Andy cam: Amy Taubin on the Warhol Film catalogue raisonne.
Taubin, Amy
ANDY WARHOL SCREEN TESTS: THE FILMS OF ANDY WARHOL CATALOGUE
RAISONNE, VOL. I, BY CALLIE ANGELL NEW YORK: ABRAMS/WHITNEY MUSEUM OF
AMERICAN ART, 2006. 320 PAGES. $60.
IN 1963, Andy Warhol bought a 16-mm Bolex movie camera. The films
he shot with it and with the sound camera he acquired late in 1964 are,
as Callie Angell writes in her introduction to Andy Warhol Screen Tests,
"finally receiving long-overdue recognition as one of his greatest
accomplishments." Warhol ended his stint as a hands-on filmmaker in
1968 with Blue Movie, and, shortly thereafter, his films were de facto withdrawn from distribution, leaving available only those "Andy
Warhol productions" directed by Paul Morrissey. A few years before
the artist's death in T987, John G. Hanhardt, then film and video
curator at the Whitney Museum of American Art, proposed that all of
Warhol's films be preserved and catalogued, and thus "The Andy
Warhol Film Project" was born.
Because of Warhol's extraordinary film productivity, Angell,
adjunct curator of the Warhol Film Project at the Whitney and consultant
to MOMA on the preservation of Warhol's films, decided to divide
the catalogue raisonne into two volumes. (When Angell began to prepare
the catalogue in 1996, she systematically sorted through roughly three
thousand reels of camera originals and prints--the originals alone
adding up to a total running time of some 290 hours.) The first volume,
Andy Warhol Screen Tests, is devoted to the 472 portraits Warhol
recorded on 100-foot rolls of silent 16-mm film between 1964 and 1966.
The second will deal with the rest of Warhol's film oeuvre, from
the early silents such as Sleep (1963) and Kiss (1963-64) to the
"talkies" that he turned out, sometimes at the rate of one or
more per week, for nearly four years. (Its publication is several years
away.) Angell likens the Screen Tests to a "yearbook of the
mid-1960s avant-garde" and also to "stem cells" of
Warhol's portraiture. Warhol asked visitors to his studio, from the
famous (Duchamp being the magisterial presence) to his own
"superstars" to "complete unknowns" (to quote Bob
Dylan, one of the most illustrious subjects) to pose for their film
portraits. The sitters (this writer among them) were instructed to look
straight at the lens and to try not to move or blink. Warhol (or
occasionally one of his assistants) adjusted the one or two lights and
the framing (in most cases, the subject is framed in close-up, as in mug
shots or passport photos--two more of Angell's analogies), turned
on the camera, and wandered away. The Screen Tests force both subject
and viewer to confront what Angell poses as the primary concerns of
Warhol's art: stillness and duration. His rules replicated the
torturous conditions of nineteenth-century portrait photography, making
his sitters hold their pose for three excruciating minutes. (The Screen
Tests can also be read as film versions of cartes de visite, produced by
the host rather than the guest.) "The subjects' emotional and
physiological responses to this ordeal," Angell writes, "are
often the most riveting aspect of the Screen Tests.... The films'
silent projection speed further exaggerates these behaviors, revealing
each involuntary tremor or flutter of an eyelid in clinical slow
motion." (Warhol specified that his silent films, including the
Screen Tests, although shot at sound speed, be projected at silent
speed, i.e., slowed by one-third, a stipulation that hasn't always
been respected in recent exhibitions.)
[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]
In its layout and text, Andy Warhol Screen Tests is an elegant
version of the kind of yearbook to which Angell analogizes the collected
Screen Tests themselves. Her decision to treat each Screen Test as a
separate and more or less equivalent entry emphasizes the extended
serial nature of Warhol's project. Each entry consists of a digital
scan of one film frame (or, in a few cases, of several frames)
accompanied by a text that provides biographical information about the
subject and details about the circumstances in which his/her Screen Test
was shot and his/her connection to Warhol and the Factory scene. Thus
the entries are in themselves portraits, albeit ones that focus
precisely on what is excluded from the Screen Tests--narrativity. Angell
is a wonderful writer with a rare ability to combine rigorous
scholarship, an abundance of ideas, and empathetic, dryly witty
observation in a direct style that's a pleasure to read. (I wish
only that her introductory essay were three times its length.)
No precedent exists for a film catalogue raisonne. There are, of
course, monographs devoted to single films and filmographies that
inventory the work of individual directors. By adding an element not
found in either of these, namely a detailed description of each film as
a material object--type of stock, condition, markings on the strip
itself and on the box in which it was stored--Angell calls attention to
Warhol's films as hybrids existing between the art world (where
such material descriptions are required of any catalogue raisonne) and
the world of projected entertainments. The physical descriptions also
create a parallel between this fascinating book and Warhol's
inspiration for the first group of Screen Tests, the NYPD-issued
pamphlet Thirteen Most Wanted (also the source for Warhol's
infamous, short-lived mural at the 1964 World's Fair). The police
pamphlet provides not only a mug shot and biographical information for
each criminal but also a description of distinguishing physical marks
and characteristics. Andy Warhol Screen Tests transposes this accounting
of the criminal body to the filmstrip as body--the evidence of an
enterprise that operated outside the law.
AMY TAUBIN IS A CONTRIBUTING EDITOR OF FILM COMMENT AND SIGHT AND
SOUND.