ACE Postgraduate Research Symposium 2016

Title of Presentation:
Personal filmed material and the archive effect.

Abstract:
This paper reflects from a practitioner perspective on Jaimie Baron’s conceptualisation of the ‘archive effect’ (2014). In my presentation, I draw on my recent Practice as Research experiments as case studies in order to explore aspects of Baron’s theory. These new moving image artworks use extracted material from my own personal ‘collection’ of Super 8mm and 16mm film footage, which contains material captured over the last 25 years, in order to establish a critical position on my doctoral investigation.

1 Second Memories

The films sat in boxes for years. They were on a variety of reels, some on the original 50 ft Super 8 spools that were return from processing, others pieced together into bigger spools of several hundred feet. The splicing was with a strange zigzag cement splicer which gave visually appealing joints, both when looking at the film strips and when viewed on screen. The splices were very noticeable and served as a clear indication that one 50 ft roll had ended and another begun, quite the opposite of the invisibility normally required when splicing two shots together.

A lot of the material has been edited in camera in as much as a scene might be filmed in one or more shots which would then be inscribed on the film in sequence. The camera might then be unused for some time before the next shot is appended to the film producing a fractured chronology of image sequences perfectly edited together and not requiring tape or other clumsy interventions.

Super 8 cameras typically start and stop almost instantaneously so don’t ‘suffer’ from changes in exposure that can appear on 16mm and 35mm when starting and stopping the movement. The slightly acceleration of the mechanism can give overexposed frames each time the camera starts up. Some cine cameras – such as the Bolex EBM – have shutters which can remain open if its power is removed and the mechanism comes to rest with the gate exposed. This gives a flash frame caused by gross overexposure of the emulsion. Paradoxically these defects in the technology produce results which can be prized by some filmmakers as part of the ‘film look’, seen as an alternative or antidote to clean digital video footage. Super 8 cameras have an easier job pulling the narrow gauge film through the gate, and also have shutters which close after filming, partly as a result of often having stop motion ability as part of the feature set which could be advertised to potential consumers for the home movie system.

Contemporary digital (non-tape-based) cameras – whether stand-alone or built in to mobile phones, tablets etc. – are clip-based. Once the camera is recording and subsequently stopped the footage is stored as a standalone clip in a folder or collection/gallery. The possibility of the camera edit has been made redundant by the availability of nonlinear editing in the recording device itself or the expectation that the user has, and indead needs, digital storage and editing equipment.

Thoughts:

  • straight eight style competitions
  • The kink that formed when leaving film stationary in a S8 camera
  • The dodgy film pressure plate
  • Judder and weave
  • FCP X’s skimming in the browser
  • Makes footage accessible in way it never was with film viewers and projectors
  • Linear editing – in-camera
  • Film editing non-linear with spicer, Steenbecks etc
  • Linear in the age of deck to deck video editing
  • Strangely Super 8 is perhaps the most linear since it was fiddly to cut and splice although not impossible and there was a small industry catering to enthusiasts who wanted to use the tiny gauge film ‘professionally’.
  • metadata: a few films had basic names written on the reels
  • Most are filmic memories floating in time – of their time
  • Adam Laity thought Sea Front was much older than 2006
  • Charlotte Humpstone asked whether Womad had been filmed by my father since I appear in one shot
  • SWArts film award in 199? Still in progress – haha
  • students assumed projected Super 8 were ‘home movies’ in which I was included.

DN Rodowick’s the virtual life of film:

  • filmofanic?
  • thinking about film vs digital
  • his early writing in the book talks about experiences as a spectator in the cinema
  • Makes a distinction between the terms ‘cinema’ and ‘film’
  • Cinema studies in cultural studies
  • Interesting that my Super 8 films typically don’t have any audience
  •         ref Terry and recording material which is never even viewed
  •         not sure whether there’s much difference between a roll of processed film sitting in a box and an SD card which may or may not have video recordings stored

31 March – ghosts beneath us

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Wildlife pond at CCANW

The Sun reflected in the surface of a strange pool in Haldon Forrest car parking, near to the now-defunct CCANW – Centre for Contemporary Art and the Natural World. I think the centre was showing an exhibition by local artist Tabitha Andrews. As I was filming we were approached by Emily Allan – an ex-foundation student from PCAD – who introduced us to Paula Orrell, who was about to take up a curatorial post at Plymouth Arts Centre.

The CCANW website has been archived.

29 March – the past dissolves

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Grass caught in a fence on Dartmoor. We parked behind the Plume of Feathers pub in Princetown and walked towards South Hessary Tor. It was bitterly cold, Kayla carrying her heavy Bolex. I filmed with the weighty Canon 1014, using its lap-dissolve facility. The dried grass looked beautiful in the wind – it’s molinia and a real nuisance on the moorland.

What year was this? I’ve no idea. Maybe there is metadata with the film strip – not date and time, but implied metadata such as the film type. Perhaps shots before or after on the roll would give a clue. The lap-dissolves on the the grass tells me that it was filmed with the 1014 because its predecessor, in the sense that I traded one camera for the other, a Canon 814 didn’t have that facility. Now when did I buy the camera? Lees Cameras in London, and I remember using the 1014 at Beaumont Avenue before we moved out in 1994. So it could be any time after 1989…

28 March – dark reflecting pool

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The Sun reflected in the surface of our garden pond, in the 90s or 2000s. The pond is formed from the foundations of a WW2 air-raid shelter to the rear of the house. The front door is a bit crooked as a large bomb exploded 5m away in the street in The Blitz. Plymouth has a ‘bomb book’ where the impacts were mapped each day by the City Council. Our house was already 50 years old at the time. It has flawed glass panes in the front windows that were probably replaced after the blast. The next road has two newer ‘infill’ houses as two adjacent homes in the terrace were destroyed by a bomb.

When we first introduced fish to the pond they were given names.

27 March – zephyr

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The muslin curtain blown by the breeze through the open bedroom window at Beaumont Avenue. To the left was a ‘vintage’ pink moulded plastic splash-back with chrome metal fixtures for two toothbrushes and his-n-hers water tumblers. It’s probably still there as the landlord moved back after we left, having been ousted from his role as director by a coup from Plymouth Art Centre, where he’d lived and worked.

26 March – spectacular

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Beautiful filming of sparklers through a photographic enlarger’s condenser lens. The tiny house on Beaumont Avenue in Plymouth was the studio space for a lot of experimentation in the 1990s. This was filmed in the upper front room which served as studio and office space.

I had been experimenting with lenses to create an aerial image in front of a projector for transferring to video without filming the projected image on a white wall or piece of paper. The filming is spectacular, what’s less obvious are the small autobiographical elements. At the time I was spending a lot of time in photographic darkrooms, developing, printing and teaching. Some of the paraphernalia made it home such as the enlargers’ condenser lenses.

25 March –what goes around

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A very early piece of Super 8 filming, on St Andrew’s Cross roundabout. I had walked up the hill from Plymouth Video Workshop, based in Plymouth Arts Centre circa 1987/8.

I had learned photography at college as part of my biology course, and developed video skills in the workshop, but Super 8 was a new adventure. I recall playing this film on a Bolex back-projector and hearing Annette Kemp, the workshop director, commenting on the beautiful footage to someone on the phone. At some stage the word ‘film’ was added to the name, becoming Plymouth Film and Video Workshop. This was the beginning of an understanding that there was something of a schism between filmmaking and the newer independent video production. This line was blurred for me as I’d come to video via photography which was all ‘analogue’ at the time.

[Having selected the first shot, the following second of footage appended to the editing timeline contains an in-camera edit, that I discovered at the end of the month when reviewing the whole sequence.]

24 March – lapsing time

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The living room mantlepiece in Beaumont Avenue with daffodils and artwork from Plymouth Art Centre where I worked in the film workshop, but also as a gallery technician for Artangel’s James Lingwood and then Rosie Greenlees.

Working at the Art Centre was a wonderful education having come from a science background: contemporary visual art and artists, huge events like TWSA 3D, driving exhibitions around the country and a whole new world of film to absorb in the cinema.