Notes from the Underground Part Five — Escaping Muybridge's Curse (Can We?)
The main difference, as I "see" it, between one approach, "photo-realism," (being a response to societal models, at once derived from and enforcing them), and the other, "phenomenological, poetic, magical," (being an attempt at seeing the appearing as it appears, bereft of societal models, or at least, seeing those models as models), is that the former is a tool of status quo, while the latter is one of renewal and discovery.
Aided perception has at least two aspects, one (the most common) reinforces preconceptions, asking "me" to conform, giving me praise if "I" do, singling "me "out as a good conformist.
This, I earlier called "aided perception #1."
The other form of aided perception literally rips open the societal box and makes room for "my" contribution in such a way as to establish my subjectivity as an (the) essential factor.
This I will call "aided perception #2."
One of the best examples of "aided perception #2" I have seen lately is the Qatsi Trilogy, an exceptional example of aided-perception-based work that opens vistas, helping us see as if for the first time (if we take the journey) and renew our connection with the magic that our "ordinary reality" truly is.
I had not seen Koyaanisqatsi since the early Eighties, and it really hit me between the eyes this time, or as Godfrey Reggio would say, "Right in the solar plexus!"
The idea of leaving space between the music and the images so that the viewer can get "in there" is brilliant, it shows how forcing the music and the images to be "on" all of the time is really a form of propaganda, bordering on fascism!
It's one more example of how easily we can deny the otherness of the other, and how we can deny the mystery that we are to ourselves.
This reminds me of the two poles between which we seem to always swing, "power" and "compassion."
"Power" has been dominating animation for a very long time; one hopes compassion is now ready to start appearing more often.
How futile (or even hostile) so much of animation now comes across to me after seeing Koyaanisqatsi again. What a tremendous waste of resources and creative energy the making of habitual animation appears to be!
So little current animation contributes to this "enlightening" category, so many of the works shown in animation festivals and on AWN (for example) are trapped in some sickly obligation to be "funny" or "smart" or "cynical," and their reason for being seems to be to cater to the lowest common denominator, thus reinforcing its grip on our daily life. ("Life is a bitch and then you die.")
Surely, there's got to be more to animation and to life than that?
There have got to be many amongst us who can sense that there is potentially much more to animation than telling (funny) stories, and that, indeed, animation can be a major contributor to one of (if not the) most important aspects of life, the search for meaning.
In my next and last article, I hope to be able to show examples of animation that are working away from the "aided perception #1" model, and which contribute to the opening of the doors that "aided perception #2" may make possible.
Jean Detheux is an artist who, after several decades of dedicated work with natural media, had to switch to digital art due to sudden severe allergies to paint fumes. He is now working on ways to create digital 2D animations that are a continuation of his natural media work. He has been teaching art in Canada and the U.S., and has works in many public and private galleries.























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