|
CHAPTER
1
Introduction
As a result
of a period of dissatisfaction with my steel sculpture's increasing
irrelevance, I took a sabbatical from commercial values and production
and returned to the University of North Texas (UNT) to work on a
Master of Fine Arts. Rather than a peaceful transition, this was
a disorienting journey. In the past my sculpture drew from archetypal
ideas, ethnographic characters, and symbols to create sculpture.
A storyteller in steel, I attempted to overlay and integrate myth,
subconscious imagery and history in a narrative and semiotic manner
with steel. Although I carefully planned and executed, these sculptures
were not spontaneous.
My sculpture
ideas began to include time, color, pattern, motion, participation
of an audience and light, but the flatness of steel had become too
limiting a medium for these new concepts.
By reading the
words of the beat, minimalist and post modern artists who rebelled
against traditional structures and invented and re-invented their
own expanded structure, I became convinced that installation art
and performance art are not fully realized. The beat film by Alfred
Leslie and Robert Frank, "Pull My Daisy" an enchanting
stream of consciousness movie, like a poetÕs car ride through a
city with only ordinary life intruding. A theater of real unadorned
life might have a meaning and place in my new art, and this theater
may be a way to slow down our experience to see more closely the
significant moments in ordinary life.
John Cages'
ideas of chance and indetermination were stimulating. He used random
ambient sound and life as part of the composition of 4'33".
The wind in the trees, bird noise, coughs and anger of the audience,
the sight and sound of the piano being opened and closed are equal
in meaning within the composition.
Events by Fluxus
and Yoko Ono triggered further thought concerning art documentary
performance and about using time, spontaneity, audience and place.
In 2001, Yoko Ono was commissioned by the Walker Art Center to create
a new work that utilized the telephone. I participated by standing
on a dam on the border of Texas and Oklahoma while using a personal
communications device to leave a recording on a machine in Wisconsin.
These recordings were edited in New York and presented globally
as a work of art. The idea coalesced in my mind that art can be
made of anything, anywhere, in any time.
A monumental
portrait by Chuck Close removes the mystery from the subject by
showing warts and hairy ears. Unsentimental, his paintings present
an unvarnished truth. The camcorder can do the same by capturing
all of the moment included in the recording. The editor selects
footage that fulfils the criteria of the art, and in my case abstracted
movement and pattern, selected from nature and ordinary life.
Using a digital
camera, I photographed and manipulated visual oddities like a fire
dancer whose motions made me dream of video. Conversations with
other students and my professors helped me realize a leap to video
was possible and logical.
Video, being
similar to television, presents content in a manner to which people
are accustomed. In addition to capturing the spontaneous moment
with the camcorder, a more substantial editing could be undertaken
later. In video, inadvertent content exists along with narrative
content. The editing process is used to mediate the experience of
the audience by selecting what is meaningful and worthy of presentation.
Video seems to be amenable to re-visiting and re-selecting content
and imagery surprising the editor with unforeseen connections. Video's
unpredictability and uncertainty encourages spontaneity, enabling
new insights to be gained during editing and re-view.
Statement
of Problem
My new body
of work concentrates on the exploration of digital video technology
in the making of art. I focused the lens on the abstract moment
in ordinary life as captured by the camcorder, at the moment when
the motion, color, and optical patterns interact to create an effect
or event worthy of attention.
Questions
1. What is the
role of chance and indeterminacy in making Art video?
2. What can
the role be of spontaneity in an artwork that uses video?
3. VHS, QuickTime
and DV tapes are possible formats to present the art videos. In
what method of use, are they most effective?
Methodology
I
produced three videos, Shidoni, Under
a bridge in Fort Worth, and Rio Grande, Taos
that included time, motion, light, dark, and abstract pattern studies
using available light. A Canon XL1S camcorder and a G4, 667 Titanium
PowerBook were my primary tools of digital capture and editing.
The movies were produced in three formats; VHS (home video), QuickTime
formats for compressed digital electronic distribution, and as a
broadcast quality digital master tape. I kept a journal, installed
an exhibition of videos and wrote a paper.
CHAPTER
2
Defining
the Abstract Moment
The abstract
moment occurs when the image that is captured by video loses its
connection with the original context, allowing the images to be
viewed in an entirely new way. What I see with my eyes is only part
of the information that is captured by the camcorder. Optical anomalies
resulted from experimenting with selecting and divorcing the digital
video subject from its usual context and location. New relationships
were formed and discovered among dissimilar ordinary experiences.
The abstract
moment is initiated by a transformative instant, that instant in
which perception is altered and the viewer sees the intended content
of my composition of light and sound. The transformative instant
is not a fixed point in time but seems to be a relational moving
point on the video timeline that indicates the audienceÕs entrance
and engagement in the abstract moment.
Relationships
are found which link the three videos. The abstracted movement of
light and water in Rio Grande, Taos has a
flow similar to the pouring bronze of Shidoni. The over-racing clouds
in Under a Bridge in Fort Worth mimic and recall the reflections
and debris under- racing a bridge in Rio Grande, Taos and the boiling
impurities that discolor the molten flow of metal in Shidoni.
Water, clouds and molten bronze share the qualities and laws of
fluids. Fluid dynamics reveal and organize the splendor of these
natural flows, allowing the artist and the viewer to experience
a distorted yet harmonious event. Wind that propels the clouds in
Under a bridge in Fort Worth, whips the trees and grasses into motion
in Rio Grande, Taos by being forced through a pipe and blended with
fire to melt the bronze in the short movie Shidoni.
The three videos
are projected as large format abstract paintings that include: motion
and time, accuracy, and are truthful and surprising unadorned portraits
of places and moments. No affectation, effect, or filter modifies
the video information, only the selection, scale, and isolation
of perceived beauty are important.
What is the
role of chance and indeterminacy in making Art video? All three
films allowed chance and indetermination to determine how, where
and what was recorded. When arriving at a random attractive destination,
I would turn on the camera and start composing through the lens.
In Shidoni the human eye was overwhelmed by the glare of the flaming
metal, but the camera iris was adjusted to compensate for the glare
and intensity, thus unsuspected detail was revealed. The digital
camera sees in ways the human eye cannot; the optic nerve is flooded
with generalized information, while the digital eye sees and captures
incredible detail.
Inadvertent
content is found in these details. The framing through the lens
determines what is of interest in the landscape by eliminating everything
that is not encompassed by the digital eye. The camera is an information
filter and the artist is the mediator of selected content for the
audience. Difference was discovered between what can be seen on
the 1.5-inch camcorder view screen and what clear detail was recorded
when the digital information was viewed on a wall screen. The abstracted
video patterns and optical effects became a uniquely detailed portrait
of that time and place (Rio Grande, Taos was initiated with four
hours of recording at the Taos Junction of the Rio Grande commencing
at 6:00 am on June 15, 2002). Immediate editing supported the maintenance
of conceptual focus and point of view. Concept to compression the
process of making these digital movies was completed within twenty
four-hours. Studying the landscape of ordinary life so closely gave
me new appreciation for the activities that flow about us in the
unperceived background.
What can be
the role of spontaneity in an artwork that uses video? In all three
movies the abstract moment was located first and recorded in the
field. Later in the studio, while editing the collection of images
the connections became apparent and the composition emerged. There
is no blueprint, fixed course, or method in my process only the
imperatives of ideas and intuition.
Spontaneity
relieved me of anticipatory anxiety. Arriving at the potential locations
of beauty I would become aware of rightness. My role was to be sensitive
to nuances of light and composition and be ready to capture and
delineate the significant content. I find that the transformative
instant is also a spontaneous instant, different and individual
in each viewer's response.
The accidental
and not so perfect recording is as important as the perfect; all
are part of the inexact encapsulation of idea. As with CageÕs compositions,
what happens in, around, and during the art making is a part of
the art. Spontaneous moments allow another layer of content that
cooperates with the intended content. Uncontrollable nature, involved
with doing what nature does, provides surprising details that add
to the texture, staging and scope of the movies. By embracing the
idea of not being completely in control of all elements of these
movies, (deliberate indeterminacy) improvisational relationships
were initiated that helped these compositions to be greater than
the sum of their parts.
A spontaneous,
unplanned effect was the hypnotic viscerallity (gut soothing) of
the abstracted patterns of water in Rio Grande,
Taos and Under a bridge in Fort Worth
on the audienceÕs emotions. At the studio exhibition, the audienceÕs
serene reaction to water and wind videos was enlightening and emboldening
to me as the composer. " I wish I was there right now" has been
the most remarked phrase heard from my audience, accompanied by
a sigh. This effect was not planned or even considered during the
construction of my composition, but was discovered only by including
the audience, the artist and the moment.
VHS, QuickTime
and DV tapes are possible formats to present the art videos.
IIn what method
of use are they most effective?
VHS is the common
denominator of digital and analog presentation. Almost everyone
has a VCR to play and record VHS. With VHS the audience sees and
hears the same colors and audio as edited. A recent video festival
had a variety of computers, software, monitors, and plasma screens
that displayed VHS, DVDs and CDs. The variants in technology caused
system conflicts that ruined the clarity of movies. Only the pedestrian
VHS worked right every time. VHS uses no computer memory, so long
sequences can be viewed immediately without waiting for a downloaded
file. I can achieve the minimal effect of multi screen viewing by
using multiple VCRs. This is the affordable format with which to
experiment and perform. Under a bridge in Fort
Worth and Rio Grande,Taos are presented
with two screens using VHS.
Today's digital
movie software has replaced linear editing (snip and splice) with
what is called nonlinear/ non-destructive editing. By using digital
selected copies of video sequences to assemble a movie, a laptop
computer today replaces million-dollar editing studios. When completed,
the digital movie can be stored in a web site available to download
or view, distributed in a compressed version by e-mail, left in
the computer hard drive, recorded on Disk or processed for film
distribution.
Electronic mail
(e-mail) courtesy in sending videos is crucial because you can cause
problems for your audience with large files. Shidoni
is an attempt to make a small file that quickly loads as an e-mail
that is short in time but loaded with content. Shidoni
a 30-second QuickTime 716K video arrives in most mailboxes, but
a 3-minute version of Taos a 2900K video
is blocked. The 2900K movie requires a unacceptable10 minutes of
computer time to load. QuickTime creates movies in three compression
formats; full screen format files at thirty frames per second, computer
file sharing is best on a 4" x 5" screen at fifteen frames, and
seven frames per second creates the smallest screen at about 2"
x 2", suitable for email.
Mini DV tape
as used by the digital camcorder has been superseded by Firewire
technology that attaches portable hard drives directly to the camera
eliminating the need for tapes of any kind. DV tape will continue
to be used for archives, masters and originals and may have similar
technological longevity as VHS. Cost of tape quickly amortizes a
mobile hard drive with one hundred hours of re-useable storage capacity.
The Canon XL1s is the first commercial camcorder to use this technology.
This camera body is mated to an internal digital audio recording
system that is advanced and as capable as the lenses, providing
superior fidelity and audio clarity.
CHAPTER
3
Conclusion
Re-described
as a composer, I now use ideas, objects, space and emerging technology
to create an ephemeral opera of untraditional elements that includes
the interaction of indeterminacy, spontaneity, ordinary life, music,
ambient sound, audience presence, video, computers, nature, and
performance.
The study of
the abstract patterns yielded experiential insights that are now
part of my ideas to be used in future videos. Video experimentation
directly connects the ideas I could not pursue as a young artist
with the experiences and resources of maturity to develop a new
complex personal expression. It was discovered through the experience
of displaying these movies that the abstract moment was revealed
to have structure, a beginning or tranformative instant that enters
the abstract moment and a similar transformation back into the ordinary.
The mind and eye struggle to reconcile the abstract moment with
their internal references, and our physiological grasp of the abstract
moment is tenuous.
Continuing to
be fascinated with older artists, their work, their humanness and
their practice, in the future, I intend to make a series of videos
portraying artists and musicians in their studio. Narrative video
can absorb and utilize the research of the abstraction studies.
I theorize there is a corollary abstract moment to be found in documenting
artists at their work.
Two sorts of
portraits of people and places have become important in these videos.
One presentation is the de-mystified image like a Chuck Close painting,
a time consuming, detailed video like Rio Grande,Taos
that overwhelms with perceivable content. The other is a 30 second
elegant video construct with a closer relationship to a short formulaic
Japanese poem, the Haiku. Ironically, the complex portrait like
Rio Grande, Taos tends to fade quickly into
the background of an exhibition, while the small Haiku-like video
Shidoni glitters as an e-mail jewel. Additionally,
this research has changed the way I use the backgrounds of my portraits,
by elevating the importance of selected visual details as the lessons
of the abstract moment are incorporated into the experimental ambient
narrative.
|