032

Dariusz Kowalski

Optical Vacuum

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Nirgendwo wird die Rede vom "panoptischen Zeitalter", von einem Auge, das alles erfasst und selbst unfassbar bleibt, deutlicher, als in eben dem Medium, das Allgegenwart und Flüchtigkeit im globalen Maßstab umgesetzt hat: das Internet. Im Netz wird das bisherige Paradigma unserer bildgebenden Apparate hinfällig: Keine singuläre Zentralperspektive mehr, sondern Myriaden von Blickwinkeln, übertragen aus Webcams, die pausenlos Bilder in den digitalen Datenstrom pumpen. So ist das "Vakuum" im Titel von Kowalskis filmischen Essay, der an seine früheren Arbeiten Elements und Luukkaankangas anschließt, keine Leere, sondern ein mächtiger Generator, eine unablässige Verdoppelung der Welt ins Bild.
(Dietmar Kammerer)

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Snow blankets a terrace and the furniture on it. A bottle jerks back and forth on a pavement. Christmas lights blink on and off. Everything looks desolate. What people we see scuttle across washed-out landscapes, play mahjongg in stammering gestures, and toil in computer labs under glaring fluorescent lights. What planet are we on?
These images are available to any of us. For two years Dariusz Kowalski trawled through sites for surveillance-camera footage. He chose only material from hidden cameras. He added nothing except some slow motion (“otherwise it would be too fast”) and a voice-over commentary from artist Stephen Mathewson reading passages from a year’s diary. The result was a fifty-five minute assemblage film called Optical Vacuum (2008), which I saw and admired in Hong Kong back in April.




Sometimes the diary account intersects with what we see: Mathewson talks of washing his laundry/ shots of a Laundromat. More often, the voice drifts off on its own. Optical Vacuum isn’t an effort to make a film essay or to create a complex audiovisual dynamic. Mathewson’s diary provides an intimacy that the footage lacks, but I think the film would stand up strongly without it. 
As a flow of impersonal views, usually from a distant perch, the footage creates a bleak beauty.
 Occasionally a human operator has commanded the camera to focus on something, usually a woman.
But most often the camera is just mindlessly recording.

In the process, the surveillance camera reinvents avant-garde film—not just the barely inflected fields of Structural cinema, but also the time compression and melting glimpses, the reflections and superimpositions, the transient ghosts and brutal geometry we find in silent experimental work by Richter, Vertov, and others. These stupid cameras can’t help turning reality into something else. They don’t know any better. 
David Bordwell in Observations on film art and Film Art , 27.05.2009

 

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€ 26,40
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€ 17,00
Stream
€ 6,00
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Inhalt

Gesamtspieldauer: 101 min
Extra DVD: 20-seitige zweisprachige Broschüre Deutsch-Englisch