| Transcript
of interview with Judith Goddard: London, Feb, 2005
C.M-A: When and in what circumstances did you first begin to work
with video?
J.G: It was when I went
to the Royal College. I’d been working with16mm film, and
they had the first video equipment that I’d come across.
C.M-A: When was that?
J.G: 1981. I was there
between 81-83, in “Environmental Media”, when Peter
Kardia was Head of Dept. I was attracted to video because of its
reproducibility.
C.M-A: The fact that
you could make copies of it easily and quickly?
J.G: Yes, and also because
you could see it immediately and you could work with it directly.
At that time the equipment was very heavy, so I worked mainly in
interior spaces.
C.M-A: Were you working
with a portable recorder, or was it literally in the TV studio?
J.G: The first video
work I did was using portable equipment and taking it back to the
place I was working.
C.M-A: Was this black
and white, or colour?
J.G: Colour.
C.M-A: So you started
off working in colour.
J.G: Yes, that was one
of the reasons why video was attractive to me.
C.M-A: But you weren’t
particularly interested in working in B&W?
J.G: Well, I’d
been working with B&W film, and when I worked with colour film,
I could only afford 3 minutes of stock, and that made a fantastic
difference, but I wanted to have more of it. I loved colour and
I still do.
C.M-A: So the most important
things for you about working with video was the instantaneity, the
fact that it could be reproduced instantly, that you could copy
the tape and so on. Were you editing tape as well, or were you making
recordings in real time?
J.G: I was doing both
from the beginning- I didn’t have the structural strictures….the
first tape I made that was publicly shown was “Time Spent”,
which was literally about that- it was about the time you spend
in reverie. I think video is perfect for that because you can use
a longer duration. It was about duration- it was about duration
in that reverie sense- not in a kind of “structural”
sense.
C.M-A: Not in a “concrete”
sense.
J.G: Exactly. I was doing
things like using an incredibly long focus- the tape was about “looking”.
I come out of a background in which the materiality of film was
important, and so I started thinking about video in that way- I
wasn’t using film. Video had a particular quality, and there
was a particular quality of colour that you could get out of it-
it was emanating light- it wasn’t projected light.
C.M-A: The quality of
the television screen image?
J.G: Yes, the screen
has always been important to me, whether its being projected, or
on a monitor. The fact that the light was coming out of the screen
was always really important. I had always like painters such as
Rembrandt where the light had a very particular quality, or Vermeer.
It seemed a kind of Dutch thing to me in a way. I started to look
at the quality of light in interior spaces quite early on. Colour
and painting were always really important to me, and probably more
of an influence on me than other video work that was around at the
time.
C.M-A: What about other
video work. Was there anything that influenced you?
J.G: That was the interesting
thing. When I first began working with video I hadn’t seen
much other work, because it wasn’t widely shown. It was only
when I came to London that I could either “A”, use a
video camera, and “B” that I could go to places like
the Air Gallery or the film-makers co-op. Not that they showed much
video- there was definitely a kind of snobbishness, and video was
definitely perceived as a second-class medium. People looked down
on video- it wasn’t really considered “proper stuff”.
C.M-A: Yes, that’s
true.
J.G: And that carried
on for years!! In fact, I think its still there.
C.M-A: Yes, I think you’re
right, but then because we now have video projection technology
that provides such good pictures, people are transferring things
from film to video in order to show them.
J.G: Yes, sure…
C.M-A: Just to stay with
the situation that you were in at the beginning of the 1980’s
at the RCA, you have begun working with colour video, because of
the qualities of the picture, because of the colours emanating from
the screen, and you’ve seen a little of the work that was
around, but nothing particularly struck you.
J.G: A lot of the video
was black and white as well.
C.M-A: You hadn’t
seen, for example any of Peter Donebauer’s work. He was at
the RCA in the early 1970’s.
J.G: No.
C.M-A: Were there other
people working with video at the RCA during the time you were there?
J.G: There were, but
a lot of them were working in the way that you touched on earlier-
in opposition to television. There were a lot of people making political
work, feminist work. I felt like an outsider because although I’d
come up through the feminist route, and that was important to me,
but it wasn’t really what the focus of the work. I had more
in common with artists like Holly Warburton or Cerith Wyn-Evans.
C.M-A: Did your film
work influence what you tried to do with video?
J.G: The early films
I made were about rhythm, though quite visual. When I moved into
colour, interestingly, the work was about painting. It was a still
life, based on a Cezanne.
C.M-A: What about the
fact that you’re working with time? The painterly concerns
of light and colour were obviously important- but what about the
temporal thing? You have talked about the duration being important
in relation to video, breaking the three-minute threshold. What
about the fact that you had to think about orchestrating things
across time?
J.G: Well that was, and
still is fascinating. But going back to the 16mm still life film,
it animates the objects from the still life painting. So it’s
playing with the idea that it’s a still life that’s
not still, and it’s very much about being aware of the picture
frame.
C.M-A: What about the
sound?
J.G: A lot of my sound
is quite ambient. It’s about locating the image in some way-
where the image is in relation to the screen or the space, and I’ve
also used it emotively, quite consciously
C.M-A: You’ve said
that you used video in relation to other media rather than exclusively-
could say a little more about that?
J.G: Video has the advantage
of sound an image together with the durational aspect. One of the
things that I’ve talked a lot about in the past is my interest
in visual narrative, and when I started working with video I was
looking for models and I looked at a lot of medieval art, which
is still a love of mine. This was an art from a culture that was
not literate, and was developed before the printing press. I felt
that video was rather suited to that kind of approach. I’m
currently working on something that uses language, literally telling
stories, but within my framework.
C.M-A: Many people have
observed that video is much better at detail, at intimacy than for
example, landscape, or large-scale subjects. Even if its projected,
the problem is that it doesn’t resolve expansive images- but
its very good in close-up. Images of talking heads- that sort of
thing.
J.G: I think with the
early work it was something that I did because I was fascinated
by macro shots. I did use that a lot. Especially in the first piece,
“Time Spent’, I was looking at a lot of close-up images
and I was editing them so that I took away the normal reference
points. The viewer had to experience the image in close-up. It’s
something I’ve used on and off, and it does still interest
me.
C. M-A: Is the feminist
context or agenda relevant to your work?
J.G: It was a question
that I used to get asked a lot 20 years ago!
C.M-A: Remember that
I’m writing historically.
J.G: I remember getting
criticised because I wasn’t making feminist work in the early
days.
C.M-A: So if you were
a woman it was somehow assumed that you had to make feminist work?
J.G: There was a kind
of pressure.
C.M-A: Did that kind
of attitude make you react against it?
J.G: No, because I saw
myself as a feminist. It was political with a small ‘p”.
It just wasn’t leading the work. The work was lead by other
interests such as visual narrative, duration, close-up, and the
influence of painting. I was interested in working with things that
perhaps men weren’t so interested in working with.
C.M-A: For example?
J.G: Well, I think interiority
for example, which wasn’t seen as being appropriate subject
matter. People were interested in the oppositional practice, whereas
my first work used the kitchen table as the main location of the
mis-en-scene.
C.M-A: So there was a
deliberate focus on the domestic space?
J.G: Yes. I saw that
as kind of political, but it wasn’t seen as being important
at the time.
C.M-A: Does you mean
that your work was sidelined in a way that you weren’t happy
about?
J.G: No, I think I was
probably an outsider when I initially started with video, and I
think that position is part of my character in a way, because even
when my work was supported, I was always slightly outside of whatever
the mainstream was, and that does seem to be my place. One of the
things that’s interesting about all the work is the place
of either the artist or where the action is happening is part of
the work. This is very important. Also I think that the distance
between the camera and the subject is important.
C.M-A: One thing that
Cate Elwes, for example, talks about her approach in her early work
is this idea of the “female gaze”- the idea that the
spectator might become aware of the woman behind the camera. Was
there a sense in your mind when you were making these early pieces
that people would become aware, either because of something in the
tape, or in the approach to the work, that it was the work of a
woman.
J.G: In a few of the
early tapes I actually use an image of myself, and I think a part
of those early works which is a kind of self-portraiture. So there’s
an exploration of the self and there’s an exploration of the
projection of the image of the self. There is a point at which I
stopped using an image of myself- about 1984, so I only used an
image of myself for a few years in my work. I stopped doing it because
I thought I was actually making myself too vulnerable- because of
the way I was using myself. There are other artists who use themselves
in their work all the time and its nothing to do with vulnerability.
But I felt that I was exposing something. I think from then on I
probably coded what that was about.
C.M-A: We talked about
the influence from painting. Were there any critics or writers or
theorists who influenced you?
J.G: It’s an interesting
question. I went to Reading University to do my fine art degree
and had a very good art historical background, but it wasn’t
in critical theory at all. We did have people like Caroline Tisdal,
who lectured about Beuys, and we had Neil McGregor, (Spelling??)
teaching there, and they were fantastic. There was also Petrie (?)
on Hawksmoor.
C.M-A: Right! So you
had a really strong background in the almost classical art historical
training.
J.G: Yes, which I really
appreciate, and perhaps it shows in my work.
C.M-A: I think it does.
J.G: I love Hawksmoor.
I love Joseph Beuys, and Neil McGregor was a very inspiring teacher.
So that was the kind of background that I had, rather than critical
theory. I did read a bit of Merleau-Ponty and some Bachelard, and
some of the other things that were around at the time. This was
all part of a base that was art-historical rather than oriented
towards critical theory.
C.M-A: Yes, and when
you read Merleau-Ponty, he’s theorising about art from the
position of the painter. You were in Environmental Media at the
RCA, as opposed to the film school…
J.G: I actually attached
myself to the film school, quite early on. I discovered that they
had these ex-BBC TV studio cameras, and two-inch tape, and I began
working with video using A & B rolls and mixing. I think I was
the only person from Environmental Media who did that. It meant
that you had to get on with the technicians! So I had a route into
that place and was doing things that people said were very “painterly”-
it was very much to do with the image and what you could do, and
what an artist was.
C.M-A: So you superimposed
those things onto the technology that you could access. You weren’t
fazed by the technology the way some people were.
J.G: I loved it!
C.M-A: So you were quite
comfortable with 2-inch machines, studio TV cameras and “A/B
rolls”?
J.G: As long as there
were technicians in control of the machines. My job was to get along
with the technicians to enable me to get what I wanted.
C.M-A: That’s unusual
I think. Not just amongst women- I don’t want to put people
into compartments- I think lots of men are the same about it- they
don’t want to get too bogged down in the technology.
J.G: I’ve enjoyed
it. I don’t like to think that the work will become dated
by the technology. Sometimes of course it is, because I suppose
it is of its time. But I think there’s a difference being
of its time and dated by the technology, and it’s an important
difference. The other thing that I’m interested in and I always
was interested in was the idea of the contemporary. So although
I have an absolute love of art history and of painting and cinema,
I’ve always believed that there was no point in doing something
that was about a century out of date. To me one of the exciting
things about that technology was that it was contemporary- that
it was “now”. It meant that I could be working with
something that in my mind was influenced by mediaeval painting,
but I was doing it with 20th Century technology and I was always
interested in making connections in all sorts of ways.
C.M-A: So did you want
the work to have a certain kind of “look”?
J.G: There was a kind
of luminescence that I saw in video which was again to do with the
TV screen that I always associated, rather romantically, with stained
glass. One of my earliest aesthetic experiences was sitting in a
freezing Norman church at the age of ten, seeing the light coming
through a stained glass window.
C.M-A: That’s interesting.
Film-makers like Brakhage….
J.G: I didn’t have
enough access to Brakhage. I didn’t see any of that when I
was at Reading. I didn’t see any of his work until I came
to London. But he didn’t make his colour work till a lot later
did he/
C.M-A: The direct painting
on to film, yes, but I was thinking about some of his earlier stuff
in which he is celebrating light. “Window Water Baby Moving”,
“Dog Star Man”…
J.G: Yes, I saw that
at the film co-op. But I didn’t see that until I was at the
RCA. But I didn’t see any of that kind of work till I was
on post-grad. I also loved Kenneth Anger, and Derek Jarman, as well.
I felt more of an affinity to those who had rather a camp aesthetic-
but it was a very visual aesthetic.
C.M-A: The New Romantic
approach. Which I guess had come through Anger, I suppose, amongst
others.
J.G: I’m still
a big Anger fan…the over-the-top use of sound. It was such
a refreshing thing to hear somebody using….
C.M-A: All that pop music!
J.G: And the classical
music- Vivaldi in “Eaux d’artifice” for example,
which I have a real soft spot for. It’s completely over the
top, which I think is kind of necessary sometimes.
C.M-A: And playful…Let
me go on to ask you about installations. How would you characterise
the difference between making installations and the screen-based
durational work we have been discussing so far?
J.G: The first piece
that I made that wasn’t single screen was Celestial light
and Monstrous Races which came out of a fantastic book that I haven’t
seen for years called “Mediaeval Art and Literature and Monstrous
Races” which had images of Cyclops and all sorts of fantastic
creatures that came from the mediaeval lexicon of “the other”
that fear that people had. In “Celestial Light”- the
quote at the beginning of the tape comes from Milton. That tape
was multi screen rather than installation.
C.M-A: How many screens
was that?
J.G: 6.
C.M-A: So you were quite
ambitious- you went from single screen to six.
J.G: Well there were
several reasons for moving to more than one screen. One was quite
pragmatic. I didn’t like the festival circuit, I didn’t
feel I fitted in, and in those days the festivals were mainly film
screens with video as a bit of a sideline, and it couldn’t
compete with film because it didn’t have the same photographic
quality, so from about 1984 onwards I saw myself as locating my
work in a gallery context. This was a problem because most galleries
didn’t want to screen single screen work and so I started
thinking about the monitor in a sculptural sense, or about repetition
of an image that was taking up space, even though I didn’t
have access to equipment that would allow me to synchronise the
tapes. I was using repetition so I was editing with the knowledge
that a particular movement would repeat over a number of monitors
and you would get that kind of “rush” across the monitors.
Sometimes it would work better than others- it was a limited way
of working when compared with actually synching up a sequence, but
when it worked the images would travel across the screens. It was
the first time I began to think about the possibility of the image
leaving the screen in some sense- or at least appearing to leave
the screen and move across onto other screens. The movement wasn’t
just contained within one rectangle, it was moving across a sequence
of rectangles. This was very much to do with wanting to locate within
the physical space. I didn’t want people to have to sit down
in a kind of cinema. So it was a combination of not wanting to be
in the context of film because it was doing something different.
C.M-A: It was about scale.
J.G: Yes. The audience
wasn’t fixed to one viewing position, or one duration either.
I was working with quite short durations and was quite happy for
somebody to watch the work twice. This was more important than sitting
through a 15 minute section of something.
C.M-A: Did the work have
a beginning and end or could you come in at any point and leave
at any point?
J.G: Most of the work
at that point had a beginning and end, but it was also cyclical,
and I was quite interested in the idea of cycles Things did have
a beginning a middle and an end, but they weren’t completely
story bound.
C.M-A: How was that different
from “Expanded Cinema”?
J.G: Well, the first
time I’d seen any expanded cinema was at the Hayward show.
C.M-A: “Film as
Film”- 1979.
J.G: Yeah. That was the
first time I’d seen film laid out in that way, and I did really
like “Shore Line” (Welsby)
C.M-A: So did you consciously
adopt those kinds ideas into video? Was that kind of work an influence?
J.G: I don’t think
it was. The fantastic thing that Welsby did was to make one landscape;
I couldn’t really do that at the time because of not having
a synching device. I did that later, but I didn’t do it in
that very early work because it just wasn’t possible. Also
I think there was something about the monitor and the frame. It
is a sculptural object as well, as everybody always talks about,
so I was and still am very conscious of the frame in everything
I do. I sometimes give talks “My work in Relation to the Frame”,
or “The Frame and the Space”. I talk a lot about the
screen space. I’m interested in the screen and perspective,
and screen space, and that does have a relationship- although it
was less conscious when I was working on those early things- but
the box was a container and a frame. So I was always conscious that
I was breaking away from the frame, although not able to do the
sort of thing that Chris Welsby did in “Shore Line”
because he didn’t have a frame, and I did- and I was very
conscious of that. So I was deliberately doing things to break through
the frame, like “Descry”, which was the first piece
that I think really worked, because I had a proper synch.
C.M-A: Well let’s come on to “Television Circle”.
Was that the first time that you’d made a sculptural installation,
as opposed to a multi screen piece?
J.G: “Television
Circle” was ’87. The project was a TWSA 3D commission,
set up by Television South West, and James Lingwood. It was an open
submission for site-specific works. I had had a conversation with
James Lingwood at an opening at Matt’s Gallery and he asked
me if I’d put in an application, and I said “no”-
because the only site that interested me was on Dartmoor, and there
are no plugs on Dartmoor. I thought about it and decided that I
shouldn’t let that stop me, that I could get a generator and
put something in the forest.
C.M-A: Could you talk
about some of the issues relating to setting up an outdoor video
piece?
J.G: I put a proposal
in for a piece that was going to use a generator. They loved the
idea which was to put a circle of 7 monitors in this forest in Dartmoor,
and we went through the logistics of the generator and the petrol
and all that sort of stuff. I made a trip down there to look at
the site. Originally I thought it would be great to have the monitors
actually out on the tor, but because of the brightness levels I
though it would be better to have them in the forest. I found a
site n the forest where there was enough of a clearing to site the
monitors. It was quite near to a stone circle- the whole place is
littered with stone circles, and also very near a stream. Because
it was such a long trip to Dartmoor, I went to Stanfords (Covent
Garden Map shop) and bought an OS map of the area and saw that there
were all these features. I love maps anyway. It’s another
way of dealing with space. I looked at all these stone circles and
the stream, and I pretty much found my site from the map. When I
went to see it was just right! It also turned out to be 300 metres
from a Forestry Commission hut that had an electric spur in it.
They asked me if I could use that as my power source. We had some
health and safety discussions and I was told that if I used 16mm
armoured cable, I could use the electricity supply from the hut.
It was an amazing project
to work on. I think being young and naive probably helped, because
I didn’t really know what I was letting myself in for. I had
incredible backup from the people working at TV south west. I also
had support from the Forestry Commission, who laid the cable, the
electricity board come and put a junction box on a tree. TV south
west arranged all of this. Meanwhile I was up in London making a
tape to be installed in the circle, and I also designed 7 steel
boxes to support and contain the monitors. They had to be weatherproof,
vandal proof, and they were made of 3mm mild steel in the East End.
I went to visit Toshiba who had agreed to sponsor it. They a factory
in Plymouth, probably still do, the production director was very
helpful, and gave me the dimensions of the monitors, and I had the
boxes built to a scale that was appropriate to the monitor. The
boxes had “lexan” (spelling??) screens, which is the
material that they make riot shields with- which was very expensive,
but it worked. So I took all these boxes down in a van, put it all
together on site.
C.M-A: Were the video
players in the boxes too?
J.G: This was in the
pre-synch days, so I only used one VHS player. It was the top of
the range Toshiba of its time. At this time they players did not
have auto repeat programme, but the production director had the
player altered so it would. He was an enthusiast who knew the insides
of his machines, so I was really lucky.
Not only did I have to
site the boxes, but I had to make concrete bases. We had top dig
big holes in the soil, and a trench to put in the waterproof tubing
for the cables. It was pouring with rain whilst we were doing this,
and we were working against deadlines, and it was quite something.
But at the end of the day, it was actually incredibly successful,
because it worked. There were a few things. For example there was
a big storm and the power went out at one point. But it was on for
6 weeks and it could have run for a lot longer.
C.M-A: So the video player
didn’t suffer from the damp?
J.G: I put great wadges
of silica gel in the boxes. The boxes were also sealed with silicone,
so they were all dry. Nobody could quite believe it, but it ran
for 6 weeks continuously, nobody vandalised anything. I did have
spare copies of the tape, but in the end the tape kept running,
24 hours a day, seven days a week.
C.M-A: I’m surprised
that it didn’t get vandalised.
J.G: That was incredible.
But then I don’t know, it was in the middle of nowhere- you
would have to have gone out intentionally to vandalise it. I think
that people found it quite amusing. It was in a very beautiful part
of the country, and some of the reactions of people who didn’t
expect to come across any contemporary art in the middle of the
forest. TV South West interviewed people who said that it was a
bit like putting a motorway in the middle of the forest, but then
other people thought it was wonderful to come across. This was 1987
when people really hadn’t been exposed to video within an
art context at all. One of the things that was interesting for me
was the haunting quality of the soundtrack, which could be heard
from a distance before you saw the work, and there was this slightly
other worldly quality of it that really fitted. Then you’d
come across this TV circle, instead of a stone circle. There lots
of layers to the work, but it was a kind of memorial. I think that
was one of the reasons why people didn’t touch it- there was
a kind of respect that it seemed to command. At one point I came
to see it and found people having a picnic in the middle of it.
Perhaps it was the comfort of television or something- it took them
back into the domestic.
C.M-A: How big was the
circle?
J.G: (Judith, could you
write an approx distance in here??) In terms of its placing- there
was something intimate but at the same time there was enough distance
to view each screen. This was partly because there was one tree
that had been chopped down. There was a natural clearing that used
the space of the tree that wasn’t there any more.
C.M-A: Was there ever
any opportunity to make it permanent?
J.G: No, I think the
Forestry Commission thought it was fine for that period of time,
but I think there would have been health and Safety issues if it
had carried on longer term.
C.M-A: Have you ever
considered doing something more permanent?
JG: I wanted to do something
in Brixton, South London, where I was living. I wanted to do one
monitor, in the middle of Brixton, and have a looped image of a
diamond going around- a bit like those ones you see in Jewellers
windows, but of course nobody ever gave me the money to do it, and
everybody thought it was ridiculous to try to do something like
that in Brixton. I think we had just had the last riot.
C.M-A: What about the
broadcast context. Is this of any relevance to you as an artist?
Did you make work that either reacted to that context or challenged
it?
J.G: I did one work that
was made directly in relation to television. It used a bit of that
“Paint along with Nancy” programme. Its not my favourite
tape.
C.M-A: What was it called?
J.G: “Go to Your
Fridge”, which is a quote from something she said in the programme.
It was on daytime TV at the time and it combined my interest in
painting and television. My original idea was to use the duration
of the TV programme, which was I think about 20 mins. I planned
to use that as the framework and I was going to make interventions,
which I did pretty much, but I deviated. My interventions used the
medium. I used the introductory music and the end credits, but in
between her painting with a palette knife, which is pretty kitsch
and quite trite, there are shots of the Royal College TV studio,
where I made it. I mixed images of a bowl of still life from two
cameras. I mixed images of Cerith Wyn-Evans drawing an orange of
the image of a real orange. There were also deliberately psychedelic
mixed images of lemons and oranges, pinks and greens and blues and
yellows. It was really over the top. I mixed all this into this
painting programme. For me it was flawed right from the beginning.
I had a terrible time editing it- I hated editing it, partly because
I hated her. I had a real battle with her in terms of TV presence
which I think she won actually. I decided that I couldn’t
really compete in that way. I would never try to do anything like
that again. It makes me cringe, but its got some great bits in it.
I’m not in the business of re-editing old work that’s
been in the public arena, but if I was, I’d reduce it to about
4 minutes.
C.M-A: So you were very
conscious of the relationship between television, art and the medium
that you had chosen to work with. I know that you have made a piece
using the Quantel “Paint-box”.
J.G: That was much later.
But can I just mention two other things. Because I did actually
2 two commissions for television- one was “Luminous Portrait”
which was a one-minute piece, in about 1989, for BBC 2, which drew
on my interest in the Medieval again, which used a portrait that
I’d seen in the Musee des Beaux -Arts in Brussels. The painting
was part of an alter piece- a triptych. I used the image of a student
of mine, whose face fitted. This was the first time I’d used
“paint-box”, which was quite early-ish in its development.
I made that in Dundee, with Steve Partridge operating. It’s
a playful piece- to me, the “paint-box’ is well described-
it was quite a playful tool. There was something quite childlike
about what I did with it, and yet it had a momento-mori skull, and
a dismantling of an East-End landscape- Garden street was completely
derelict, not a garden in site. I was interested in trying to encapsulate
quite a complex narrative through time, though history, through
tradition- breaking with the conventions.
C.M-A: When you were
making it, did you know ahead of time what you would be able to
do with the paint-box?
J.G: I knew exactly what
I was going to do, and did it. I didn’t know what the paint-box
could do, but I guessed that it could do it. I did know a certain
amount, and I don’t think it was that complicated. Maybe there
was more that I could have done.
C.M-A: Would you have
made it differently had it not been made for TV?
J.G: One of the things
that did interest me, (although this doesn’t quite answer
the question in a straight kind of way) was that I was making something
that was only going to last a minute. I thought for a long time
about the way that I was going to construct it, by watching adverts
and seeing how many cuts were in an advert. The biggest influence
on me was the time slot that I had been given, and how much you
could do within the time- how much can be condensed into a minute.
C.M-A: It’s back
to the 3-minute colour film roll that you mentioned at the beginning.
J.G: Kind of…I
always hope that there is a kind of economy in my work, but it was
interesting for me because I was thinking about the time scale,
of the bits “in between” television. I looked at the
slots that make up regular television, and thought about my one
minute very much in relation to advertising. I think they only showed
it once or twice on the BBC, but ZDF in Germany bought it several
times on its own, separate from the other commissions- and broadcast
it, but I don’t know what they did with it- you never see
that.
C.M-A: When you were
making it did you think much about the fact that you were working
for a different kind of audience to, say, the gallery audience of
your video installation work?
J.G: No, I had gone back
into the theme of the medieval- the waning of the middle ages. It
was quite early a decade before the new millennium, and I was living
in a very derelict part of East London at the time in a house that
was semi-derelict and the house next door had fallen down, and there
was a tower block overhead. “The Waning of the Middle Ages”
seemed like an appropriate book to be reading. The tape does have
some of that in it- the construction out of dereliction- the taking
apart and the building back up.
C.M-A: So the themes
in that piece are a continuation of the themes in previous work.
It was as if you had suddenly jumped to another approach because
it was for broadcast.
J.G: I’m probably
rather single-minded in that way. As with earlier work, the frame
was important, the renaissance perspective is not there, although
it on a TV screen I use a mediaeval perspective. There is a frame
behind the figure in the foreground and the action that takes place
beyond- the clouds moving, or the car going past is in layers, which
I thought would probably suit the paint-box, and this in turn fitted
the medieval stepping of physical space rather than perspective.
C.M-A: So is that the
first time you’d worked digitally?
J.G: Yes. It’s
a collage. I’ve been making collages since I was tiny. I think
of collage of the making of a world within a frame.
C.M-A: This framing of
things is really important to the way you think and the way you
work with video and I can see that there’s a specific idea
about video and the kind of frame that it gives you, which as you
say parallels your interest in medieval painting of story-telling
and its also particular to the way you use the TV screen. Not so
much as an object, but a particular kind of frame, and the availability
of that frame in all sorts of contexts.
J.G: for me having “The
Garden of Early Delights” as part of a collage show was the
perfect context. That’s where I don’t feel like a video
person- it is absolutely using the medium, but it is about collage.
C.M-A: Wolf Vostell and
Nam June Paik worked in collage, and John Handhart argues that their
first video works are colleges. There is a strong link between that
approach and the sort of thing that Paik was doing- such as “Merce-by-Merce-by
Paik”, where he builds up layers of imaging using chroma-key,
luminance keying, etc.- the stuff he did at WGBH Television workshop.
So I think its true to say that there is something about collage
and video art which is very significant.
This of course extends
to the influence of Fluxus which as a movement, included collage
and live events, and includes sound collage too.
J.G: Most of my soundtracks
are collage. I can’t think of one that isn’t.
C.M-A: What kind of work
are you making now, and how does it compare to the earlier work?
J.G: Well, that’s
a big jump! After I made “The Garden of Early Delights”,
which was kind of a special piece for me, I wanted to do something
quite different. It is a really complicated piece to talk about.
I did “Descry” after that because I wanted to go back
out into the physical space. I went back into the gallery and was
editing across the frame, which I think was partly in reaction to
having done these pieces that were so contained.
C.M-A: Because the layers
were imaginary layers inside a single frame-
J.G: The colour bled
into the room. There was a white carpet in a white room- it was
a reference to Keats’ complaint about scientific ideas destroying
the rainbow. In that piece I was thinking quite consciously about
Newton and optics, which relates to your questions about the relationship
with technology. I wanted to make a rainbow which was generated
from the computer- I was generating my idea of red, orange, yellow,
green, indigo, blue, violet. The mantra is the Japanese song: sacaro,
sacaro (spelling??) which is almost their national anthem- it’s
actually a naturalist national anthem about viewing the Cherry blossoms
in the full moon. So there’s this terribly romantic connection
to nature that the Japanese have- this is my layering. All the technology
I was using was Japanese. I was thinking about the relationship
of all this to my Western tradition, coming out of the Age of Enlightenment,
from Newton, and out of the Romantic tradition as embodied by Keats.
So far me there was this interest in the complicated relationship
between nature and technology and urbanism.
C.M-A: You’re building
layers of ideas here, as well as layers of images.
J.G: Yes, it was a bit
of both, there’s one shot in which a fish appears to swim
into the centre. There’s a very famous problem housing block
that in the bottom of that shot which at the Elephant and Castle
(I took my life into my hands when I went and got that shot alone
one night!) and then fish sequence comes from the London Aquarium.
But you’re right, I think that’s a pretty fair observation
in a way- the layers are not all apparent. They are there for me
and that’s what constructed that piece. In some sense you
can read it and just appreciate the colour and the relationship
of the technology.
C.M-A: I think that’s
the thing about a dense work like that. There are lots of layers
that you can encounter it on, but in many ways people don’t
get past the first few layers- the physicality and so on, to the
other layers.
J.G: I’ve been
criticised for this sometimes. For me all of my work is heavily
layered, or coded sometimes, and I’ve never minded that people
will only get some of it.
C.M-A: Well, its there
if people want to dig. I wanted to throw this thing in about Newton
seeing himself first and foremost as an alchemist. I was thinking
about the paradoxical aspect of that. We have him dissecting the
rainbow- taking way the mystery of it, when in fact he was tackling
some the most weird, the most mysterious and esoteric ideas.
J.G: Absolutely! Well,
the mysterious and esoteric has always been a line through my work.
It’s been a part of the work however banal- there’s
always something else going on beyond it. To briefly go on to the
next piece, because it does connect, when I made “Reservoir”
I had a Windhurst Generator made to my specifications. This interest
in electricity goes back to the images in the tape I made for “Television
Circle”, which is called “Electron”. Because form
me, it was the stuff that made up television. Electrons are what
makes up the image. This connects to the view I have of the world
as being pretty magical. It is an amazing thing that there is an
electron which can make this incredible image. There are two other
things- one is the relationship to language- the extra-ordinary
power of language and poetic as well. I looked at the definition
of electron and electricity and then went into the physics a bit.
C.M-A: There was an interesting
programme on Radio 4 on In Our Time about electricity- apparently
the original term for electricity was “electrickery”….
J.G: Really? Well of
course the word Electron comes from the Greek for amber. Which is
why I was using images of amber. You rub it together and you get
a spark of electricity. So for me there was not only that, but also
the thing about Electra, and myths are a very important part of
my work and code pretty much everything that I do. The myth of Electra
was very much in the background, so I won’t go into that now.
The tape has lots of literal connections in terms of lots of parallels.
C.M-A: Were you able
to make things like the cables in the ground in the installation
apparent?
J.G: No, because of health
and safety it had to be concealed. For me that was perfect in a
way to tap into the national grid. That’s something they get
me saying in the documentary. In the end that was much more satisfying
than it would have been to have had a generator with petrol and
hay bales and all that sort of thing.
To go back to “Reservoir”,
the installation in which I used the windhurst generator, they were
used by Newton’s followers to demonstrate the existence of
God, which I thought was fantastic! So that’s why I used it
in my work- because it was all about creativity, about the making
of the spark of life. So in one half of “Reservoir”
there is the windhust generator in a plinth, and there was also
a video camera inside facing upwards, and when someone crossed a
beam breaker this triggered the windhurst generator, generating
a spark that went across the screen. In the second room, there were
three tiny monitors with an image of a heartbeat going from one
side to the other. On the other screen there were images of a gender
re-assignment operation. There was also a steel tray with three
drips, lit with a strobe light triggered by the spectator, which
caused the drips to appear to travel upwards.
C.M-A: It sounds very
complicated!
J.G: It was perhaps too
complicated- it was ambitious. But I had moved into a period of
working with installation as opposed to single screen., very much
working within the physical space. A piece like “Reservoir”
actually requires the viewer to complete the work- the work didn’t
exist unless there was a viewer in the space. I have never really
seen it as “interactive”, but of course on some levels
it is. Although it exists without the viewer, but something happens
when the viewer is there, that doesn’t happen unless the viewer
is in the space. So there was a period of working where the image
became less pictorial- the work became de-materialised, and that
came from this business of working with the matter, but always in
the background there is, for me, a coded mythology that the work
is built around.
C.M-A: It is interesting
how the image can become secondary in that way in the work of someone
who is inspired by the pictorial.
J.G: Yes, well now, the
work has gone back the other way, and I’m working much more
within the pictorial again. I did a series of works around American
landscape. I did a big road trip in America in 1999, so there is
a whole series of works connected with the desert landscape, and
to me that was very interesting in terms of space again, and the
frame, and the screen.
C.M-A: Were these projection
pieces, or…
J.G: They are a mixture-
a couple of them are projection pieces, one of them is made specifically
for screens. At the moment I’m working on something that uses
landscape as a framing device, but it is actually using letters-
a particular correspondence. So I’ve been working with this
desert landscapes, and I’ve been working with text on the
screen. Text has an interesting potential in that it can sit on
surface of the screen, or you can get it to sit within the screen
when you are using perspective- I suppose it is a kind of layering
device again, and it is also working linguistically as well.
C.M-A: There is a sense
of the possibility of building a visual vocabulary. It is getting
to the point where it is possible to begin to articulate a visual
language of the moving image.
J.G: There has probably
always been a language of the moving image, but people are more
conscious, not only of film language, but of avant-garde film language.
The idea of the conceptual framework is not pretty much part of
the accepted canon isn’t it?
C.M-A: It does seem to
be. You can make cultural references within the frame and they can
be understood- they are all around us now…But anyway, you
are using written texts in your current work. Is Gary Hill relevant
here? I was thinking about for example, “Happenstance”,
which is referencing the text in Blanchot’s book.
J.G: No, absolutely irrelevant!
No, it’s not Blanchot- it really isn’t. I like Gary
Hill, and “Happenstance” is a great piece of work, but
mine is very different. There are two things that I’ve been
doing with the text. One is using words- it’s much more sculptural,
the words become much more physical within the screen space. Sometimes
its poetic, but quite sparing compared with that very dense textuality
that Hill uses.
The piece that I’m
working on at the moment is a bit of a departure for me because
the story is going to be much more evident. The correspondence that
I’m using is actually about an event. Its historical but it
is also completely archetypal, it draws on the archetype and something
that’s within my own familiar grasp. Pictorially it will use
two landscapes, and the correspondence – probably not all
of it- I’ll probably edit it. It’s the nearest I’ve
come to working with something that is a story. I’m not actually
sure how much of a story; I’m still working on it.
C. M-A: So the image
text theme is the most important theme for you at the moment.
J.G: Yes, it’s
quite a departure for me in some ways.
C.M-A: Are there spoken
words as well?
J.G: Not so far, but
the one that I’ve just described does tell a story, and it
could use spoken language.
C.M-A: This new work
has a duration- a beginning, middle and End.
J.G: No, I still plan
to make it cyclical, rather than having viewers watch it in a “seated
sense”.
C.M-A: It’s not
cinema.
J.G: No, I think if I
was going to make cinema I probably would have done it twenty years
ago, and I would probably use some of the more conventional methods-
I would use dramatic narrative- I should imagine.
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