Man with a movie camera: Helen Molesworth on the art of Phil Collins.
Molesworth, Helen
PHIL COLLINS AND KARAOKE were both born in the 1970s, the decade
during which, according to the novelist Michael Cunningham, dreams of
revolution faded and people began to dance. And dancing is at the center
of the project that is probably Collins's best known to date, the
seven-hour double-screen video projection of a dance marathon, called
they shoot horses, 2004. This work lays out all the basic parameters of
Collins's practice: The British, Glasgow-based artist goes
somewhere (in this case, Ramallah) that is not his home and that is
politically volatile and vaguely suggestive of the biennial circuit in
its "global" character. Once there, he issues an open call for
some kind of activity or event, conducts auditions, and, after securing
the agreement of the participants, starts rolling the camera. While the
activities may differ, the formal dependence on real-time duration, a
relatively static camera, and a minimal use of editing is fairly
consistent. In they shoot horses, we see a bunch of Palestinian teens
dance--for one another, for the camera, for themselves--until they
literally drop with fatigue, too exhausted to continue. The sound track
is a steady stream of Western pop and disco, easy and infectious. The
kids seem to know every word to every song, and their moves are as
intermittently naive, sexy, and geeky as you might remember your own
being back in the day.
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One effect of they shoot horses, in which the Palestinian teenagers
may remind any viewer of his or her own adolescence, is that the
old-fashioned idea of the universal is somehow mapped over the newer and
more contemporaneously celebrated idea of the global. The potential
conflation of these concepts is a hallmark of Collins's work. He
often focuses on very particular social groups that seem, when refracted through his lens, to open themselves up both geographically and
temporally, appearing at once placeless and local, timeless and very
much of the moment. This past November, at the Dallas Museum of Art,
Collins unveiled his recently completed trilogy, the world won't
listen, 2004-2007, shot in Bogota, Istanbul, and Jakarta. Here the call
for participants solicited people who wanted to karaoke to the
cult-classic Smiths album of the same name. (The three installments--el
mundo no escuchara, 2004; dunya dinlemiyor, 2005; and dunia tak akan
mendengar, 2007--are discrete works whose titles translate the phrase
"the world won't listen" into the languages of the
respective locales.) It turns out that there are disaffected goth girls;
stringy, faggy boys; and nerdy lovers of sentimental lyrics all across
the globe. And who among us is surprised that Morrissey's words and
lyrics feel just as stylish and classic and right now to us as
Sinatra's Songs for Swingin' Lovers do to our parents?
The one-two punch of they shoot horses and the world won't
listen comes from an awareness that singing and dancing are deep
mixtures of social conformity and libidinal excess; as age-old practices
found in every culture in the world, they lend a veritably humanist
dimension to Collins's oeuvre. While it might be stretching the
point, one could say that historically, art, too, has been conceived as
a universal practice in which the impulse to conform and the impulse
toward libidinous self-expression are channeled even as they are held in
tension. Indeed, watching the performers in the world won't listen
use Morrissey as a way to traverse the boundaries of time and space, it
occurred to me that here Collins had perhaps fashioned a rather sly
allegorical portrait of the art world. Consider that karaoke, which rose
to fame in Japan but was fashionable worldwide by the mid-'90s,
oddly mimics many of the characteristics of the contemporary art scene:
Both karaoke and contemporary art are symptoms of globalization; both
are nomadic; both are fueled by our new experience economy; and both
perfectly encapsulate the DIY ethos that has become so pervasive in the
last couple of decades. Karaoke is also an analogue of sorts to
relational aesthetics, inasmuch as it is a cultural practice predicated
upon participation rather than contemplation. And just as the rhetoric
of democracy hangs around art's participatory modes, so too is
karaoke "democratic"--although the great equalizer here is
that everyone is equally "talentless," which helps to generate
the communal we're-all-in-this-together-and-anything-is-possible
effect of karaoke bars.
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You could say that the biggest difference between karaoke and
relational aesthetics is that while both are highly contagious, karaoke
is funny--funny because, as Henri Bergson theorized at the beginning of
the last century, laughter is a response to the human body's
failure to be properly mechanical. In effect, karaoke renders failure
pleasurable. When people do karaoke, they make themselves vulnerable; in
these provisional gatherings they are willing to fail in front of one
another. And fail they do. The participants in the world won't
listen bungle the lyrics, slur their broken English, and are confused
about whether to look at the camera or the monitor. Even their globally
recognizable hipster clothes fail to beat out the awesome banality of
the stock landscape backdrops they are filmed against. Their amateurism
is hilarious and moving and, in some deeply Brechtian form of fractured
viewership, we cringe and root for them simultaneously.
Although failure as a trope is ever popular, not much has been said
about it in relation to Collins's practice. But I have become
increasingly interested in the "little failures" that
punctuate his work. At the very end of they shoot horses, his camera
moves for the first time in seven hours and, in one quick turn of the
zoom lens, practically caresses the intensely beautiful, flushed, and
exhausted face of a young man. It is an astonishing moment. Its
acknowledgment of desire (of the artist for his subject, of the man for
the boy) is heart-stopping. But however ravishing, the shot also feels
like a (violent?) rupture, as the artist is clearly unable to maintain
his emphatically static (stoic?) camera--a cinematic style indebted to
such high-minded structuralist filmmakers as Chantal Akerman and James
Benning. This close-up is a punctum, and through it we are made acutely
aware of Collins's yearning presence. In this one gesture, a work
of art that seemed all along to be about others (the ultimate other for
a Western audience, even) comes to seem, in the final instance, to be
also about Collins.
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This "disturbance" happens again in gercegin geri donusu
(the return of the real), 2005, a project for which the call for
entrants, again in Istanbul, was directed to people who felt their lives
had been ruined by reality television. The work, which debuted at the
2005 Istanbul Biennial and was also on view in the 2006 Turner Prize
exhibition at Tate Britain--Collins was one of four nominees for the
prize, though painter Tomma Abts won--treats viewers to a parade of
individuals confessing their misery and exploitation at the hands of
reality TV. The stories range from the Kafkaesque (a man was arrested
after his son accidentally killed another child) to the borderline
farcical (a woman was libeled as a porn star). Each participant in
gercegin geri donusu is shown in multiple ways: in a photographic
portrait; in a video of a press conference arranged by Collins; and,
most centrally, in a double-screen projection in which the subjects
appear individually on one screen, while on the other an interviewer,
hired by Collins, listens with a plastic smile and asks benign questions
that simply elicit further embarrassing revelations. The doubling of the
subject's exposure is as excruciating as it is compelling, and
anyone versed in the work of Michel Foucault cannot help but think that
the demand to speak in a putatively therapeutic situation is the most
efficient form of domination. The viewer is caught in a tennis match,
looking back and forth from interviewer to subject, encouraged, in
essence, to do the work of shot-reverse-shot editing designed to suture one into classic suspension of disbelief. Engrossing and maudlin, the
stories are as hard to believe as they are easy to anticipate (we know
things will turn out badly). Behind the interviewer, however, another
minor melodrama unfolds. We see the camera trained on the subject, and
every once in a while we see Collins emerge from behind it. Arms
crossed, lips pursed, his shock of red hair slightly damp from sweat, he
is the image of nervousness. His concerns silently pour out of him. One
imagines his worries: "Is the shot right? Is the story OK? Is it
going well? Will everyone be OK? Is this too much? Is it enough?
It's horrible, what's happened to them and that I might be
making it happen to them again."
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I found Collins's random and seemingly accidental
"behind-the-scenes" appearance a moment of fissure akin to the
close-up in they shoot horses. It jolted me out of the lull of
viewership; it made me, once again, as much aware of the emotional
sensibility and situation of the maker as of the person in front of the
camera, the person with the story to tell. The combined effect of these
works provoked, for me, a pedestrian question: What exactly is it that
we are supposed to do with a camera these days? The technology is so
ubiquitous that it seems as if one needn't even ask the question,
so habitual and unexamined, typically, is our response to the apparatus.
Like innumerable contemporary artists, Collins has made the camera his
ally. This was true in the still photos that predominate in his early
work. In the ethereal erotic blue light of sinisa (blue), 2003, an image
depicting the sinuous body of a young Serbian man, we are aware that a
camera has entered this rather extraordinary space and time. Even more
so in you're not the man you never were #2, 2000, an image in which
a chunk of the male torso is solidly pressed up against the picture
plane. It is the artist, holding his half-hard cock; above it, a huge
wound, a still-raw gash held together with surgical tape. Confronted
with the one hand, it's difficult not to think of the
equivalence--one hand on his dick, the other on the camera release. So,
too, in the more recent video projections, the camera, or an awareness
of it, is always there. Where it is, he is. But unlike artists for whom
the use of the camera appears to be completely mannered (Anna Gaskell or
Gregory Crewdson) or naturalized (Jessica Craig-Martin or Roe Ethridge),
for Collins the camera's omnipresence is anthropomorphized; through
the intensity of his identification with it, it becomes a palpable actor
in the mise-en-scene. In this new version of Kino-eye, instead of the
camera making the man mechanical, the camera itself seems to acquire a
kind of subjectivity. (Even his early pictures of the wildly abused
image of Britney Spears have a kind of pathos, as if the camera, the
original agent of her spectacular degradation, might now be able to
rehumanize her.) The camera is Collins's other, and, as such,
artist and camera exist in and for each other, through each other,
because of each other. (Anri Sala and Zoe Leonard perhaps share this
relation to the camera, although in Collins's case the relationship
seems to have a particular intensity.)
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To speak of feelings and failure and otherness is to
cross-pollinate the discursive regimes of psychology and philosophy and
to arrive on the doorstep of conversations about ethics. I've noted
two moments of "little failures" (which I suppose I mean to
rhyme with the "petite mort" of orgasmic pleasure), when the
artist seems unable to stick to his own plan. These moments are small
tears in an otherwise seamless presentation of "other people"
doing the best they can under the specificity of their political
conditions. I don't impute a very high degree of artistic intention
to either of these incidents; indeed, it is their almost accidental
quality--as if they were aesthetic Freudian slips--that I find so
disarming.
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The companion piece to gercegin geri donusu in the Turner Prize
exhibition was an office Collins established in the galleries under the
moniker shady lane productions, 2006. Although it looked like the set of
a sitcom (not dissimilar to The Office, either the BBC or NBC version),
it was in actuality a fully functioning work zone. In a brilliantly
parasitic use of the museum, which provided free rent, phone, supplies,
etc., Collins used the space, complete with assistants and a production
crew, to conduct interviews for the British version of the Turkish
reality-TV project. (Both the British component--which went on view at
Victoria Miro Gallery in London, where teleprompters functioned as
readymade sculptures--and the entire project travel under the plain
English title the return of the real.) The office was entirely glassed
in; the only aperture was a sliding window on one side, just large
enough for a face to stick through. The door to the studio was reached
from a nonpublic site in the museum, so people simply appeared and
vanished stage right, never actually materializing in the gallery
space. While the setup recalled some aspects of relational aesthetics,
particularly Rirkrit Tiravanija's re-creations of his apartment in
various venues over the years, perhaps more pertinent was its channeling
of earlier Conceptual and performance-art strategies that foregrounded
the labor of the artist: shades of Mierle Laderman Ukeles's 1969
proposal for living in the galleries of a museum with her husband and
child, so that viewers could see her as both an artist and a working
mother.
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Like a good analysand, Collins took the Freudian slips of they
shoot horses and gercegin geri donusu and mined them. What does it mean
for an artist to put himself on display like this? He was quite dutiful,
showing up every day, Monday through Friday, sitting around, like so
many of us do at the office, even when there was nothing to do. As if in
pointed rejoinder to the UK press's readiness to turn any artist
under the age of fifty into a scatological pervert, Collins's
gesture was that of a stand-up working-class boy, clocking in at an
office rather than at a factory, no less. "Um, I'm here
working. What are you doing?" Shady lane productions was a
strategic inversion of the return of the real: Why wait for the press to
fulfill our prurient desire for artists to be scandalous stars when we
could just go watch them ourselves? Mirroring the real-time exposure of
the interviewees in the next room, Collins sought to make his own
artistic life and process just as transparent. Yet in stark contrast to
the talky quality of the return of the real, or the highly emotive
singing of the world won't listen, or the sheer ebullience of the
they shoot horses sound track, the goings-on at shady lane productions
were inaudible to the viewer. Leaning against the wall, watching Collins
and crew working, I wondered, What does it mean to watch and not be able
to listen in? What is transparency without audibility? And I immediately
thought of the great Joni Mitchell lyric "constant as the northern
star? That's constant in the darkness, if you want me, I'll be
in the bar."
In shady lane productions, Collins took up his own challenge: By
making himself the subject of the situation, he engaged in a kind of
perverse karaoke marathon in which he performed the role of the nomadic
global artist in the poststudio environment. And like his fellow karaoke
aficionados in the world won't listen and the damaged souls in the
return of the real, he made himself seem incredibly vulnerable with this
act of exposure. But unlike the provisional community of the karaoke
bar, ready for the performer's failure, the audience at the Tate
was largely unprepared for this dynamic. Both times I went to see the
piece, I ended up feeling extremely agitated as I watched the steady
stream of visitors walk by. I couldn't figure out what was
worse--when they simply ignored him or when they ridiculed him. But what
exactly would constitute a successful viewer in this situation? Why was
I watching the crowd and not the artist? I think part of my discomfort
was generated by the extremity of the silence; it meant that I had
become the camera. The real-time duration was up to me now. I was made
into the other of the artist, the other to the situation at hand, a
situation I could only partially grasp. No matter how much I watched
this inaudible event, most of it would remain unknown to me. This
realization recalled for me the profound insights of philosopher
Emmanuel Levinas. For Levinas, the primary attribute of the other is his
or her radical alterity, or consummate unknowableness, and any notion of
ethics or feelings of love must begin from this realization. According
to Levinas, I love and care for someone not because I know her but
because in fact I do not know her and can never know her. Levinas
exhorts his readers to see that ethics means that I am responsible for
the other, regardless of whether this sense of responsibility is
reciprocated.
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To some extent the pleasure of Collins's work lies in a kind
of identification with the other through a recognition of the self--a
concept that took some serious hits during the heyday of
poststructuralist theory. But, considered in light of Levinas, shady
lane productions mitigates this sense of the
"self-as-other"--which might mean that one of the things going
on in Collins's evolving oeuvre is an attempt to elicit the
multiple vectors of identification offered by art (once considered to be
"universal") in its newly globalized milieu (in which there is
a creeping fear that audience and artist are becoming increasingly
interchangeable). With this in mind, I think part of what was at stake
in shady lane productions was a critique of the logic of relational
aesthetics that demands the presence and activity of the viewer--or, in
Levinas's formulation, the other--when in fact the artist is often
absent, off to the next biennial. Collins has apparently decided instead
that what was mandatory was the presence of the artist--the category of
person, it is worth noting, on which museums are dependent. Collins did
not ask viewers to participate in ludic experiential play but rather
confined them to an outside and relegated them to silence, throwing them
back onto their own desires, their own otherness. The glass wall
acknowledged that the viewer and the artist were unknowable to each
other, which provoked the ethical and psychological dilemma: not, What
do I want from this experience, but, What do I want from this other,
unknowable, person? And while the piece may have been
"successful" in its exploitation of previous small failures,
the question it ultimately asked was not the kind that wins people
prizes.
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HELEN MOLESWORTH IS MAISIE K. AND JAMES R. HOUGHTON CURATOR OF
CONTEMPORARY ART AT THE FOGG ART MUSEUM, HARVARD UNIVERSITY. (SEE
CONTRIBUTORS.)