Being and Doing

A film by Stuart Brisley and Ken McMullen (1984)
Film, B&W and colour, 55 minutes
Arts Council/Concord Media Collection
http://t.co/PB5ecskgK7

Performance art is a term used to describe a live art activity that fits
uneasily into critical categories. It is ephemeral and often dangerous.

In ‘Being and Doing’ filmmaker Ken McMullen and artist Stuart Brisley
collaborate to search out the origins of performance art, connecting it not
to modernism but to ancient folk rituals in England and Europe. These
rituals offer a drama where the division between performer and audience has
not been institutionalised. They testify to powerful behavioural traditions
which have survived the transition from an agricultural to an industrial
society.

Performance art springs from these traditions but self consciously draws on
the artist’s sense of alienation and isolation within society. The artists
present in this film are chosen because their work challenges those who
regulate the institutions of society.
The recordings of the performances have been extensively manipulated: the
images slowed down, fragmented: details isolated to construct a filmic
memory of the events. This process, combined with a jagged editing style,
both reinstates the original impact while giving the film the grainy
rough-edged quality of a newsreel.

The film confronts, in its construction , the same questions as those posed
by the artists represented and stands in the same relation to traditional
documentary as performance work does to conventional art. It demonstrates
that performance art is as much about the observer as the observed.

Performance extracts by: Tibor Hajas (Hungary), Rasa Todosijevic
(Yugoslavia), lain Robertson (Scotland), Zbigniew Warpechowski (Poland),
Milan Knizak (Czechoslovakia), Natalia LL (Poland), Ewa Partum (Poland),
Jan Micoch (Czechoslovakia), Sonia Knox (N. Ireland), Jerzy Beres (Poland),
Stuart Brisley (England), The Haxey Hood (England), Padstow Hobbyhorse
(England).
_______________________________________________
NetBehaviour mailing list
[email protected]
http://www.netbehaviour.org/mailman/listinfo/netbehaviour

Reply via email to