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The
Stream exists in a number of different versions, with the first
completed in 1985 and produced as a two-channel work for tapes to
be presented on identical television monitors. After making An Imaginary
Landscape in 1986 using the Gemini II, I decided to re-work The
Stream, developing a single channel version which explored the potential
of the Gemini for producing split-screen effects, image symmetry
and mirroring.
The
Stream is about dialectics, a presentation of opposing parallels,
co-existence's and interdependencies, presenting fluid electronic
images of flowing matter (the water of the stream depicted) in relation
to a reference to the flow of human cognition. I have drawn inspiration
from the work and thoughts of the physicist and philosopher David
Bohm (1917-1994) who first posited the notion of a crucial relationship
between mind and matter in Wholeness & the Implicate Order.
My final version of The Stream begins with a quotation from the
introduction to his book:
As
careful attention shows, thought itself is in an actual process
of movement. That is to say, one can feel a sense of flow in the
"stream of consciousness" not dissimilar to the sense
of flow in the movement of matter in general. May not thought itself
thus be a part of reality as a whole? But then, what could it mean
for one part of reality to 'know' another, and to what extent would
this be possible? Does the content of thought merely give us abstract
and simplified 'snapshots' of reality, or can it go further, somehow
grasp the very essence of the living movement that we sense in actual
experience?
My
intention by beginning The Stream with this quote was to suggest
to the potential viewer that the tape was not simply a set of pretty
visuals to accompany Reich's music, but was an attempt to present
something much more complex, both abstract and philosophical. The
fluid video images should be seen to hold metaphoric and poetic
significance, to be understood not simply as the record of something
that existed in nature, but mediated via a technological process
which ordered them for an entirely different purpose other than
to simply re-present them. The images of the flowing river had,
like the music, an abstract relationship to nature. I wanted to
suggest that the parallel between thought and image in nature was
mirrored in the language of the moving electronic image. My intention
was to merge the physical, rhythmic experience of the music with
the mind's visual and visceral memory of flowing water. I wanted
to make a work which established a set of interdependent relationships
between the movement of the music, the flowing water, the video
imagery and the flux of thought process and cognition.
Nik
Houghton, "The Stream: Chris Meigh-Andrews", Independent
Media, March 1988 This was partly a practical consideration, as
the use of twin screens made it difficult to show or distribute,
but I also felt that a split screen format would be better suited
to the ideas and concepts I was interested in.
David Bohm, Wholeness and the Implicate Order, Routledge and Kegan
Paul, London, 1980, introduction, p ix
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