William Kentridge was born in Johannesburg, South Africa, in 1955. He attended the University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg (1973–76), Johannesburg Art Foundation (1976–78), and studied mime and theater at L’école Internationale de Théatre Jacques Lecoq, Paris (1981–82). Having witnessed first-hand one of the twentieth century’s most contentious struggles—the dissolution of apartheid—Kentridge brings the ambiguity and subtlety of personal experience to public subjects that are most often framed in narrowly defined terms. [1]
[1] //art21.org/artist/william-kentridge/
Artist, William Kentridge: My name is William Kentridge. I'm an artist, and I live and work in Johannesburg, on the Southern edge of Africa.
The films that I make come out of the brutalized society that Apartheid has left in its wake. This film uses a lot of images, which are really forensic photographs of people who died months before South Africa's first Democratic election in 1994. There's a huge amount of violence just in the run-up to the election.
The film title "Felix in Exile" really came from the wordplay that exile and Felix are almost anagrams of each other.
The films start as drawing. Drawing is the heart of all the work. I start with an image that I feel I know, or want to work with. And hope that in the process of making that drawing, other ideas and other images will suggest themselves.
The woman in "Felix in Exile" started off as a very minor part in the film. And as I drew it, her role and importance grew and grew until she in fact became the heart of the narrative of the film. She uses a sextant and a theodolite. The sextant's really for fixing your position and the other is for actually mapping the terrain that you're standing on, and they're about fixing and drawing the landscape. Making a record of here we are now, in this place. The machine that turns and then that clicks is really an old-fashioned seismograph that is monitoring the rumbling and turning of the earth. And insofar as all the people who die in the film get absorbed into the earth, it's part of the history digesting its people, I suppose. And that has to stand in for kind of history in general in the film.
There's a question of people disappearing, of memory disappearing, and how do we hang on to things that we should feel so strongly, but which get weaker and weaker with time? I think that what artists say about the work, one has to take with a big pinch of salt, cause it's always kind of justification after the event. So, my advice to you listening would be to switch off me talking, and rather, watch the film. [2]
[2] //www.moma.org/audio/playlist/1/248
Through his animated films, theatrical productions, and graphic work, William Kentridge addresses the personal and social traumas that are the vestiges of South African apartheid. His ongoing series of short animated films Drawings for Projection (begun in 1989) feature two principal characters, who function as the artist’s alter egos: Soho Eckstein, an avaricious South African mining magnate in a pinstriped suit and tie, and Felix Teitlebaum, shown naked and vulnerable to apartheid’s devastating acts.
In Felix in Exile, the fifth film of the series made between September 1993 and February 1994, Kentridge depicts the barren East Rand landscape as witness to the exploitation of and violence against both natural and human resources. Isolated in a hotel room, Felix peruses the survey charts of Nandi, a young black woman who maps the history of the terrain. Figures and structures are subsumed into the landscape or night sky, allegories for how the land can bear the scars of crimes against humanity.
Kentridge created the sixth film History of the Main Complaint in 1996 during the initial hearings of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission, at which apartheid’s crimes were first publicly admitted while the perpetrators were granted indemnity in the hope of healing profound social and historical wounds in this post-apartheid society. In the film Soho lies comatose in a hospital ward, suffering from the weight of his past acts as well as those for which he is implicated due to his race and class. MRIs and CAT scans reveal his affliction, as memories of violence committed against black South Africans float across the screen. The relationship between individual and collective guilt is played out when Soho regains consciousness only through acknowledging his own responsibility.
Kentridge’s films reveal traces of their making, just as the narratives invoke memories of an historic time. For each scene, Kentridge films a large charcoal and pastel drawing (measuring approximately 76.2 x 114.3 cm), which he partially erases and redraws, recording each sheet up to 500 times. The cumulative effect of his thought process is retained, leaving residue of the act of production to reflect the tensions between past and present. [3]
在UCCA把 展出的所有片子全部看了一遍 隨意馬克四個(gè)
一雙眼,一幅畫(huà),看盡了世間所有的悲涼。
看完之后深感自己學(xué)習(xí)的無(wú)用 藝術(shù)的表達(dá)如此自由 像孩童一樣用想象力去觸碰想要之物,拉近愛(ài)人之間的距離 關(guān)于temporality 關(guān)于愛(ài)
William Kentridge用碳棒和pastel作畫(huà),在每一幀的基礎(chǔ)上進(jìn)行修改,他走到畫(huà)室另一頭按下拍攝鍵,再將畫(huà)修改為下一幀。以此創(chuàng)造出一種定格動(dòng)畫(huà)。這種特殊的制作方式讓整個(gè)動(dòng)畫(huà)也蒙上了一種特殊的質(zhì)感。漫天飛舞的紙張、蔓延的血跡,被圈出的傷口,尸體化作山河橋梁…透過(guò)儀器及透鏡觀察,流放中的felix記錄下他的思念、他的見(jiàn)聞。這許多意象和變換著的超現(xiàn)實(shí)主義畫(huà)面,讓我似乎從中看到了故事、思念以及許多感情,我卻不敢說(shuō)我看的準(zhǔn)確。但那陰郁卻深沉的氛圍緊緊將我纏繞。 死去的人被紙張覆蓋,生命永存于這些記錄與創(chuàng)作中。
驚艷,鏡中繪畫(huà)的表現(xiàn)力很強(qiáng)。
kentridge的第五部短片..為防對(duì)內(nèi)容的過(guò)度詮釋,不需對(duì)背景和變形進(jìn)行套用:只在水色及手提箱、流放、男女、死亡、血和傷口,死尸的變化……這些上去尋找想像痕跡:自由及思鄉(xiāng)、遙遠(yuǎn)星空、愛(ài)人、真理、憤怒絕望,遺忘與原諒……最終那個(gè)遠(yuǎn)方的愛(ài)人的同樣死去,讓行李箱合攏,離開(kāi)流放的孤獨(dú),化為一片希望的泥塘。
滄海桑田 事故容顏 4+
突然意識(shí)到上雕塑課時(shí)教授推薦的就是威廉肯特里奇。
「其作品構(gòu)建在一種不可還原的“消失”的藝術(shù)之上,即在一張紙上繪制出圖像,再進(jìn)行局部涂改和變化后進(jìn)行拍攝,并不斷進(jìn)行這一過(guò)程直到場(chǎng)景結(jié)束?!箯浡乃{(lán)色和似有若無(wú)的人聲ost讓我也有了淡淡的鄉(xiāng)愁。如果要有更深入的理解,需對(duì)南非歷史和創(chuàng)作背景做了解。
2020.2.17
Youtube it!
難以理解的,但是很牛逼的
一個(gè)沉重題材的短片。
William Kentridge
顯然文藝片不適合我== 要考慮以后類似找不到重點(diǎn)畫(huà)風(fēng)又不喜歡的片是否要看
MOMA
第一次看Kentridge的作品
非常喜歡的一大肯特里奇的作品,故事真像套作《銀河搭車指南》曼格拉斯條目,以及那條吃腦電波的,能翻譯宇宙中所有語(yǔ)言的魚(yú)。在肯特里奇的作品里,藍(lán)色和紅色都是極其有趣的顏色,藍(lán)色絕不會(huì)是藍(lán)天,只會(huì)是誰(shuí),原諒的水,滌盡一切的水。
最終流放的感覺(jué)。。。
#2022TIDF