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Ronald Bergan
Saturday March 15, 2003
The Guardian
Those who consider cinema a narrative art form, and believe that films
should have a beginning, a middle and an end - in that order - will have
problems with the work of Stan Brakhage, who has died aged 70. His films
were difficult also for those not willing to shed the conventionalised
illusion, imposed by rules of perspective, compositional logic and "lenses
grounded to achieve 19th-century compositional perspective".
For Brakhage, the goal of cinema was the liberation of the eye itself, the
creation of an act of seeing, previously unimagined and undefined by
conventions of representation, an eye as natural and unprejudiced as that of
a cat, a bee or an infant. There were few filmmakers - film director is too
limiting a description - who went so far to train audiences to see
differently.
"Imagine an eye unruled by man-made laws of perspective," he wrote in
Metaphors On Vision, first published in the journal Film Culture in 1963,
"an eye unprejudiced by compositional logic, an eye which does not respond
to the name of everything but which must know each object encountered in
life through an adventure of perception.
"How many colours are there in a field of grass to the crawling baby unaware
of 'green'? How many rainbows can light create for the untutored eye?
Imagine a world alive with incomprehensible objects, and shimmering with an
endless variety of movement and innumerable gradations of colour. Imagine a
world before the 'beginning was the word'."
To a large extent, Brakhage realised this innocent world in his films,
restrictively labelled avant-garde or experimental, existing in a parallel
universe to the multiplex ethos. His signature was as figurative as it was
literal - he would scratch his initials directly on the film's emulsion at
the end credits. Like a painter or sculptor, he worked manually on his
material, often scratching, dyeing and altering the celluloid itself, making
today's push-button digital technology anathema to him.
He would hand-paint blank frames of 16mm film, and glue objects to them in a
collage. In Mothlight (1963), for example, he pasted moth wings on to strips
of film and, when projected, the bright light seemed to bring the insects
back to life.
Brakhage was born Robert Sanders in a Kansas City orphanage, and adopted two
weeks later by Ludwig and Clara Brakhage, who named him James Stanley. He
performed on radio as a boy soprano, attended high school in Denver,
Colorado, and, at 19, dropped out of Dartmouth College after two months to
make films.
Among his early influences were Jean Cocteau and the Italian neo-realists
but, after arriving in New York in 1954, he joined the flourishing
avant-garde scene, drawing inspiration from artists and filmmakers like Maya
Deren, Marie Menken and Joseph Cornell. He admired Ezra Pound, and was a
close associate of poets like Kenneth Rexroth, Robert Creeley and Robert
Duncan, and abstract expressionist painters such as Willem de Kooning, with
whom much of his work has an affinity.
In 1957, he married Jane Collom, and the details of their lives together
figured prominently in his work. In Window Water Baby Moving (1959), he
unflinchingly and poetically documented the birth of the first of their five
children.
In 23rd Psalm (1966), he contrasted scenes of his tranquil life in rural
Colorado with footage of the second world war. The quick cuts of the first
part, depicting a world menaced by chaos, give way to the contemplative
passages of the second, suggestive of a quest for the roots of war -
particularly the Vietnam war, then at its height.
Brakhage's most famous film, Dog Star Man (1964), one of the key works of
the 1960s American avant-garde, experimented with the use of colour,
painting on film and distorting lenses, while depicting the creation of the
universe. It ends with superimpositions of solar flares and chains of
mountains over his wife, as she gives birth to their child.
During five decades, Brakhage made nearly 380 films, most of them shot in
8mm or 16mm, and ranging in length from nine seconds to four hours. With a
few exceptions, they were made without sound, which he felt might spoil the
intensity of the visual experience. He preferred to think of his films as
metaphorical, abstract and highly subjective - a kind of poetry written with
light.
Brakhage taught film history at the University of Colorado from 1981 until
last year, when he retired to Canada with his second wife and two sons, who
survive him along with the five children of his first mariage. It is a
tragic irony that he seems to have been killed by the art he loved.
According to his widow, doctors believed that the coal-tar dyes he used in
his filmmaking may have contributed to his bladder cancer, which was
diagnosed in 1996.
James Stanley Brakhage, filmmaker, born January 14 1933;
died March 9 2003
Source:
http://www.guardian.co.uk/obituaries/story/0,3604,914589,00.html
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