Un Chien Andalou

credits: https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0020530/mediaviewer/rm670974208

Shock, horror and confusion – these are just few of the words that can describe the cinematic collaboration between Luis Bunuel and Salvador Dali. The idea behind Un Chien Andalou was born in Dali’s house in Spain, where the two surrealists went for a short vacation. There, Bunuel shared his strange dream of a cloud slicing the moon in halt that looked like a razor, cutting human’s eyeball. Captivated by the story, Dali shared his own dream of ants crowing from man’s hand. Spontaneously, as they were still discussing their dreams, Dali proposed Bunuel to create a movie together, and they started writing down their ideas. Their aim was to provoke the public, to shock and frustrate it, by showing irrational and unthinkable pictures. The result is a sixteen minutes experimental movie, with no plot where absurd situations take place, and make the movie jump from one story to another. 

Un Chien Andalou (1929)

The title Un Chien Andalouitself does not make logical sense: translated to English it means An Andalusian dog. For opening scene was chosen Bunuel’s dream with the moon and the cloud. It is a shot a man who is sharpening the blade of a razor, played by Bunuel himself, who then uses it to slice the eyeball of a woman (Simone Mareuil). Then, the non-linear story line of the movie follows a parade of scenes, not connected to one another, showing irrational images like a hand crawling with ants, man (Pierre Batcheff) sexually assaulting woman (Simone Mareuil), and a man (Pierre Batcheff) whose mouth is replaced by an armpit. 

Un Chien Andalouis a revolutionary short movie, presenting shocking images and making bold statements of controversial like sexuality and religion. These images serve an answer to the fake values and moral of the modern bourgeoisie society. These disturbing shots, appearing on the screen one after another, cause confusion and frustration in the audience. The absence of a plot leaves the viewer with feeling like the movie is a representation of a dream, where scenes are changing every minute and things are constantly appearing and disappearing. Thus, the film could be possibly interpreted as an attempt to recreate the process of dreaming, using the limited possibilities of the cinema.  Moreover, even though Bunuel states that the aim of the movie was to make no sense at all and that no rational explanation can be created from any of the images presented, psychoanalysis can help to shed more light into the dark, twisted mind of the film.

Un Chien Andalou (1929)

Themes of sexual desire can be found in the image of the hand crawling with ants, which is a metaphor of strong sexual desires. The moon from the opening scene is a metaphor of purity and virginity. Thus, the act of cutting of the woman’s eyeball by the man’s razor implies the motif of the rape and introduces the theme of sexuality that will be reintroduced further in the following scenes. According to psychoanalysis, the scene represents an act of castration. Furthermore, from a Freudian point of view, the scene is connected with the myth of Oedipus, where he blinds himself after he founds out what he has done. 

The violent act against the woman can be seen as a reference to the psychoanalytical movie Secrets of a Soul, where in the opening scene a man is shaving his beard and unconsciously cuts his wife’s neck. Both movies have the motifs of punishment, sadism, and castration. However,Secrets of a Soulfollows an organized storyline, the plot shows how the main character used psychoanalysis to undergo the process of catharsis, and the audience can draw the line between dreams and reality.

 One of the flaws of Un Chien Andalouis that it cannot be accepted as an accurate representation of a dream, but as an attempt of such. The reason is that dreams happen spontaneously, and most of the times are beyond the control of the dreamer, where in cinema even without following a written script, the actions taking place in front of the camera are planned in advance and thought through. Through the juxtaposition of action, music and story, the director successfully creates an atmosphere of suspense and horror, filled with almost unbearable images for the audience. Therefore, even though the Bunuel and Dali claim that there is no rational explanation of any of the scenes, and no meaning could be derived from it, the plot without a plot is well thought out to provoke and shock the audience. 

Having in mind everything stated above, it could be concluded that is Un Chien Andaloua brilliant and revolutionary movie which purpose is to scandalize the society and challenge the known standards in the cinema production. No matter if one loves it or hates, one thing is sure – it will not leave the viewer emotionless. 

Bread and Butter,

Eyes and Razors,

Nikol

Blind Vaysha: The Girl that sees everything

What I love most about animation is that it is a powerful tool for storytelling. It is a combination of visual effects, sounds and narrative that provokes all senses.  While watching movies we allow ourselves to become immersed in a different universe were we are part of the character and their stories. 

“That’s why there are fairy tales, that’s why people invented them. That’s why there are songs, too… to get you away from reality, so you can realize that you’re human.”

—Elin Pelin, Kosachi 

For my presentation, I chose to talk about the Bulgarian animator Theodor Ushev. I decided to research his work because he is a renowned animator, and I was sure that I would find plenty of sources to base my analysis on. Not very creative of me, but it was a practical decision. The man was nominated by the Academy, after all. 

However, after completing my research, I felt so humbled and inspired by this man. The true value of his work can be measured not by the numerous awards that Ushev has won, but by the strong feelings his movies provoke in the audience. I saw his last animation, Physics of Sorrow, just before I went back home for the holidays, and it left me in tears. However, that’s another topic that I will discuss in my next post.

With his masterpiece Blind Vaysha, Theodore Ushev takes us on a journey through the forth dimension to remind us something so simple, yet often forgotten – to live in the present. 

Political and Social environment in Bulgaria:

In the sixties, Bulgaria was a communist country part of the “Eastern Bloc” and censorship and propaganda favoring the party dominated the social and art world of the country. The access to any foreign goods was highly limited, and the only way to buy American jeans, for example, was through the black market.

The production of the first black and white TV had just started and there was a ten-year-waiting list for buying a car. The major rule in art, during the Soviet regime, was to use the so-called “socialist realism” to serve the mission of the party in charge.

Theodore Ushev:

credits: https://bnr.bg/en/post/101166749/theodore-ushevs-the-physics-of-sorrow-merits-special-mention-at-tiff

In these dark for the Bulgarian art years, where art was just a commissioned work for the party and freedom of speech and expression were non-existing, in a small city called Kyustendil one of the most successful and renown experimental animators Theodore Ushev was born. Son of the painter Asen Ushev, he studied Scenic Arts in Fine Art High-school in Plovdiv and Graduated from the National Academy of Arts with Masters of Graphic Design. Part of a strict educational system with old traditions in art, he became an illustrator.

In 1999, ten years after the fall of communism, he moved to Canada in search of a better life. There he gained the reputation of an innovative and bold animator. Under the patronage of the National Film Board of Canada, he creates experimental short-movies that have won him numerous awards. His movie Gloria Victoria was shortlisted for an Academy Award in 2013, and his latest masterpiece – The physics of Sorrow is Canada’s this year’s entry. So far, his most famous work is the eight minutes short movie The Blind Vaysha.

Narrative:

Based on a story by the contemporary Bulgarian author Georgi Gospodinov, the movie tells the story of a girl with an unusual condition – she could see only the past with her left eye and the future with her right eye. Longing for the comfort of the past and the hopes of the future, Vaysha was trapped in the present.

It is a simple concept of lost hopes and dreams that is universal and relatable.

The story, as Ushev states, is a parabola of the modern person, who is so concentrated on his past and so desperate to see his future, that he is just lingering on the surface of the present, without actually living in it.

He found inspiration on how to portrait the story on “one-month immersive writing residence at Frontecraud Abbey”.

Sketch by Theo Ushev made at Fontevraud Abbey.
Credits: https://www.cartoonbrew.com/presented-by-the-nfb/director-theodore-ushev-bringing-blind-vaysha-life-four-dimensions-146560.html

The Medieval period, the Byzantine religious paintings and Bulgarian Rennessaince engravings, inspired him to create an animation using the so-called linocut style (originally, used to satisfy the need for more accessible religious art)

Ushev made his “Medieval fairytale” using a Cintique tablet. To recreate the original technique of engraving he never used the “undo” command on his computer while animating. He said:

“It creates a natural feeling of the unpredictable, of mistakes and the holy imperfection of the image – which is the basis of every creation”

He drew every color on a separate layer and animated them individually to create an engraving looking artwork. Some images have more than 64 layers.

Problem:

The problem of the unlived life.

We are not provided with an effective solution. After the visit of hundreds of healers and witches, the only solution for Vaysha is to “find a way to unite her vision”. Giving up on one of her “realities” would mean staying forever either in “the beginning of the book, where nothing has happened yet” or in “the black page of an already told story that has come to an end”.

Setting:

Inspired by the Abbey, Ushev incorporated the 12th-century old castle and village into the setting of the film.

‘Blind Vaysha’. National Film Board of Canada.

As for the duality of the screen, he found inspiration in contrast between the medieval city and the modern military base nearby.

Character:

Vaysha is a timeless character, she has no present, no home.

‘Blind Vaysha’. National Film Board of Canada.

“There is no unity of place and time this film. Vaysha ties to measure the time but it is not possible”

Vaysha is living in a four-dimension reality where the four dimensions are time.

Ushev says that Vaysha has “the Dorian Gray Effect’ – the same way his portrait is aging and he’s not changing in reality, Vaysha is changing her face without having her age

‘Blind Vaysha’. National Film Board of Canada.

He had to-draw her face in every scene to make it look different

Sound and Music:

The Canadian actress Caroline Dhavernas voices the film, in both English and French. Ushev did not want to influence her natural rhythm and timing by giving her visual cues, because he appreciates when artists contribute to the final artwork with their interpretation of the story.

‘Blind Vaysha’. National Film Board of Canada.

The narrator guides the guides through the movie, creating a progressive story. The two conversations happening at the same time in Vaysha’s head just add to the motif of duality in the life of the character.

“That’s one of the tragedies of her life, and also in ours, because we have these conversations in our heads: while we live in the present, we’re nostalgic about the past and afraid about what the future’s going to bring.”

Birth scene “Music for the funeral of Queen Mary” – following Gospodinov’s understanding that in the worlds there is just birth and death and nothing in between them.

‘Blind Vaysha’. National Film Board of Canada.

The rest of the movie, Ushev worked with the Bulgarian composer Nikola Gruev whose work is referred by the critics as “Balkan Psychedelic”

Performance:

The animation looks almost static.

Ushev strived for simplicity and re-did every action that seemed too complicated or complex. Theodore was afraid that by “over-animating” he would destroy the story. He was working alone to make it as personal as possible.

Conclusion:

In conclusion, I would like to say that the juxtaposition between image and sound, past and future, made the animation look like a tale of an old universal problem. The simplicity of the film makes the moral of the story accessible to everyone, without overstating it.

Reference:

Animation World Network. (2020). The Past and Future Torment the Present in Theodore Ushev’s ‘Blind Vaysha’. [online] Available at: https://www.awn.com/animationworld/past-and-future-torment-present-theodore-ushev-s-blind-vaysha [Accessed 5 Jan. 2020].

Connect, C. (2020). Director Theodore Ushev on Bringing ‘Blind Vaysha’ to Life in Four Dimensions. [online] Cartoon Brew. Available at: https://www.cartoonbrew.com/presented-by-the-nfb/director-theodore-ushev-bringing-blind-vaysha-life-four-dimensions-146560.html

Desowitz, B. (2020). ‘Blind Vaysha’: How Theodore Ushev’s Zeitgeist-Grabbing Short Taps Political Anxiety. [online] IndieWire. Available at: https://www.indiewire.com/2017/01/blind-vaysha-theodore-ushev-short-1201776201/ [Accessed 5 Jan. 2020].

The World of One REST[LESS] Artist

credits: www.instagram.com/itisnotkristin

The second part of my post about Restless is a conversation with one of the co-founders and head of Marketing of the theatre company – Kristin Bacheva. As found on her Instagram page, she is “a theatre-maker or curious human that loves aesthetics”. Recently, she published her first book – a collection of poems in Bulgarian and English. My role in this project of hers is that I made simple illustrations, based on my initial emotions provoked by the writings. However, this is the theme for another blog post, which I will write as soon as I get my hardcopy and start bragging about it to my family. 

I hope you have some midnight snack with you as you read our lovely conversation.

What is the theme of the play?

  • Rest[less] is a movement piece dissecting the phenomenon of burnout through the curious lense of a beehive.

What do you love about physical theatre, and why did you choose it over traditional theatre?

  • As I come from a dance background, I found in physical theatre a level of expression that resonates with who I am as a performer, and I kept choosing it over traditional theatre throughout my studies, which led me even into specializing in it deeper.

How do you use movement to express an idea or a feeling?

  • Firstly I use imagination to access the movement, which then expresses the idea or feeling that I am trying to tell.

Do you use Stanislavski’s questions when building a character?

  • Depending on the type of role I am working on. If it is a movement piece, I use physical acting methodologies (such as Michael Chekhov or Viewpoints), if I am working on building a character for a naturalistic play, I’d probably ask for Stanislavski’s help.

So what methods do you use when portraying an animal?

I’d use Chekhov’s Imaginary body exercise.
I would study the animal first- how it walks, sits, lies, eats, runs, communicates and all those details. After I’ve watched a couple of videos on YouTube as I tend to pick exotic animals that are not around us every day, I’d try to imagine the animal in front of me very precisely. Next, I’d imagine stepping into what I’ve imagined and physically make a step and get into the animal. Then I’d feel around how it is to be this animal and go for a walk around, exploring how it behaves and so on. Once I feel like I have it 100% (and in case I need to tone it down to a human character that behaves like a panther for example) I’d go down to 50% meaning I’d internalize the animal 50% and leave 50% of it to show on the outside, then 20% where physically the animal is not visible at all but I’m still imagining everything on the inside at  a 100%. Here we talk about body versus mind relationship or the psycho-physical.

Actually, the methods I used to build my character from rest[less] are the same. Although as my character is not real but built from my imagination, inspired by bees, I had to do some additional imagination work to create it before I step into it. And I only tuned it down to 60% when performing. I imagined myself in a cacoon being born for the first time (this is another exercise from Jaques Lecoq but slightly altered). I only imagined it, while lying on the floor. Then I saw my character ‘Bubar’, a weird looking bee with very long and a lot of body hair/bee fluff, massive antennas and skinny bones but with very big hands and feet. And after that, I went on doing the exercise from above until I had Bubar in my body.

Chekhov’s Imaginary Body Exercise is a new concept for me. I’ve studied Stanislavski’s System in both theory and practice in my old uni. I will try to combine both methods for my animal study, and hopefully, the others will be able to tell that I am a … well, we will see in a week.

Bread and Butter,

Salt and Peaches,

Weetaibix and Oat Milk (because dairy is bad for your skin duh),

Nikol

We are all REST[LESS]

credits: GOLKK fb page

On the 12th of November, I had the pleasure to watch the latest version of the show Restless by GOLKK Theatre Company at The Cockpit. GOLKK is a physical theater company, founded by graduate theater students from Canterbury. It all started as a university project for a graduation play. As time passed, however, they realized how much they enjoy working together and how great their collective energy.  Three years later, just as passionate and devoted as in the beginning, they are ready to present the third version of their original play called Restless

credits: GOLKK fb page

Even though I know Kristin for about three years now, I never had the chance to see any of her performances. Knowing nothing but the name of the show, I am sitting impatiently in the audience, waiting for my very first physical theater experience. The lights go off, and I find myself in a world where people are just worker bees, caught so tightly in their daily routines that they do not notice anything else. Day by day, they all do the same things over and over again – wake up, get ready, go to work, go home, go to bed. Even though their routines were different, the outcome was the same – they were all part of a vicious cycle, a made-up life deprived of meaning. Suddenly, one of the bees sees a light so bright and beautiful she forgets she has to work. Following this ray of happiness, she allows herself to feel free for the first time and just rest for a minute. Seeing one of their fellow workers happy, the other bees think she is crazy, so they drag her back to her “normal” life. Losing her only moment of joy, she goes back to being part of the soulless machine. 

Watching them play made me think about how our lives are just empty actions devoid of emotion and purpose. We live in a world in which we worship titles and money, completely ignoring our inner “wealth”. We buy objects we do not even need just for validation and to increase our levels of dopamine for a minute, and we pay for them with currency far more valuable than money – our time. 

We waste years on jobs we hate just to satisfy our artificial needs created by society. A society that accuses gambling of being immoral and marking it like a vise, but simultaneously promotes social platforms built on the same principles as the slots in a casino. A society where freedom of choice is just a concept and everyone is a part of a carefully targeted audience of an algorithm.

credits: moi (such a great photographer)

The play leaves the audience with an open ending: the last bee sees the light … and the curtains fall. So what will happen next? In the end, we are responsible for our happiness. As we know from the butterfly effect: even a small change could have a great impact. Sometimes, one person can spark the fire of a thousand others and break the system. 

But enough with my existential monologue.

From an animator’s point of view, watching the play showed me the power of movement. Even the slightest change in the behavior of the actors brought something new to the performance. Simply, by watching their daily routines, I was able to understand their characters and see their personality traits. Observing the sense of touch, I knew which two bees were a couple and that they have some unresolved issues with each other.

To learn more about physical theatre and how to use it more successfully, as we have to present our animal analysis in a week, I asked Kristin to tell me more about her experience and some practices she uses to prepare for her performances. I will post the short-no-so-much-of-an-interview conversation in the next couple of days. 

Bread & Butter,

Nicole

The Suspense of The Gaze: Hitchcock’s Psycho and Vertigo

Building upon Carla’s presentation about Female Representation in the film industry and “The Male Gaze” in cinema, I decided to share my research on “the gaze” found in two of the movies of one of my favorite movie directors – Alfred Hitchcock.

credits: https://www.mdsci.org/event/hitchcock-film-fest/

“Give them pleasure – the same pleasure they have when they wake up from a nightmare

This is how Alfred Hitchcock explains his filmmaking philosophy. Widely known as the king of suspense, had a sixty years career, throughout which he explored new revolutionary cinematic techniques and helped the development of the drama and psychological thriller genre tremendously. His movies are filled with suspense and terror, created through the brilliant use of juxtaposition of characters and sound, and camera movement.

Despite being so influential in the human psyche and emotions, Hitchcock’s opinion on psychoanalysis is rather controversial. He undermined the significance of it as a scientific field but found useful the psychoanalytical concepts and approaches in his narratives, as a tool to shock and scare the audience. His work is still influential, and film critics and scholars have written thousands of analyzes on movies like Psycho and Vertigo

One of the most notable psychoanalytical elements in a Hitchcock movie is what film critics and psychoanalysts call the look. The look“is like the cement that ties Hitchcock’s narratives together” (Walker, 177) as it is “a crucial structure feature in his films”. The change of perspective in his movies helps the audience identify with the protagonist and establishes a relationship between the spectator and the characters (Walker, 177). Clifford Manlove in her article Visual “Drive” and Cinematic Narrative: Reading Gaze Theory in Lacan, Hitchcock, and Mulvey, states that “Freud and Lacan’s theories focus on the interaction of pleasure and repetition necessary for subjectivity itself, whether masculine or feminine.” (90). In this way, Hitchcock used different cinematic techniques to “reinforce the power of looking in cinema” (90). Manlove discusses the slip between the gaze and the eye. The camera is “subjective”, and the viewers are forced to see the scenes from the point of view chosen by the director. Therefore, the spectators “gaze” is limited, and certain parts of the film are left without an answer on purpose.

The Gaze in Psycho:

credits: https://www.sothebys.com/en/buy/auction/2018/original-film-posters-online/24836f65-228f-4181-b733-542d0c7dee20

Psycho is unarguably one of the best horror and suspense films of all time. In this Hitchcock classic,this subjectivity of the gaze can be found in the occurrence that the audience never sees Norman talking to his mother. It is always someone who overhears them talking, but we never see the action. This creates an image of suspense and mysticism. In the article Hitchcock: The Murderous Gaze, in Psycho, William Rothman states that “the camera itself is called upon to suffer incarnation” (260) thus creating a mystic world of the movie where reality and fantasy merge and fuse. The cinematic apparatus shows the narrative through the gaze of the mother. There is a separation between the eye and the gaze. Marion’s vision is limited, she is a passive victim of a greater gaze. Hitchcock’s camera point of view separates the viewers from the heroine, but yet “reveals close familiarity with her mind” (269). The audience sees her consumed by her thoughts in her car in one of the first scenes when she had just escaped with a large sum of money. The scene can be analyzed as a visual representation of her nightmare where her mind is filled with doubts and the fear of being caught. 

Collage. Psycho (1960)

Cinematically, Hitchcock uses changes in the depth of the background of light and darkness to create an image of the parallel objective reality and the subjective mind of the protagonist. The gaze in Psychocan be analyzed through the uncanny – the Freudian concept of experiencing something familiar, yet unfamiliar that creates trouble in the mind, i.e. seeing something common in a new strange way. The uncanny is also connected to one’s desires. The main protagonists, Norman and Marion, are uncanny doubles of each other. At the end of the first scene, Marion looks straight to the camera and smiles. In the end of the movie, when Norman is caught, and the mystery is solved, he does exactly the same, which could be interpreted as a hidden symbol that both characters are in fact uncanny doppelgangers. They both have anxieties of being judged and accused of their crimes, presented by their inner voices. The mother’s gaze presses both Marion and Norman. However, while Marion is the passive object of the gaze, Norman is seen as an active viewer. At the beginning of the movie, in a scene where Marion says that she wants to have dinner with Norman in her house where the picture of her mother will be on the wall, indicates the presence of the gaze of authority. Later on in the film, we see the silhouette of Norman’s mother spying from the window. The audience never sees the mother, but her possessive and controlling gaze is present until the very end of the movie. It feels like the house itself is part of this “gaze” – the paintings on walls, the mirrors, and the stuffed animals starring at Norman and Marion as they have dinner together. 

Female Representation in Psycho:

Shower scene, Psycho (1960)

The heroine is a victim of the powerful male gaze: she is paranoid and anxious because she does not understand the intentions of the spectator. Even after changing her car and escaping from the eyes of the law, Marion is still a subject of the gaze of the camera. The audience follows her as she finds a safe place where she can stay over for the night, where she becomes a victim of Norman Bates’ “gaze of desire”. The male gaze is reinforced in the scene where Norman watches Marion undress through a hole in the wall. According to Rothman “this hole-within-a-hole is changed symbolically; it is an eye, and it is an emblem of female sexuality” (296). The audience’s point of view is “the deferred view” and we are watching Marion together with Norman, but we are furthermore in possession of the authoritarian gaze of Hitchcock’s “eye” – Norman is watching through the peephole as “a subject of the camera, a creature who can be framed in its view” (296). However, the greater gaze of the viewers is also limited as it is derived from the view of the naked body of the heroine. Hitchcock used cuts to limit the vision of the audience thus creating the feeling of suspense and ambiguity (297). 

The sequence in the shower is one of the most analyzed scenes in the history of cinema. In these iconic 45 seconds of Marion taking a shower, Hitchcock uses 78 camera setups and 52 cuts to create the brutal image of the murder without even showing the actual action. It is presented as a rape, an act of penetrating her intimate world, her “love scene” with the shower in the role of the partner (Rothman, 300). The point of view of the voyeuristic gaze in the scene is the shower. It is “the peephole through which our gaze penetrates the shower curtain and through which Norman’s gaze continues to possess the frame” (Rothman, 301). The shower is the “eye” through which the audience satisfies its voyeuristic desires (Rothman, 302). We are interested not in the act as a purifying from her crime ritual, but rather in “our fantasy of rape” which is “disavowal of our own desire” (304).

The Gaze in Vertigo:

credits: http://uicfilmphil.blogspot.com/2014/09/blog-response-ii-hitchcocks-vertigo.html

There are two types of gaze in the movie that present a “split between the eye and the gaze” (Manlove, 91): (1) Scottie’s gaze that kills Judi and her “failure” to be the woman from his fantasy, and (2) a greater gaze, which is the reason for Scottie’s vertigo, appearing in the opening scene of the accident on the rooftop. She describes Hitchcock’s “Vertigo shots” used to present this mental occurrence as they were “created by simultaneously tracking the camera backward while also zooming the camera lens in; an effect that is repeated in several scenes to mark the presence of the gaze” (92). In the book Hitchcock’s Motifs, Michael Walker states that “the act of watching” is a significant part of Hitchcock’s director style. Hitchcock’s ‘audience-identification techniques”, part of which is cutting, editing and repetition of the scenes, the apparatus shows the narrative from the point of view of the “voyeuristic hero”. 

Female Representation in Vertigo:

credits: http://uicfilmphil.blogspot.com/2014/09/blog-response-ii-hitchcocks-vertigo.html

The female is a representation of the male fantasy and it’s doomed to die because death is the only way to satisfy one’s desires. Judi is a real woman, and Scottie is only interested in her just because she reminds him of his dead fantasy. He wants to project his dreams onto her, and thus kill the “real” her. Judie, led by her desire to be loved, suppressed her identity in order to satisfy his romantic fantasies. In the hotel scene, where Judy fully “transformed” herself into Madeline, the three hundred and sixty degree shot of the camera of Judy and Scottie kissing creates a spiral movement around them “emphasizing once again that we cannot be rid of spirals and their spectral suggestion of sexuality” (Belton, 69). The narrative of the movie follows the spiral motif of repetition. Scottie falls in love with Madeline and loses her because his vertigo takes over him and he cannot save her when she jumps from the bell tower. He finds Judy and projects his love and adoration he had for Madeline just to lose her the same way he lost Madeline, further enhancing the unbreakable cycles of human nature. Furthermore, in a shocking plot twist, Judy is revealed to be an actress hired by Gavin Elster to help him to cover up the murder of his wife. So, actually, Scottie loses the same woman twice, and they were both just a fantasy, an illusion of his own creation. 

In conclusion I would say that Hitchcock fulfills his audience’s unconscious desires by giving them the active role of the one with the gaze, observing and peaking onto his subjects. The director skillfully plays with the emotion of the audience by the juxtaposition of the camera and the characters. Even without considering the “scientific validity” of psychoanalysis, Hitchcock transforms it into a useful cinematic technique to create an ambiguous world where nothing is what it seems to be. 

Bread and Butter,

Salt and Peaches,

Nicole


References 

Freud, Sigmund. “The Uncanny.” Art and Literature. Vol. 14. Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1985.

Belton, James. Alfred Hitchcock’s Vertigo and the Hermeneutic Spiral cite. Canada: The University of British Columbia, 2017. Print. 

—. Three Essays on the Theory of Sexuality. Ed. James Strachey. 1949 Paperback. Simple Books, 2011.

Lacan, Jacques. “The Split between the Eye and the Gaze.” The Four Fundamental Concepts of Pyscho-Analysis. New York: Norton & Company, 1981. 67-105. Print.

Manlove, Clifford T. “Visual ‘Drive’ and Cinematic Narrative: Reading Gaze Theory in Lacan, Hitchcock, and Mulvey.” Cinema Journal, vol. 46, no. 3, Spring 2007, pp. 83–108. 

Rebello, S. Alfred Hitchcock and the Makin of Psycho. London: St. Martin’s Griffin. 1998.

Rothman, William. Hitchcock : The Murderous Gaze. Vol. 2nd edition, State University of New York Press, 2012. 

Sandis, Constantine. 2009.Hitchcock’s conscious use of Freud’s unconscious”. Europe’s journal of psychology.Oxford Brookes University, 2009:56-81. 

Walker, Michael. Hitchcock’s Motifs. Amsterdam University Press, 2005. 

Wexman, Virginia Wright. “The Critic as Consumer: Film Study in the University, ‘Vertigo’, and the Film Canon.” Film Quarterly, vol. 39, no. 3, 1986, pp. 32–41. 

United Visual Artists: Other Spaces in The Store X The Vinyl Factory

In the beginning of October, I had the chance to visit an absolute stunning contemporary show in The Store X The Vinyl Factory.

UVA is an exhibition for the modern person caught by the technological world. The futuristic setting, accompanied by the numerous visual and sound effects, create an artificial universe, where time and matter are relative. For the full experience, you should just allow your senses to guide you through the installations, give your mind the freedom to wander and create its interpretations.

The exhibition features three large installations:

Our Time

As you enter the building and walk through a dark corridor, you will find yourself in what seems an infinite space with swinging lights. Walking under the kinetic structures, you feel like a part of a movie production showing the future of humankind.

The Vanishing Point

Inspired by the Renaissance painters Da Vinci and Durer, the laser installation simultaneously creates and destroys space in front of your eyes. Follow the perspective point, and you will end up in an infinite illusion.

The Great Animal Orchestra

The project is presented in collaboration with Fondation Cartier pour l’art Contemporain Paris. The seminal bio-acoustician Bernie Krause uses the recordings of animals in their natural habitat, to create a transcendental experience that will take your mind into the depth of the ocean. The average duration of the movies is fifteen minutes, and the best way to experience them is by laying down on a bean bag, closing your eyes, and losing yourself into the dark woods with the wolfs.

In case you want to visit the exhibition:

Dates: 2nd October – 8th December 2019
Times: Tuesday – Saturday, 12pm – 7pm, Sunday 12pm – 6pm
Address: The Store X 180 The Strand, London WC2R 1EA
Entry: Free

Website:https://thevinylfactory.com/films/other-spaces-inside-the-immersive-world-of-united-visual-artists/

I tried to upload some of the videos I made that day, but unfortunately the platform does not support files bigger than 10MB. So, enjoy one of the many pictures I took ( without complying with the GDPR regulations because I’m a rebel and I’m doing it for the art kinda talk) until I figure out an effective way to compress my 100MB videos.

Peaches and Salt,

Nicole

(D)Art Vader loves Balenciaga and pasta.

A long time ago in a (business) gaalaxy far, far away...

a girl decided to escape from the tyranny of the numerological problems of the Finance planet, and followed her dream to become an artist. After spending four years of her life practicing the financial witchcraft, the force was weak with her. She devoted all her time reading the sacred art text, building her portfolio. A couple of months later, still figuring out how to survive and adapt on the Art planet, she took all her pink clothes and left for the rainiest yet super-mega artsy planet CentralSaintMartinous. She was finally ready to join the (d)art side. 

Soooo, enjoy my fight with the resistance and some dopeass posts about art, bags, more bags, shoes, and eventually some existential crisis. 

Love & Peace,

Bread & Butter,

Salt & Peaches,

Bye. 

Nicole a.k.a. Nicoco a.k.a. Art Vader