Another Forensic Charade
September 15 - December 9,2001
The ocean has many faces - it's been an inspiration to humanity
for aeons. With "Another Forensic Charade", I wanted
to add my own views of the currents of commerce and culture flowing
through a port and the museum at its edge. "Another Forensic
Charade" was a commissioned video work made by Magasin
3 in Stockholm, Sweden for a show entitled "Free Port."
Essentially, Richard Julin, the curator for the museum, was curious
about the linkages between architecture, history, and how film
can be seen a kind of hyper-textual archaeology. The harbor where
the museum is located was Stockholm's and all of Sweden's "free
trade zone" for almost 60 years - and when it was opened,
there were cameras to document the process. The artists Julin
invited to present work in the show - myself, Cosima von Bonin,
John Bock, and Janine Antoni, all engaged the idea of ports as
portals, as entryways not only into physical landscapes, but into
the historical relations that configure how land-use and water
use occurs in a world of networks and hyper-active trade routes.
Sweden has several strange histories that are interogated in
my "Another Forensic Charade" video piece. I took a
lot of historical footage from the archives of the harbor and
museum and remixed it into a "portrait" of the flow
of commerce spanning almost an entire century. The harbor has
a lot of strange histories - it was once the largest importer
of bananas, for example, and was also near the center of some
of the earliest mass developments of telecommunications centers
(Ericsson is based there...). The "Free Port" and all
of the sundry sailors and ships that passed through it conditioned
my video portrait of a culture where many a sailor could say,
like the words of one of Sweden's greatest dramatists, August
Strindberg who said in 1887: "I am a devilish fellow, who
has mastered many arts....And all the things I have tossed off!
Though Sweden was as hard as a stone! Novels and verses, plays,
good and bad, Swedish Histories and Chinese, and four kids, the
fifth on its way, and two wives..." It was definitely a wild
place. Strindberg's paintings focused on the ocean. It seems to
be a recurring theme in Swedish culture, and the care and almost
analytic quality with which the Swedes maintain their harbors
attests to a culture that might seem carefree on the surface,
but like the "Freeport" has an intense underlying depth.
My video portrait was projected onto fragmented record cover sleeves
made to resemble the harbor floor, which on a clear day, you can
almost see. The Swedes take such good care of the waters of their
capital that you can go swimming right in the middle of town.
Try doing that in the Hudson... The harbor of Stockholm where
the museum is located was considered to be a "free trade"
zone - and it was meant to be a portal to the rest of the world.
When Stockholm's Free Port was inaugurated on the 27th of September
1926 the entire proceedings were what we would call today a "photo-op."
In the film that was made, one can see the inauguration ceremony
with king Gustav V on a throne and observing the proceedings.
Things have changed so much since then, and I wanted to really
give a sense of historical ambiance. I included film works from
the archive of films that documented the architectural growth
of the harbor, and I based a lot of the footage on various MAX
patches developed with Luke Dubois from Columbia University's
Electronic Music department.
There is a limited edition mix CD for sale at the museum that can be ordered from Magasin
3.
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