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The
Room with a View is 'about' photography, or more accurately, it
is about the view that the camera gives us of ourselves. The central
theme of the tape is the way in which time, memory and image are
intertwined. Ideas and notions of identity and self-image are the
major theme in my video work of this period, and they lead directly
to later tapes and installations in which this self-reflexive aspect
of the human mind becomes central to my work. Initial ideas for
this video tape came out of readings of Camera Lucida by Roland
Barthes and the photographic work of Jo Spence and the Film Stills
of Cindy Sherman. I was also influenced by experimental film work,
in particular by Hollis Frampton's Nostalgia (1971) and La Jetee
(1962) by Chris Marker. I have had an interest in the photographic
self-portrait since I began working with the camera in the late
1960's.
The Room with a View presents an assembled sequence of personal
family snapshots shown in strict chronological order, starting with
the earliest and continuing until the point at which I have a clear
memory of the event, untainted by the view imposed onto that event
by the camera. These are the pictures of myself that make a significant
contribution to my 'sense of self''. Images of growing up that are
infused and elaborated by parental reminiscences, and events magnified
by the very fact of being preserved, frozen out of the flux of life,
and made iconic. I wanted to make a work that was personal but also
'public', and my choice of holiday 'snaps' was based on a certainty
that they would resemble countless pictures of others of my generation,
and that this work would evoke a similar response in them.
This video assemblage of snapshots is intercut by images of the
sea and sky originally recorded for Field Study (1980). Additional
video material was also shot using a 3 tube colour camera (JVC KY
2000) borrowed from LCP and 'patched' directly into the edit suite.
Captions, diagrams and simple line drawings were luminance-keyed
using a simple caption keyer/colouriser. The 'seaside atmospheric'
soundtrack of waves and seagulls was recorded on location and transferred
to video in the edit suite.
The Room with a View was an important tape in terms of my development
as an artist. The first work to be produced entirely on my own equipment,
and made during the first year of a part-time MA at Goldsmiths (1981-83),
it was presented in a wide range of venues and gave me renewed confidence
to continue my experimental work.
See A Sense of Myself, CD Rom, Oxford Brookes University, 1994.
See also Ian Harrow's essay in Chris Meigh-Andrews, Video Tapes,
installations, CD Roms: 1978-1997 , and my Xerox self-portraits
in New British Image , Arts Council of Great Britain, 1977. Exhibitions
of this work included "New British Video", Museum of Long
Beach , California, 1983; "Video/Performance" ,The Photographer's
Gallery, 1984 and the Videotheque, ICA, London, 1982, The Basement,
Newcastle, 1982.
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