Mark Ashbery on 30 Mar 2001 15:27:51 -0000 |
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<nettime> Jordan Crandall/Larry Rinder/Part1 |
Jordan Crandall and Lawrence Rinder: Transcript of presentation at The Kitchen, New York 20 January 2001 Part 1 LR: We're going to divide the program this evening into two parts. During the first segment, we're going to show a tape that is a compilation of all of the tracks from Jordan's serial work Drive. Jordan will tell you some of the technical facts and some of the themes that he was engaging. After a break for dinner, we'll view his newest work Heatseeking, which will be shown in its entirety in "BitStreams" at the Whitney Museum, opening on March 22. JC: I'll just begin with a brief overview on Drive. Drive is a project that I've worked on from 1998-2000. It's a seven-part series of videos (each part is referred to as a "track") that combines cinematic technology -- mostly 16mm film -- with military-derived tracking, targeting, and identifying systems. It combines formats of old and new, network and analogue, military and civilian, in order to move toward a post-cinematic language -- and one that has very particular historical and political resonances. All of the footage that you see in Drive is original footage, with the exception of some parts of Track 6, which contains military-commercial footage, some derived from smart bombs. I approach the making of these works much like a filmmaker. [Tape begins.] Track 1 deals with movement -- with individual, isolated bodily movements and urban movements. It is structured according to coordinations -- coordinations between various kinds of rates, speeds, formats. It relays between the rhythms of the body and the rhythms of the city. It has many historical references, such as early experiments in sequential photography -- the idea of breaking down movement into its constituent parts in order to analyze those movements, very often as part of technologies of accounting. Thinking about, for example, Marey, who was a physiologist -- behind much of that sequential photography was measuring devices. Behind all of that photography is the fact of measurement of different rates of movement -- of looking at ways of harnessing that movement to production demands. This kind of research was funded in part by the military. The green overlays that you see are the result of running the footage through a motion tracking system. I worked with the developer of this software to gear it for this purpose. It was originally developed for the military for use in tracking such things as missiles. I instead used it for this filmmaking purpose. It is very seamlessly integrated into the film -- it just sort of intertwines itself, often in very subtle ways. Sometimes you don't even notice that it's there. But it marks an enormous change in how the image is constituted. There is a mechanism of analysis behind it. It is sweeping through, in a sense, absorbing information. You can see the processing rhythms, in conjunction with the film rhythms. The information is sorted in a database, so there is a database structure behind it. The machine is registering movement, compiling information about movement. We will see in Track 2 how this database becomes a kind of speech, the speech of the machine. LR: You mentioned in an article recently that one of the implications of this kind of tracking technology was to be predictive. How does that function here? Are we seeing that happening [in this sequence]? JC: I'm glad you mentioned that because tracking is a type of seeing that is very much oriented toward predicting. In the case of military technology, it is wanting to see what is happening in order to predict what will happen -- what is moving, how it is moving, and how that movement can be controlled or intercepted. It is interesting to think about what tracking is because it is a process and also part of a new form of signification. It is a process of seeing, quantifying, and articulating. You could see it as part of a new semiotics. I'm interested in this in conjunction with film semiotics. So tracking is scanning, absorbing information, trying to develop some kind of prediction, in order to intercept or control or modify the object. It is oriented toward the proactive. You see it as work in new policing strategies, which are very much oriented toward intercepting things before they occur -- in other words to predict a crime before it will happen. It often involves the redlining of areas or the locating of dangerous circumstances or dangerous individuals who, under certain circumstances, may be inclined toward criminal behavior. A politics of profiling is very important right now, and to see that developing is very encouraging. I want to probe into these qualities of tracking and the peculiar warpage of time that results from it. It is evoking something that will happen, or could happen, or should happen, and almost carrying that future with it as part of its own body. That involves a kind of shrinkage or mutation. It is one important factor that "causes" material change. LR: We're looking at Track 2 now, which is very close to Track 1, but here the database is made overt. You said it was an invented database -- are you symbolizing the idea of a database? Is there a relationship between those numbers and what is actually happening? JC: There is a relationship, but it's not scientific. It is quantifying processing speeds, movement rates -- different temporal streams that run through the film. But it's done in a poetic way. It functions in terms of illustrating those streams, referring to a kind of statistical inclination -- a statisticalization that is about absorbing data and predicting a certain orientation. It's also about the different formats of identity that may arise. It's also about trying to bring out the idea of the database as an organizing principle. It does influence how this track is organized. What is really interesting to think about in all this is how the database operates as a new organizational paradigm for us. In the context of cinematic history, what interests me is how the database paradigm is displacing or augmenting the narrative paradigm. Lev Manovich has written extensively on this. The database is very much part of the way we see things. Its logics are everywhere. It has becoming a way in which the public is seen, heard, and made visible. It's where buying habits and all kinds of behaviors, down to the tiniest flickers of desire, are becoming measurable. It is a format through which we are "seen" almost as a calculus of manageable functions. LR: Now we're viewing Track 3 -- JC: Those green images are made with a night vision camera made by ITT, the company that was the largest supplier of night vision technology to the US military since the Vietnam War. It allows you to film in complete darkness. It's interesting because night vision has now become a feature on consumer-grade video cameras. It's not as good as the military stuff of course, but it's an interesting example of the flow from military systems to consumer systems. The military way of seeing starts to filter into the way we're seeing. It's very much about an organization of a perceptual field, a particular kind of perspectivization. LR: I wanted to ask you about the gesture that the actress is making [in Track 3] -- this repeated tapping of her breastbone as she is trying to get someone on the phone. JC: She's tapping a number or sequence, tapping a rhythm on and of the body, caught in a kind of circuit, a loop, and very much oriented within a technological system. There is a particular interest I have in the fitting of the body inside technology, which I talk about in terms of a "vehicle." It's the fitting of the body within an apparatus of travel, of orientation, of mobilization, of � rhythmicization. Is that a word? LR: Rhythmicity. JC: Yes. Rhythmicity. The images I use are all technological metaphors, in order to speak about technology in ways that we are familiar with. The phone, car, a door knob -- simple things. When you see a telephone system or a car, you can see the fitting or orienting of the body, a holding of the body, in order to institute a linkup or a transport from one place to another. This holding of the body, this orienting of the body and its senses, has an attendant dimension of pleasure. A pleasure of fitting into, a pleasure of being held by. Of being controlled by. It's a particular kind of molding. And so at the same time that it is a very invasive and control-oriented contouring, it's also a very seductive one. From our point of view we can take a certain pleasure of the fit. In this particular track, the actress has very specific repetitive obsessions, as we see with the phone. There is a compulsion to encode, to internalize, a certain pattern. To in/habit it a particular way. I'm interested in that because it is a way of thinking about how technological systems, visual systems, are about the instillation of certain habits, routinizations, formats of behavior -- things in which we "fit in." Again, often in terms of a kind of vehicle, a vehicular device. In this track, I evoke early Hollywood cinematic tropes, shooting with black and white 16mm film. I mix that with night vision videography, with satellite-derived imagery, and footage derived from wireless, hidden pinhole cameras that the actors wear on their bodies. In those scenes, the camera crew completely disappears. I also use this invented targeting system -- through computer animations -- which starts to become part of the way the actress sees. It becomes imposed on her vision. You see it here with the knob on the drawer and the door handle, where that kind of militarization seeps into how and what she sees, as well as behaves. LR: You also speak about how particular angles, specifically the angle from above, evokes the military view, a kind of vertical gaze. JC: Yes. We are at a point now when we have so many possibilities of filmic languages, because we have so many different visual systems. It is interesting to experiment with new orientations, orientations that can be politicized. There is the axis of the aerial view, which can be generally identified as a military axis, but not necessarily specifically so any more. But it is a filmic orientation that can be seen in contrast to the cinematic terrestrial orientation. I've done some writing on the development of these two orientations -- of how cinematic languages developed alongside military languages. It is interesting to see how the different orientations derived and how they sort of intercept each other. They intertwine. There is also the surveillance angle, a lateral angle coming down, which we recognize from surveillance camera monitors. There are angles that are about how a computer might see us. Not just as a webcam, although a webcam has its own particular angles as well, but in terms of how are seen by a technological system, through the ports of our own desktops. On the network, the image-system sees us back. There are also new angles derived from these little cameras, these little pinhole cameras, which transmit images wirelessly to a base station. They allow you to place them in many secret locations. You have the possibility of these very intimate and highly mobile views. These are all a part of emerging film languages. LR: If you look at Drive and at Heatseeking, there are such an incredible variety of film styles it is seems to be a kind of encyclopedic rehearsal of various modes of both avant-garde and full-on Hollywood cinema moments. I wonder if you could talk about some of the specific references that you are drawing from. When I look at these, I see everything from Stan Brackhage to Carl Dreyer to Maya Deren, and so forth. JC: Yes -- there's also live-action TV like "Cops," and MTV aesthetics, along with surrealist work like Cocteau. The little girl in Track 4 comes right out of "Blood of a Poet." There's quite a bit in Drive. But with Heatseeking, I'm actually not doing so much referencing. I think I've started to internalize it more. LR: Something that is really important to these works, which is not immediately apparent from looking at them [on this single screen], are the disruptions of the standard cinematic form, as evidenced here at The Kitchen, with the two projections of Track 4 running on two screens opposite each other. Can you talk about other instances of this in the works that we have seen in Drive so far? JC: When I first showed Track 1 of Drive at Sandra Gering Gallery in 1998, I experimented with video headsets. You wear them and the project the image out about 10-20 feet in front of you. The image hovers in front of you and moves with you. The image is semi-transparent so you can see through it. It's superimposed on the space in front of you. It was very interesting for me to think of Drive shown that way because, particularly Tracks 1 and 2, it is so much about relationships between physical and representational movements, and technological movements. It enabled me to draw an investigation of a space of representation that specifically involved viewer's movements. That was just after I had renounced ever using a computer mouse in an exhibition again. I found that work could be more "interactive" without it. This use of the video headset was the part of my ongoing interest in looking at mobile imaging systems. When I first presented Heatseeking at inSITE in San Diego, I used a handheld device, a PDA. The videos were streamed to it wirelessly, using a software developed by Packet Video. During the time I was working on this project, I was talking with Qualcomm about developing a new kind of mobile device. I was interested in developing the shape of the device, thinking about how it would fit in the hand. I did not end up working with them on this (and our relationship to the corporate world is another discussion). It is interesting to think about how these new kinds of images are coming off from the mainframe and snuggling up to us, become personalized and moving with us, helping to change the way we see and behave, and how they are contoured against the body in form. It is interesting to see these devices as part of a way of augmenting vision, of augmenting perception and our sense of place, as well as the contours of the body. We know that this is happening a lot today with mobile communications -- you can see it with cell phones, for example, in the context of the history of the telephone and how that has changed our sense of space. How it has helped to generate new kinds of social worlds, new ways of seeing, of placing ourselves, of holding ourselves. Working with the miniature, portable device is really a challenge. It is a different way of thinking about images and how we relate to them. It is a different dynamic of attention. You're multitasking, flipping between scales and formats. It's difficult to hold attention when you're engaged in so many different types of tasks. It is difficult to compete in this space. The logic is more that of advertising, of techniques fractured into small frames of time. As artists, can we compete with the world of advertising? Should we? We can choose not to compete at all. We can make a demand on the viewer. In any case, it is a time now when this large-scale cinematic projection format has, in a certain way, run its course, in a culture moving toward miniaturization, mobility, and dispersals of access. LR: Can you address specifically your use of the dual projection screens in Track 4, as installed here at The Kitchen, and some of the themes of that piece? JC: That piece was shot with an old hand-cranked camera, a surveillance camera, and a wireless pinhole camera worn on the actor's body. It is based on a famous case of Freud's called "A Child is Being Beaten," especially as used by Jean-Francois Lyotard in developing his concept of the "matrix." Rosalind Krauss has beautifully described this matrix figure as Lyotard saw it. Track 4 of Drive is a way for me to think about this matrix figure. The matrix is a formalization of a repetition pattern. It is the cycling of a beat-system that underlies how we behave, how we hold ourselves, how we see. In extreme cases, it can form the basis of a psychic or psychosexual compulsion. For Lyotard, the matrix is a form that cements together an occurrence that holds a fascination for us -- a situation in which we become "caught," a situation into which we "fit" with a certain level of comfort. It is a network where roles are continually exchanged -- where, for example, observation flips into participation, seeing flips into being seen, beating turns into being beaten. Opposites are exchanged. With the rise of new visual systems, I wanted to think about that in relationship to the beat of changing visual modes, and the various ways in which one is drawn into or placed within them. The beat of the spank -- which is also very much a technological beat, mixed together with it -- marks the contact of hand against skin but also the flipping of roles and visual systems. There are pulses that start to become apparent, such as the pulse of the flickering light, which is caused by the hand that cranks the camera, the rhythm of the cranking hand within that (now antiquated) technical system. The use of the dual synchronized projections is to allow the precise flipping of roles and positions across the screens, and to draw the viewer into the space of the scene, with a certain level of discomfort perhaps. As I develop further in Heatseeking, the actors start to become conscious of the visual systems -- they start to become conscious of the cameras. The actress in Track 4 looks up at the surveillance camera directly at several points, the actor looks at the film camera, the little girl has a certain awareness of being observed. There are all these degrees of self-consciousness. There are all these degrees of awareness of the devices and their orientations. And there are all these levels of comfort and displeasure. It is visible in the details such as the rhythm of the shift of the eyes. This is something that I am sure we will want to talk more about tonight. With the rise of these systems, which are often seen as very invasive, we see also new corresponding pleasures, new vectors of ... desire. LR: That's a good place to break, because now we have the vector of ... hunger. [break for dinner] _________________________________________________________________ Get your FREE download of MSN Explorer at http://explorer.msn.com # distributed via <nettime>: no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a moderated mailing list for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: [email protected] and "info nettime-l" in the msg body # archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: [email protected]