martes 8 de septiembre de 2009

Nuevas banderas de México para el Atlas Subjetivo de México

Un par de la serie de banderas que realicé para el libro (a publicarse antes del final de este mismo año) Atlas Subjetivo de México, con el apoyo de Fundación del Centro Histórico de México y la Embajada de los Países Bajos.



MEXICO-AS SEEN ON TV (HÉCTOR FLORES, 2009)



ÁGUILA DESPLUMADA (HÉCTOR FLORES, 2009)

sábado 20 de junio de 2009

Kamioka: Handmade

jueves 11 de junio de 2009

Cisma: Le Sens Propre

Cisma's "Le Sens Propre" from Cisma

domingo 7 de junio de 2009

Godard: A Band Apart



A Band Apart (1964), de Jean-Luc Godard

miércoles 3 de junio de 2009

Yoshiyuki: Sex in The Park

Kohei Yoshiyuki, de la serie The Park, 1971.

Kohei Yoshiyuki’s pictures of the nighttime activities in two Tokyo parks in the early 1970s are among the strangest photographs ever made. It’s as if the photographer has entered into the mind of a dreamer and recorded its wayward, flickering apparitions before they fled back into the deep subconscious. Perhaps Yoshiyuki himself is the dreamer—a sleepwalker stumbling on a private moment and, instead of turning away, becoming mesmerized, like a child at the primal scene. It’s not unreasonable to imagine that his pictures, with their shimmering auras and smudged shadows, don’t just exist on film, but remain seared indelibly on his brain.
(Peepers, Vince Aletti)

Kohei Yoshiyuki, de la serie The Park, 1971.

domingo 31 de mayo de 2009

Mulvey: Visual Pleasure and Narrative Cinema

Laura Mulvey


Cinema has changed over the last few decades. It is no longer the monolithic system based on large capital investment exemplified at its best by Hollywood in the 1930's, 1940's and 1950's. Technological advances (16mm, etc) have changed the economic conditions of cinematic production, which can now be artisanal as well as capitalist. Thus it has been possible for an alternative cinema to develop. However self-conscious and ironic Hollywood managed to be, it always restricted itself to a formal mise-en-scène reflecting the dominant ideological concept of the cinema. The alternative cinema provides a space for a cinema to be born which is radical in both a political and an aesthetic sense and challenges the basic assumptions of the mainstream film. This is not to reject the latter moralistically, but to highlight the ways in which its formal preoccupations reflect the psychical obsessions of the society which produced it, and, further, to stress that the alternative cinema must start specifically by reacting against these obsessions and assumptions. A politically and aesthetically avant-garde cinema is now possible, but it can still only exist as a counterpoint.



A. The cinema offers a number of possible pleasures. One is scopophilia. There are circumstances in which looking itself is a source of pleasure, just as, in the reverse formulation, there is pleasure in being looked at. At first glance, the cinema would seem to be remote from the undercover world of the surreptitious observation of an unknowing and unwilling victim. What is seen of the screen is so manifestly shown. But the mass of mainstream film, and the conventions within which it has consciously involved, portray a hermetically sealed world which unwinds magically, indifferent to the presence of the audience, producing for them a sense of separation and playing on their voyeuristic phantasy. Moreover, the extreme contrast between the darkness in the auditorium (which also isolates the spectators from one another) and the brilliance of the shifting patterns of light and shade on the screen helps to promote the illusion of voyeuristic separation. Although the film is really being shown, is there to be seen, conditions of screening and narrative conventions give the spectator an illusion of looking in on a private world. Among other things, the position of the spectators in the cinema is blatantly one of repression of their exhibitionism and projection of the repressed desire on to the performer.



B. The cinema satisfies a primordial wish for pleasurable looking, but it also goes further, developing scopophilia in its narcissistic aspect. Quite apart from the extraneous similarities between screen and mirror (the framing of the human form in its surroundings, for instance), the cinema has structures of fascination strong enough to allow temporary loss of ego while simultaneously reinforcing the ego. The sense of forgetting the world as the ego has subsequently come to perceive it (I forgot who I am and where I was) is nostalgically reminiscent of that pre-subjective moment of image recognition. At the same time the cinema has distinguished itself in the production of ego ideals as expressed in particular in the star system, the stars centring both screen presence and screen story as they act out a complex process of likeness and difference (the glamorous impersonates the ordinary).



During its history, the cinema seems to have evolved a particular illusion of reality in which this contradiction between libido and ego has found a beautifully complimentary phantasy world. In reality the phantasy world of the screen is subject to the law which produces it. Sexual instincts and identification processes have a meaning within the symbolic order which articulates desire. Desire, born with language, allows the possibility of transcending the instinctual and the imaginary, but its point of reference continually returns to the traumatic moment of its birth: the castration complex. Hence the look, pleasurable in form, can be threatening in content, and it is woman as representation / image that crystallises this paradox.



The presence of woman is an indispensable element of spectacle in normal narrative film, yet her visual presence tends to work against the development of a story line, to freeze the flow of action in moments of erotic contemplation. This alien presence then has to be integrated into cohesion with the narrative. As Budd Boetticher has put it:

'What counts is what the heroine provokes, or rather what she represents. She is the one, or rather the love or fear she inspires in the hero, or else the concern he feels for her, who makes him act the way he does. In herself the woman has not the slightest importance.'



Traditionally, the woman displayed has functioned on two levels: as erotic object for the characters within the screen story, and as erotic object for the spectator within the auditorium, with a shifting tension between the looks on either side of the screen. For instance, the device of the show-girl allows the two looks to be unified technically without any apparent break in the diegesis. A woman performs within the narrative, the gaze of the spectator and that of the male characters in the film are neatly combined without breaking narrative verisimilitude. For a moment the sexual impact of the performing woman takes the film into a no-man's-land outside its own time and space. Thus Marilyn Monroe's first appearance in The River of No Return and Lauren Bacall's songs in To Have or Have Not. Similarly, conventional close-ups of legs (Dietrich, for instance) or a face (Garbo) integrate into the narrative a different mode of eroticism. One part of a fragmented body destroys the Renaissance space, the illusion of depth demanded by the narrative, it gives flatness, the quality of a cut-out or icon rather than verisimilitude to the screen.



Hence the split between spectacle and narrative supports the man's role as the active one of forwarding the story, making things happen. The man controls the film phantasy and also emerges as the representative of power in a further sense: as the bearer of the look of the spectator, transferring it behind the screen to neutralise the extra-diegetic tendencies represented by woman as spectacle. This is made possible through the processes set in motion by structuring the film around a main controlling figure with whom the spectator can identify. As the spectator identifies with the main male protagonist, he projects his look on to that of his like, his screen surrogate, so that the power of the male protagonist as he controls events coincides with the active power of the erotic look, both giving a satisfying sense of omnipotence. A male movie star's glamorous characteristics are thus not those of the erotic object of the gaze, but those of the more perfect, more complete, more powerful ideal ego conceived in the original moment of recognition in front of the mirror. The character in the story can make things happen and control events better than the subject / spectator, just as the image in the mirror was more in control of motor co-ordination.



The psychoanalytic background that has been discussed in this article is relevant to the pleasure and unpleasure offered by traditional narrative film. The scopophilic instinct (pleasure in looking at another person as an erotic object), and, in contradistinction, ego libido (forming identification processes) act as formations, mechanisms, which this cinema has played on. The image of woman as (passive) raw material for the (active) gaze of man takes the argument a step further into the structure of representation, adding a further layer demanded by the ideology of the patriarchal order as it is worked out in its favourite cinematic form - illusionistic narrative film. The argument returns again to the psychoanalytic background in that woman as representation signifies castration, inducing voyeuristic or fetishistic mechanisms to circumvent her threat.



None of these interacting layers is intrinsic to film, but it is only in film form that they can reach a perfect and beautiful contradiction, thanks to the possibility in cinema of shifting the emphasis of the look. It is the place of the look that defines cinema, the possibility of varying it and exposing it. This is what makes cinema quite different in its voyeuristic potential form, say, strip-tease, theatre, shows, etc.



Going far beyond highlighting a woman's to-be-looked-at-ness, cinema builds the way she is to be looked at into the spectacle itself. Playing on the tension between film as controlling the dimension of time (editing, narrative) and film as controlling the dimension of space (changes in distance, editing), cinematic codes create a gaze, a world, and an object, thereby producing an illusion cut to the measure of desire. It is these cinematic codes and their relationship to formative external structures that must be broken down before mainstream film and the pleasure it provides can be challenged.

Laura Mulvey, Visual Pleasure and Narrative Cinema, Screen, V. 6, #3, Autumn, 1975.

viernes 29 de mayo de 2009

Mercer: Los mil falos de Mapplethorpe

Robert Mapplethorpe, Hombre en traje de poliéster.


Referir las fotos de desnudos de hombres negros tomadas por Robert Mapplethorpe significa hablar de un texto cultural que dice algo sobre ciertos modos en que los blancos "miran" a los negros y cómo, en esta forma de mirar, la sexualidad del hombre negro se percibe como algo diferente, excesivo, lo otro.*



Al ir extendiendo su repertorio a través de flores, cuerpos y caras, el conservadurismo de la estética de Mapplethorpe se volvió evidente: una reelaboración de la antigua táctica modernista de "escandalizar a los burgueses" (y hacerlos pagar), que recibe una nueva aura gracias a su marca característica, la búsqueda de la perfección en la técnica fotográfica.



Sin embargo, si no consideramos al autor como origen o garantía de los significados producidos en el texto, sino como, tal y como sostiene Michel Foucault en "¿Qué es un autor?", una "proyección, en términos más o menos psicológicos, de nuestra manera de manejar los textos", entonces lo más interesante de obras como Black Males y The Black Book es la forma en que el texto facilita la proyección imaginaria de ciertas fantasías raciales y sexuales acerca de la "diferencia" del cuerpo del negro.



Mientras que las fotografías de parejas de hombres homosexuales sadomasoquistas evocan una sexualidad subcultural que consiste en "hacer" algo, los hombres negros se encuentran confinados y definidos en su "ser" como sexuales y nada más que eso, y por lo tanto hipersexuales. En Hombre en traje de poliéster, aparte de las manos, es el pene y sólo el pene lo que identifica al modelo de la fotografía como un negro.



Como código genérico establecido en todas las tradiciones de las bellas artes de Occidente, el sujeto convencional del desnudo es el cuerpo femenino (blanco). Al sustituirlo por el sujeto masculino negro socialmente "inferior", Mapplethorpe utiliza no obstante algunos de sus códigos genéricos y sus convenciones para enmarcar la objetivación de cuerpos masculinos negros en bellas "cosas" abstractas. En Mapplethorpe toda referencia a un contexto social, histórico, cultural y político queda fuera del cuadro de sus fotografías y esta codificación visual vuelve abstracto y esencial al cuerpo masculino negro dentro del campo de un ideal estético trascendental. En este sentido, la idealización erótica y estética tiene un efecto tan totalizador, que la imagen-texto revela más sobre los deseos del sujeto masculino blanco que está detrás de la cámara, oculto e invisible, que sobre los hombres negros anónimos cuyos hermosos cuerpos vemos representados.



Como artista, Mapplethorpe fabrica una fantasía de autoridad "absoluta" sobre sus sujetos al apropiarse la función del estereotipo para estabilizar la objetivación erótica de la otredad racial y afirmar, con ello, su propia identidad como el yo/ojo soberano que tiene poder de dominio sobre la abyecta "cosisidad" del otro (como si las imágenes implicaran: "tengo el poder de convertirte a ti, criatura baja e indigna, en una hermosa obra de arte").



Superponiendo dos formas de ver (el desnudo, que erotiza el acto de mirar, y el estereotipo, que fija el flujo de la experiencia) vemos en la mirada de Mapplethorpe una reinscripción de la ambivalencia fundamental de la fantasía colonial, que oscila entre la idealización sexual del otro racializado y la angustia en defensa de la identidad del yo masculino blanco. Stuart Hall ha destacado esa ruptura del "ojo imperial" al sugerir que para cada imagen del sujeto negro como un salvaje, nativo o esclavo merodeador y amenazador, hay una imagen reconfortante del negro como sirviente dócil o divertido payaso y farandulero.



El conjunto corporal se fragmenta en detalles (pecho, brazos, torso, trasero, pene) que invitan a una disección escopofílica de las partes que constituyen el todo. Como si fuera un talismán, cada parte es investida con el poder de invocar la mística de la sexualidad masculina negra con más perfección que cualquier todo empíricamente unificado. La cámara recorta como un cuchillo, permitiendo que el espectador inspeccione y examine la "mercancía". En esta atención fetichista por el detalle, las pequeñas cicatrices e imperfecciones en la superficie de la piel negra sólo realzan el sentido del perfeccionismo técnico de la impresión fotográfica. El recorte y la fragmentación de los cuerpos (a menudo "decapitados", por así decir) es un rasgo destacado de la pornografía y ha sido considerado desde ciertas posturas feministas como una forma de violencia masculina, una inscripción literal de un impulso sádico en la "mirada masculina", que corta los cuerpos de las mujeres en fragmentos visuales.



Bajo el intenso escrutinio de la mirada desapasionada y desapegada de Mapplethorpe, es como si a cada uno de los modelos negros se le hiciera morir, aunque no sea más que para reencarnar su esencia alienada en calidad de objetos estéticos idealizados. No se nos invita a imaginar cómo son sus vidas, sus historias o sus experiencias; son silenciados como sujetos y en cierto sentido "sacrificados" en el pedestal del ideal estético a fin de afirmar la omnipotencia del sujeto principal: el yo/ojo que tiene poder de luz y muerte.



La figuración fetichista del cuerpo masculino negro en la fotografía de Mapplethorpe atrae la atención hacia la política cultural de la ambivalencia fundamental que habita el paisaje extraño, inexplorado y teóricamente "desconocido" de la imaginación masculina blanca, el "inconsciente político" de la masculinidad blanca. El desafío de su trabajo (y su posición altamente ambigua en la estructura del miedo, la fantasía y el fetichismo que se desdobla a través de la filigrana de poder ejercida por su mirada masculina blanca) es que, por lo menos, atrae nuestra atención hacia las maneras ambivalentes en que los blancos "miran" a los negros y nos hace examinar hasta dónde nosotros estamos implicados en ellas.

Kobena Mercer, "Los mil falos de Mapplethorpe", Fractal n°12, enero-abril, 1999, año 3, volumen IV, pp. 67-83.