| TO NEW HORIZONS Work in progress Film Prints Extract from video film in progress. |
FILM My aim is to create an ambivalence concerning what is American and what is Russian, and to point out that many of our ideas about these matters we have learnt through the mechanisms of Propaganda and Public Relations. The film To New Horizons (work in progress) is an assemblage of a number of elements: a voice over and film footage from a General Motors promotional film made for the World Fair in New York in 1939-40; Russian films such as Kara Bugaz by Aleksandr Razumnyj from 1935, Esfir Shub’s K.Sh.E. (Komsomol: Patron of Electrification or Chief of electrification) from 1932, Komsomol by Joris Ivens from 1933 (Komsomol refers to youth), and The Circus by Grigorii Aleksandrov from 1936; as well as the American film Dames from 1933 by the choreographer and director Busby Berkeley. By combining and confronting the narratives of the archival films in an “assemblage” manner, I seek to create a new open narrative. Using archival films from the 1930s and showing, reorganizing them today is in itself a “critical montage”, a re-appropriation or transformation of the narratives of these historical documents. (see REFERENCES for further information) “It was when existence was just like the movies, just like the advertising or propaganda image, that one felt truly alive”. (Dreamworld and Catastrophe, 2000, Susan Buck Morss) In the 1920s and 30s and throughout the whole Soviet Era, cinema was central to the construction of mass society. The same was true of the United States of the same period. “If the Soviet screen provided a prosthetic experience of collective power, the Hollywood screen provided a prosthetic experience of collective desire.” (Dreamworld and Catastrophe, 2000, Susan Buck Morss) You can say that mimesis replaced written arguments and people became part of the collective by mimicking its look. (see REFERENCES for further information) In To New Horizons there is also a focus on similarities, exchanges and influences between the two cultures, as can be seen in the split-screen sequence (see video) featuring Busby Berkeley’s Dames from 1933 and Grigorii Aleksandrov’s The Circus from 1936 – the aesthetics, the choreography, the scenography and the camerawork in the two films is very similar, almost identical.
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