Video Work – “ Circling”, “Teeming”, “Dawn Creation” 1976 |
Peter Donebauer's video tapes were the first examples of what is generally referred to as video-art financed by the BFI; to date they are also the last. On the one hand Donebauer's work was instrumental in opening up a new source of finance for video art - albeit a modest one - and on the other posed new problems. These have partly to do with that work itself, which ought perhaps to be regarded as a performance art, but more largely to do with the fact that there is an even greater problem concerning access to equipment for video artists than there is for video workers, so that the work is likely to be very limited technically, or very expensive. Of the 160-200 projects submitted to the Production Board annually, no more than five or six are video projects. The majority of these move away from Donebauer's concerns with kinetic and abstract forms towards a less intuitive interest in problems of perception, representational time, image manipulation; and have mainly been concerned to simply demonstrate that these problems exist, rather than investigating them or using them as material to work on, as avant-garde film-makers have done. |
Peter Sainsbury |
This is a very great shame,
for it has been said that all art aspires to the condition of music.
The condition of music is that it is the live production of organised
sounds that extend in time and affect our inner selves without the necessity
of mediation through verbal or conceptual structures. At present there are unnecessary
attempts in certain quarters to limit by definition what is 'video'
or what is 'video art' either in terms of the equipment used e.g. the
portapack video tape recorder, or in terms of the content e.g. alignment
with mainstream modern art or film movements. Video however is young
and alive and undefined. As electronic technology pushes back frontier
after frontier in terms of size and processing techniques so does video
expand its possibilities. In a contemporary world where many aspects
of our external environment are appearing to be finite, the interaction
of human consciousness with electronic possibilities seems to be without
limit. The areas explored included 1. the validity of the naturalistically reproduced image, 2. the relationship between the image and the sound, 3. the value of non-edited i.e. 'live' television, 4. the value of improvisation within this context and 5. the production of television by only two or three people working in a studio situation. Working in collaboration
with a composer the method of production that we have developed can
be described as follows: All these three tapes were thus generated by the interaction of a musician and a video artist in a controlled improvisation performance. The tapes are un-edited, being real time recordings of an event in a television studio. This event is not perceived by the viewer as occurring in such a space. The space recorded is the inner world of the two performers exteriorised into a meaningful form which is recordable in terms of image and sound. This final form is thus a unified expression of the mutual interaction of two human consciousnesses. These consciousnesses are formed by the cultural conditions of our day, and the external form is relevant to this point in time more than any other. The external form is a reflection of internal forms that we each carry within us. Some of these are very fundamental indeed and can be seen in all cultures of all times. Others are more relevant to our internal condition today, where our mythological perception is governed by the ideas and expressions of science and technology. Our meaning, the way we perceive and interpret the world, is strongly influenced by these ideas. Perhaps as a culture we have not yet unified these areas with our internal lives. Perhaps we are doing so at this moment now. In common with all other images, all television pictures are abstract images, i.e. they abstract out elements from our external and internal perceptions and re-present them. These representations are chosen by an artist on the basis of their internal necessity to him. If an artist chooses forms that are non-representational, there is a deliberate meaning in this choice. Ours is the only culture ever to have become obsessed with the need for realistic and now mechanically produced representations of our externally perceived world. It is as if we need constant reassurance that this world is real and meaningful. We are becoming so swamped by such images, which lack any serious degree of human expression, that we are becoming unaware of what is happening to us internally. The images that swamp us are those of the mass media, with television at the forefront. Somehow this amazing and powerful medium must be humanised rather than abandoned to the pressures of journalism, sales promotions and audience ratings. There is many unhelpful attempts in art magazines to define what video is or what video art is. People seem to seek the safety of definitions lie verbalisations) rather than the essence, which is an intuition. Video imagery is very non-corporeal compared to other visual art forms. Looking at classical forms,
paintings manifest themselves through paint on a carrier, sculptures
through solid materials of many kinds situated in space. Video is manifested
as a controlled flow of electrons exciting light emitting phosphors
on a television screen, or the beams of a projector on to a wall screen. My experience suggests to
me that the situation of the broadcast media is at present totally schizoid.
Engineers produce and control the form of the television picture, which
is the signal. Producers and directors produce and control the content
carried by the signal, which is the programme. Neither is complete.
Neither has control. And they are so separated from one another that
no humanly unified result is possible. The problem is that everyone
accepts it as normal when it is very abnormal. Most viewers of sensibility
complain, yet do not know quite what is wrong because they do not know
the technology that is involved, nor the social structure of the television
production companies. What people intuitively sense is that there is
often an innate but unconscious conflict between the content and the
form.
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