Sean Cubitt on Sun, 8 Mar 1998 21:35:02 +0100 (MET) |
[Date Prev] [Date Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Date Index] [Thread Index]
<nettime> Anxious Loves (Part 2 0f 2) |
growing awareness of the democracy of sounds. The struggles between sound and image have reached no similar plateau. Here is Jean Renoir, interviewed in 1961 by Jacques Rivette: 'Accepting dubbing means accepting that the dialogue is not a true dialogue; it means refusing to believe in the kind of mysterious connection between the trembling of a voice, the expression . . . in short, it means that we have ceased to believe in the unity of the individual' (Renoir 1989: 149). Renoir is absolutely right: a cinema premised on the integral individual must refuse dubbing, and probably, if it is to respect the integrity of the world, it must refuse incidental music too. The alternative is to start from a premise of schizophrenia as the common state of hybrid identities whose elements are not blended or fluid but in conflict. At issue then is not just the relation of sound to image but more crucially still the relation between sounds as they relate to the relations between shots, a cinema of relationships rather than objects. Chion argues, against Arnheim, that there is no distinct soundtrack apart from the film as long as it cannot be heard and comprehended as a separate entity, suggesting that even the experiments of Godard and Duras are experiments in the dependency of sound on image, the montage of sounds onto the image. Even sounds which receive no visual justification, 'sounds which are called autonomous', can only derive their autonomy 'from the absence of justification in the image . . . [they] are appreciated in the same way as diegetic sounds, and their non-belonging to the action is the only criterion for their being set apart. If that is not to define sound according to criteria of visualisation or non-visualisation, and so always in relation to the field of the screen, what is it?' (Chion 1972: 79). This mutuality need not, Chion makes clear, be restricted to the construction of diegetic space in realist or classical modes. And Chion is right again, if not of the audiovisual text, then of the audience's relation to it: up to a certain point, audiences will compose a gestalt, a wholeness out of even the most disparate elements. But that 'certain point' may be the point at which the audience's sense of self undergoes sea-change. For what we have now is a cinema which nostalgically re-presents as whole a subjectivity which, in other ways, is already fragmented and increasingly open. What is missing from this part of his analysis is the audience itself, the other sound source. In order to understand our relationship with the audiovisual, we have to understand first of all the silence with which we greet them: their lack of response to our attempts to dialogue with them; our acquiescence in that silence as we shush our neighbours in order to hear what will not be repeated for our benefit (not, at least, without further payment). The first challenge of digital multimedia should be to undo that acquiescent silence. Secondly, Chion is interested in the creation of a virtual space in the sound cinema, and I have tried to show how that virtuality is premised on the absence of the audience, or at least their fictionalisation. What is missing is an art of mutual dependency, which can only be achieved by reengineering multimedia devices away from the lone user. If we consider a complex sound event like carnival, with its mixture of professional and amateur, performance and playback, amplification and direct sound, music, talk and noise, and recognise in it the mobility of the audience as its constitutive factor, we can perhaps begin to understand what an audiovisual art form might be that was not anchored to the integrated individual, and which was prepared to develop aesthetically along the lines of social evolution. Chion is correct to observe that within the framework of the traditional cinema, with its screen, loudspeakers and seating, sound can only be anchored in the image or subversive of it without ever being able to break free. The silent audience is also sedentary: this is the price of spatialising the virtual environments of neo-classical cinema. The challenge for multimedia is to mobilise the audience in both physical and soundspace. The design of our machines is too definite to allow for evolution towards that social space of mobility and sound-making. What is there to hope for but serendipity, the primal soup of evolution? Ren=E9 Clair, discussing the advent of the sound film in 1929, catches the desperation and the necessity of this hope. His editor at the magazine Pour Nous, Alexandre Arnoux, reporting on the new technology from London, had asked whether he had participated in a second birth of cinema, or at its death. Clair responded: 'If chance -- a few grains of sand in the industrial machine -- does not come along to foil the plans of the financiers of the cinema, we must place our wager on death, or at least a long sleep that resembles it.' (Clair 1972: 129). We look anxiously -- as anxiety is a positive thing -- towards the digital arts to break out from the agendas of the profit motive, to destabilise the apparent givenness of our machines, and to research and develop a more complex interaction among our media than their entrapment in the industrialised dialectic of desire, stasis and mobility has produced so far: an art in which the love of sound for image and image for sound might recognise both their infinite separation, and their finite proximity. Such forms are emergent in installation work, where the image is spatialised, and in the architectural music of Xenakis, who quite simply discovered that turning the loudspeakers outwards into the world, rather than inwards to the individualised listener, could break through the stasis and loneliness of listening. Frequently criticised for the eclecticism and dispersal of his immense microtonal chords and the distraction of his architectural use of light, Xenakis' work exemplifies music's continuing ambition to produce beauty, even out of the shards and fragments of a soundscape now without unifying principle. beyond Xenakis, other artists have engaged with the aural in a way that his totalising music environment cannot. The local is addressed directly in Miroslaw Rogala's 1997 interactive sound installation Electronic Garden Naturealization, installed in a park in Chicago renowned for its soapbox orators, with historical samples and samples of speech from residents and local figures associated with the free-speech movement like Studs Terkel (cf Rogala 1997). The multiple samples are motion-activated in a skeletal pavilion, providing a counter-soundtrack to the square's ordinary inner-city soundscape, and to the deliberate or accidental triggering of one or many samples. By standing close to a single loudspeaker, the words of any one sample can be distinguished, but the piece produces also a pool of sound, a fountain of human babble, whose elements perform a kind of local and utopian freedom. On a far different scale is Knowbotic Research's Anonymous Muttering of 1996, another outdoor, open-cage structure, this time linking lights and multiple speakers to sound-generators triggered by a combination of movement within the structure and net interventions. The openness to the environment and the interaction with other people it shares with Rogala's piece. But the net connections give it another dimension, a geographical sense of the particularity of the space one occupies here and now, and its place on the edge of a vaster, inhumanly-scaled activity of communication on a planetary scale. The intense engagement with the local material experience, the necessity of interacting with others, the refusal of closure, architectural or temporal, and the sense of connectivity too in Mutterings suggest ways out of the organicist impasse of the total artwork, whether it be the colonial ambitions of music, or the controlled environments of Universal Studio Tours. The history of cinema, as the experimental ground of multimedia, has been one of displacements, most of all the displacement of inter- and intrasubjective dialectics onto the time and the space of the screen. As we learn to live with our own fragmentation, the necessity of endlessly reproducing new symbolic formations of unity is gone, and we can perhaps return to explorations of the real. Until multimedia make a radical break with the older audiovisual media, they will be unable to escape their hierarchies and teach us new ways to be social. The alternative is the 'ride' movie, the accentuated form of spectacular and near-zero-narrative films used in adventure rides and IMAX spectaculars, in which the worst aspects of the artificially-resolved dialectic of sound and image will continue to reinforce a hyperindividuated subject for accelerated capital, afraid to love and in flight from death -- the anxious subjects of the denial of reality. Our anxious loves must be enacted in the relations between sounds, and between sounds in their relation to images. The day of the image may also be over, as we lose the anxiety that ties us to the endless dialectics of indexicality and representation, discovering that the purposes of culture are not to give us objects and accounts of objects, but relationships with others. Indeed, the most impressive works of the present are more interested in light than images: one imagines an art composed of colours, digitally fragmenting and recombining, in the same democracy that music has fought and fights for. Only then can multimedia take up the utopian task for which we have invented them. THIS PAPER IS A REVISED VERSION OF A TALK GIVEN AT THE DIGITAL EQUINOX CONFERENCE, ORGANISED BY THE DRUM AT THE BIRMINGHAM CONSERVATOIRE, BIRMINGHAM, ENGLAND, JANUARY 27 1997 REFERENCES. Adorno, Theodor W and Hans Eisler (1947 [1994]), Composing for the =46ilms, Oxford University Press,New York, reprinted by Athlone Press, London. Arnheim, Rudolf (1958), 'A New Laoco=F6n: Artistic Composites and the Talking Film' in Film as Art, Faber & Faber, London, pp 164-189. Baudrillard, Jean (1983), Simulations trans Paul Foss, Paul Patton and Philip Beitchman, Semiotext(e), New York. Bordwell David, Janet Staiger and Kristin Thompson (1985), Classical Hollywood Cinema: Film Style and Mode of Production to 1960, Routledge, London. Born, Georgian (1995), Rationalizing Culture: IRCAM, Boulez and the Institutionalization of the Avant-Garde, University of California Press, Berkeley. Chion, Michel (1992), Le Son au cin=E9ma, (nouvelle edition), Cahiers du Cin=E9ma, Collection Essais, Paris. Hunt, Frederick Vinton (1978), Origins in Acoustics: The Science of Sound from Antiquity to the Age of Newton, Yale University Press, New Haven. Kalinak, Kathryn (1992), Settling the Score: Music and the Classical Hollywood Film, University of Wisconsin Press, Madison WI. MacDonald, Duncan B. (1901), 'Emotional Religion in Islam as Affected by Music and Singing: Being a Translation of the Book of the Ihya 'Ulum ad-Din of al-Ghazzali with Analysis, Annotation and Appendices', Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society. Marx, Karl (1976), Capital, volume 1, trans Rodney Livingstone, NLB/Penguin, London. Metz, Christian (1980), 'Aural Objects', trans Georgia Gurrieri, in Rick Altman (ed). O'Brien, Flann (1967), The Third Policeman, Hart-Davis MacGibbon, London. Plato (1965), Timaeus, trans H.D.P. Lee, Penguin, Harmondsworth. Renoir, Jean (1989), Renoir on Renoir: Interviews, Essays and Remarks, trans Carol Volk, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge. Rogala, Miroslaw (1997), 'E-garden' at http://www.mcs.net/~rogala/home.html. Schaeffer, Pierre (1966), Trait=E9 des objets musicaux, Seuil, Paris. Toop, David (1995), Ocean of Sound: Aether Talk, Ambient Sound and Imaginary Worlds, Serpent's Tail, London. Vertov, Dziga (1972), 'Naissance du Cin=E9-Oeil', Articles, journaux, projects, trad Sylviane Moss=E9 et Andr=E9e Robel, Cahiers du Cin=E9ma/10:18, Paris. -- Sean Cubitt Screen Studies Liverpool John Moores University Dean Walters Building St James Road Liverpool L1 7BR England T: 44 (0)151 231 5030 =46: 44 (0)151 231 5049 U: http://www.livjm.ac.uk/~mccscubi/screen.html --- # distributed via nettime-l : no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a closed moderated mailinglist for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: majordomo@icf.de and "info nettime" in the msg body # URL: http://www.desk.nl/~nettime/ contact: nettime-owner@icf.de