| edit: [n:ja] |
| directed: [n:ja] |
| script: [n:ja] |
| duration: 4 min |
| year of production: 2002 |
| sound: Radian (TG11) |
| medium: Beta, miniDV |
| thanks to : Onedotzero |
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The
beginning of is similar to a drive through the city: 'Let’s
go for a ride,' high energy. The camera pans swiftly from left
to right, looking at what’s going on. The beat sets the tempo.
The car’s put into gear: Take-off.
The story plays out in the viewers’ head rather than in front of
their eyes. [n:ja] shows nothing more than pure motion along spatial coordinates
which is driven by Radian’s pulsing soundtrack. So much 'reality' – in
other words details, color and representation – has been removed
from the original views of this ride that solely remnants and a basic structure
comprise the video image. In the first 'shot' we seem to recognize
passers-by hurrying in different directions. The point-of-view moves in
the opposite direction, following individuals until two parallel lines
running from left to right enter the frame as a graphic element, seeming
to set our eyes on a rail.
[n:ja] makes use of the viewing options available during a car ride: the
arrow-like movement forward into image’s depth and, at a right angle
out of the side window, the perception of motion as a horizontal gliding.
The right-angled system of lines formed by streets and building façades
corresponds to modern functionalism’s urban vocabulary of forms:
the grid which provides the basis for the layout of cities and buildings
since the modern age was born in New York and Chicago and went on to its
triumphant advance around the world. The speed of the series of images
and sounds and the visual associations with main streets, skyscrapers and
glass façades continue creating again and again
the irresistibly fascinating aspect which signifies metropolis and mobility
as topoi of the modern age. And the realization that the never-fulfilled
promises of this age to produce something better, more beauty and more
justice have lost nothing of their seductive power in spite of what has
(not) happened so far. (Stella Rollig) Translation: Steve Wilder |
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