have been welcomed paralleling its theatrical occurrence with any possible violence – of physical, or any other nature – witnessed at non-theatrical film screenings such as those presumably organised to showcase Croix de Feu’s own fascist films. Nevertheless, the very mention of the French fascist group highlights one of the book’s many strengths; namely, its willingness to engage with scholarship emanating from beyond the Anglosphere, as various references to French film scholarship feature prominently throughout the text.[4]

Smoodin’s work uncovers a staggering era of Parisian moviegoing whereby cinema patrons could well have been witnessed, or indeed participated in public acts of violence within spaces seemingly devoted, first and foremost, to mass entertainment. Whether at a poorly subtitled screening of Fox Movietone Folies (1929) at the then newly repurposed Moulin Rouge, or at a purportedly immoral and anti-Catholic screening of Luis Buñuel’s L’Age d’Or (1930) at Studio 28, Smoodin draws out a long history of physical violence – usually perpetrated by political factions situated on the Far Right – exerted at various cinematic venues across the city from 1930 to the outbreak of the Second World War. Furthermore, as the Nazis occupied Paris from 1940 to 1944, Parisian cinemas were exploited as symbolic spaces through which the city’s fascist occupiers sought to broadcast a sense of normality, whilst pursuing a policy of “great reconciliation […] under the sign of cinema” (113). Even to such intruders, moviegoing was clearly understood as an important fixture of Parisian everyday life.

Needless to say, Smoodin does not mention any such violence in his account of going to the movies in Paris as a graduate student in the early 1980s. Nevertheless, the historical cinematic landscape revealed throughout the book remained somewhat familiar when compared to his later experience, though this was seemingly no longer the case upon a later visit to Paris in 2015. Indeed, both accounts seem unfamiliar in contrast to my own experience of the city. Growing up in France as a British expatriate, I was fortunate enough to spend the occasional school holiday in Paris in the mid to late 2000s. Inevitably, these outings always seemed to result in a family excursion to the cinema – though this was never limited to any particular establishment. Fortunately, I was not subjected to any outbreaks of fascist violence at my late-night screening of La Marche de l’Empereur/The March of the Penguins (2005) at the UGC multi-complex at La Défense. Nor, for that matter, did I encounter any hurling of metal seat-numbering towards the screen at the sight of any deplorable French subtitling during my (nonetheless lively) screening of Happy Feet (2006) at the Gaumont Alésia, in the 14th arrondissement. As most of the establishments mentioned in Paris in the Dark had long since disappeared – replaced by a swarm of multiscreen complexes that significantly reduce the need to venture across the city in search of any particular screening – such a landscape certainly complicates any attempts at distinguishing continuities between the past and the present.

Though the cinematic landscape has indeed evolved with time, moviegoing has prevailed as a key fixture of Parisian everyday life. Old establishments receive much-needed renovation, and further establishments emerge in new areas of the city and its outer periphery. It appears inconceivable that moviegoing should lose its revered status in Parisians’ daily lives any time soon – a practice which, despite its temporal fluctuations, seemingly unites the local boisterous 1930s cinemagoer, the American 1980s graduate student, and the British holidaymaker into a form of a cross-generational “kinship” (156).

 

Notes

[1] Smoodin himself suggests that his methods could be applied to locations such as Algiers

[2] This level of detail stands as a testament to the invaluable and laborious digitisation efforts undertaken by the French Bibliothèque Nationale which have provided global online access to innumerable primary documents and will certainly support further research.

[3] For example, see Margaret O’Brien, “The Everyman Cinema, Hampstead: Film, Art and Community in the 1930s.” Historical Journal of Film, Radio and Television, 41 (no.3) (2021): 685-704; Guy Barefoot, “The Tudor Cinema, Leicester: A Local Case Study.” In The Routledge Companion to British Cinema History, edited by I.Q. Hunter, Laraine Porter, and Justin Smith (Abingdon: Routledge, 2020), 98-108.

[4] For example, Smoodin extracts the information pertaining to Croix de Feu from: Jean-Jacques Meusy, Écrans Français de l’Entre-Deux Guerres, Volume II : Les Années Sonores et Parlantes (Paris: Association Française de Recherche sur l’Histoire du Cinéma, 2017).

Reuse, Misuse, Abuse: The Ethics of Audiovisual Appropriation in the Digital Era

DOI:10.15664/fcj.v19i0.2399

By Jaimie Baron
Rutgers University Press, 2020

Reviewed by Lucia Szemetová, University of St Andrews

In our digital world, where so much of the audio-visual materials are accessible online to a range of practitioners, appropriation is a growing and prominent media practice deserving scholarly attention. In her first, widely influential book, The Archive Effect: Found Footage and the Audiovisual Experience of History (2013), Jaimie Baron has already rethought the theoretical groundworks of appropriation film, focusing on the spectatorial experiences and the reception of reused archival footage.[1] In her second book, Baron turns to the ethical challenges that inevitably ensue in the act of all kinds of audio-visual appropriation while similarly recognising the role of the audience in these ethical valances. Baron redirects readers, scholars, and practitioners to the complex and often ambiguous ethics vis-à-vis the subjects of reused materials and encourages us to recognise our complicity in such ethical transgressions as equally responsible viewers and listeners. Importantly, the book does not offer ways to regulate such practice but rather coins a useful vocabulary applicable across a diverse spectrum of usages and approaches.

While numerous studies have addressed the ethics of documentary filmmaking, the book’s introductory chapter, “Theorising Misuse”, adds nuance to these discussions by laying out the different ethical stakes when an already existing actuality footage, image, or sound is repurposed.[2] According to Baron, every reuse is a misuse since the existing materials are put into a different context, but this does not imply that every misuse is unethical. It is essential to distinguish between works where such misuse is for actively ethical ends, and the act of appropriation is self-referential, not aiming to deceive the audience. Works categorised as abuse are a perceptible form of exploitation and produce an ethical violation. Baron is, however, specifically interested in the liminal cases through which she dissects the ethical dimensions that are always subjective, not reducible to a single variable, and context dependent. For this analysis, she introduces the concept of the layered gaze, encompassing three gazes: the film subject’s, the original maker’s, and the appropriationist’s. The relation between these three perceptions determines the structures of appropriation media’s ethical reading. Building on Vivien Sobchack’s phenomenology of the ethical gaze, Baron finds the concept of “subjective responsiveness” particularly useful, which in the case of appropriation film must be encoded both in the choice of the materials and editing, attesting to the appropriationist’s ethical (mis)treatment of the original subject.[3]  

Throughout, Baron’s detailed and compelling descriptions help ground the reader in the various ethical trespasses that the act of appropriation mitigates. Chapter 1 “(Re)exposing Intimate Traces” focuses on the reuse, or more precisely, the misuse of intimate artifacts. Through the example of films that remix home movies, medical photographs, love letters, or surreptitiously recorded audio, Baron considers whether such appropriations can produce intense attentiveness (attentive gaze), respect the anonymity and secrecy of such materials (occluded gaze), or elicit responsibility (disclosing gaze) instead of unethical treatment.

Chapter 2 “Speaking Through Others” outlines contemporary practices, referred to as “archival ventriloquism,” which can become a productive means of exposing misrepresentations or function as political satire and critique if recognised (playful, satirical gaze). However, Baron also alerts us to the rising tendency of “framing,” an intentionally misleading practice that can fake indexicality and misrepresent the subject (denigrating gaze). Although the voice still belongs to the subject, the message is the appropriationist’s, acknowledging the power relations and the agency of subjects thus becomes particularly potent in cases of racial ventriloquism.

As its title already reveals, Chapter 3 “Dislocating the Hegemonic Gaze” focuses on the various ways that a hegemonic gaze, be it white, straight, colonial, or male, can be countered and resisted through appropriation. Through the concept of “embodied interruption,” Baron discusses works that challenge and transform dominant discourses through inserting foreign bodies and voices to times and places where they used to be, or still are, excluded and misrepresented (dislocating gaze).

The ethical debates only get more complex in Chapter 4 “Reframing the Perpetrator’s Gaze,” which reviews the ethics of reworking footage made from the perpetrator’s perspective and thus materials upon which the unethical gaze is already imprinted. Although working with such materials is risky, Baron identifies three ways of conscious misuse calling for justice and reparation: reveal the perpetrator’s intentions (revelatory gaze), offer an explicit counter gaze (accusatory gaze), and require revision (reformative gaze).

Finally, Chapter 5 “Abusing Images” considers cases of abuse, works that fail to adhere to certain ethical standards (endangered gaze). Baron discusses two very different texts that slip ethically because of the contrast between solicited and elicited gaze yet also acknowledges how certain works can be unintentionally ethically abusive, standing in stark contrast to those that deliberately solicit an endangered gaze.

One of the great merits of this book is the wide range of media texts it discusses. Baron does not limit the study to documentary or experimental films only but examines paintings, video installations, YouTube videos, or even memes. At the same time, all of these cases are contextualised and revisited through an interdisciplinary scholarly lens ranging from law, philosophy, psychology to film and media scholarship. As such, the set of questions that this book offers are relevant beyond creative film and media practices. Despite predominantly discussing the North American context, except for the appropriation of Nazi propaganda films (Chapter 4) or the shocking abuse of Anne Frank photographs in anti-Semitic memes (Chapter 5), the ethical considerations that need to be recognised transcend spatial or temporal confines. Although each chapter considers a very different type of appropriation and thus generates a set of different ethical issues, Baron identifies the underlying connections between these debates and weaves together a coherent analysis of such a subjective and fluid matter.

The concept of layered gaze proves especially useful in discussing the film Sara Nokomis Weir (Brian L. Frye, 2014) that (re)appropriates a previous form of appropriation, a video impact video. Baron here (Chapter 4) identifies four gazes: the preservationist gaze of the original photographs and videos of Sara Weir, the memorial gaze of the video impact video, the judgmental gaze when this video was played in court, and finally, the reformative gaze of the appropriationist who reveals the wrongdoings against the subject through the reuse of these materials. However, the challenge remains to locate all the different gazes and grasp their distinct implications throughout the book. The taxonomy of appropriation practices that Baron lays out often coincide with rhetorical strategies of labelling gazes – dehumanising, clinical, secluded objectifying to name a few – which distract from the vocabulary aiding the ethical evaluation of audio-visual works. Further, though the book emphasises that in works of appropriation it is always a case of layered listening, the conceptual structures of sound appropriation need to be widened and focused more on audial specificities. Chapter 2 devoted to archival ventriloquism suggests a start in acknowledging the equally important and complex issue of ethics of listening, but admittedly needs a more refined analysis.

The book has already become a discipline defining piece in recognising the various layered discourses and their ramifications in assessing the ethics of audio-visual appropriation. As this is an issue we will be dealing with more because of technological developments, Baron’s detailed and informative interrogation of specific works functions as a framework for thinking about, questioning, and evaluating (our) ethical responsibilities. Though this book cannot and perhaps should not provide a fixed set of rules, it redirects our gaze to spot unethical ways of appropriation and the stakes of ethical misuses, thus making our gaze alert and critical. As such, Reuse, Misuse, Abuse becomes a necessary manual for our contemporary media scape grappling with ethical conundrums.

Notes

[1] Baron, Jaimie. The Archive Effect: Found Footage and the Audiovisual Experience of History (London; New York, NY: Routledge, Taylor & Francis Group, 2014).

[2] Baron discusses Bill Nichols’ “axiographics” and Stuart Katz and Judith Milestein Katz’s “image ethics” in detail in the Introduction. Further detail in: Bill Nichols, Representing Reality: Issues and Concepts in Documentary (Bloomington, IN: Indiana University Press, 1991); Stuart Katz and Judith Milestein Katz, “Ethics and the Perception of Ethics in Autobiographical Film” in Image Ethics: The Moral Rights of Subjects in Photograhps, Film, and Television, ed. Larry Gross, John Stuart Katz, and Jay Ruby (London: Oxford Universtiy Press, 1988). She acknowledges Thomas Elsaesser’s essay that addressed the ethics of audio-visual appropriation. Thomas Elsaesser, “The Ethics of Appropriation: Found Footage between Archive and Internet,” Found Footage Magazine I (October 2016).

[3] Vivian Sobchack, “Instribing Ethical Space: Ten Propositions on Death, Representation, and Documentary,” in Carnal Thoughts: Embodiment and Moving Image Culture (Berkeley, CA: University of California Press, 2004).