Through Some Trick of Nature It Appears:
From Proto-Cinema to Expanded Cinema
Matt Rossoni
Film Studies Undergraduate Thesis
Advisor: Dr. Tobias Nagl
Second Reader: Dr. Janelle Blankenship
April 2013
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Acknowledgments
I would like to thank both Tobias Nagl and Janelle Blankenship for guiding me through
this thesis. More importantly, they have had more influence on my academic career than
anyone else, as the subjects of this study demonstrate, and without them it would truly
not be possible.
Though it’s unlikely he will ever read this, I would also like to thank Bruce McClure for
first exposing me to expanded cinema. When I asked you if you would be willing to send
me video recordings of more of your performances, you said you would expect nothing
less than an entire book. I’m afraid a few paragraphs will have to do. See you in Windsor
Bruce!
Title page image: a biunial lantern, taken from Ceram, 47.
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Table of Contents
Introduction
4
Chapter One – Expanded Showmanship
14
Chapter Two – Cinema Without Borders
38
Chapter Three – Black Box, White Cube, and the Proscenium Arch
79
Conclusion
109
Endnotes
114
Bibliography
135
Filmography
143
3
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Introduction
The first encounter I had with expanded cinema was in 2010 at the Media City
International Film and Video Festival in Windsor, Ontario. It was my first time attending
the festival at a time when I was very inexperienced and uninformed about avant-garde
cinema. Most of what I had seen and read about were canonical avant-garde films like
those of Duchamp, Eggeling, Deren, Brakhage, and Anger, and I knew practically
nothing about the contemporary experimental scene, including the names of its ‘major
players.’ A friend who had attended the festival in prior years was feverishly excited
about one Bruce McClure, an artist from Brooklyn. When I entered the theatre to watch
McClure’s program, I saw a large table wedged over-top the seats near the back of the
auditorium. On it were three 16mm projectors, a sound board, and a dazzling array of
guitar pedals. I was fascinated by the set-up and took a seat just behind the table. What
followed – Through Some Trick of Nature It Appears – was like nothing I had ever
experienced before. Positive and negative images of birds pulsated on the screen with a
near-deafening percussive yet minimal beat. My concentration shifted between the
images on-screen and Bruce standing behind the table, with a small flashlight held in his
mouth, illuminating the soundboard while his fingers probed the switches. Only later did
I discover that McClure’s performance was not an anomaly, that there was in fact a rich,
sophisticated, and exciting history of live cinema.
Despite its age, maturity, and widespread recognition amongst art and academic
circles, expanded cinema is still a lesser-known subject whose full history is yet to be
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discovered and written. The 2011 anthology Expanded Cinema: Art, Performance, Film,
published by Tate Publishing, is an excellent and comprehensive guide to understanding
this reclusive history: but it is only a launching point. There is still a great deal of work to
be unearthed and examined from a number of different points-of-view.
The term “expanded cinema” first became popularized in the mid-1960s in
conjunction with the multimedia performances given by Stan Vanderbeek and Carolee
Schneemann. Starting in 1964 Jonas Mekas regularly wrote about “absolute,” or as he
would soon call it, “expanded” cinema in his Village Voice column. In 1970 Gene
Youngblood published his influential book Expanded Cinema, the first extended survey
on the subject and the first to consider video as an art form. While many, if not most of
the artists who emerged in the 1960s whose work we now recognize as “expanded
cinema,” were unaware of the term, it is now a highly visible and separate category. Film
festivals regularly encourage calls for expanded cinema, multiple projection, and
projection performances, or other kinds of live-based events. In 1973, a major exhibition
at the National Film Theatre entitled “the Festival of Independent Avant-Garde Film”
featured important “expanded” artists like Malcolm Le Grice, Annabel Nicolson, the duo
Wilhelm and Birgit Hein, Gill Eatherly, William Raban, and Ken Jacobs. 1976 saw the
first festival dedicated solely to this type of filmmaking, the Festival of Expanded
Cinema held at the ICA in London, which featured the likes of Guy Sherwin, Lis Rhodes,
Ian Kerr, Raban (again) and Nicky Hamlyn. Now in its 7th year, “Mono No Aware” is an
annual expanded cinema festival held in Brooklyn. Clearly expanded cinema has carved
out its own niche within critical avant-garde discourse and practice, though in many ways
it is easier to say what expanded cinema might be rather than what it is.
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To propose an exact definition for this mode of cinematic practice would suggest
drafting a number of criteria or conventions that a piece must meet in order to be
considered expanded cinema. If it were at all possible the parameters would need to be
exceedingly loose so as to incorporate theatre, idiosyncratic projector machines, musical
instrumentation, installation art, and paracinematic works in which no film or video is
involved. Expanded cinema, then, is a highly inclusive umbrella term for live and/or
environmental configurations with “the idea of cinema” at their core. 1 A.L. Rees
summarizes the apparent frustration that can arise and hinder a straightforward
historiographical framework. He writes, “’[e]xpanded cinema’ is an elastic name for
many sorts of film and projection event[s]. It is notoriously difficult to pin down or
define. At full stretch, it embraces the most contradictory dimensions of film and video
art, from the vividly spectacular to the starkly materialist.”2 The colossal multimedia
imagery bombardment in Vanderbeek’s Movie-Drome or Jordan Belson’s infamous
“Vortex Concerts” stand in high contrast to the ‘analytical and primal’ screenings in the
UK by Filmaktion or the deconstructive and at times ironic Dada-esque performances by
Peter Weibel and VALIE EXPORT in Vienna.
Historically expanded cinema has been summoned as a way to deconstruct and
reconfigure traditional ways of viewing cinema. According to EXPORT, it is “the
expansion of the commonplace form of film on the open stage or within a space, through
which the commercial-conventional sequence of filmmaking – shooting, editing
(montage) and projection – is broken up . . .”3 In this way it bears strong resemblance to
structural or structural-materialist film, though expanded cinema arguably moves beyond
the formal interrogation of film material and the subjective processes to encompass the
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entire cinematic dispositif that EXPORT mentions, but more specifically it also includes
elements like the screen (often more than one), seating, location of the projector, source
of sound, and the source of the images themselves.
In her 1970 programme notes “Free Form Recollections of New York”
Schneemann describes a key transitional period of art and culture in New York.
Breaking away from immobile forms like painting, artists from many different
backgrounds in the 1960s commonly began using cinema in combination with other
media. Rather than film’s traditional use as a fixed product, these artists employed film
for its tactile, live, and ”kinetic” qualities.4 Apart from Schneemann’s own work,
contemporary manifestations of this tendency included: the theatrical plays of Robert
Morris; Robert Whitman’s Happenings; USCO; the Judson Church Dancers; the Fluxus
concerts of La Monte Young; and performances by Yoko Ono and Nam June Paik.
Outside of the US another major centre for excursions in expanded cinema was in
England, centered particularly around the London Filmmakers Co-operative in London.
In Britain more than in the US, early video materialized alongside more structuralmaterialist ideas and paved the way for the introduction of cinema into the gallery.
The idea of cinema as living pictures that many of the works discussed here
invoke, provides a second important framework of this thesis. I explore the parallels and
re-chartings between expanded cinema and historical predecessors that existed before
1895, the debut of the Lumière Cinématographe, as well as the aesthetic and perceptual
changes brought about in conjunction with cinema in the early years of modernism. Tom
Gunning argues that both early and experimental cinema offer alternatives to mainstream
commercial film and its tedious, rehashed formal syntax.5 I attempt to show that the
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same can be said for pre-cinematic works and expanded cinema. In proto-cinema we find
alternate ways to display or exhibit images that fundamentally differ from the standard
presentation in a film auditorium.
In the first chapter, “Expanded Showmanship,” I look at the contextual
similarities between magic lantern culture and projector performances that first arose in
the early 1970s, notably in the work of Ken Jacobs and his Nervous System and Nervous
Magic Lantern. Projector performances are live events in which the artist controls a
projector (or array of projectors) to manipulate the imagery. For instance, the French
group Metamkine often use mirrors to alter and scatter the projector’s light beam.
Chance, spontaneity, and improvisation are integral factors in the investigations of these
works. Yet there is also the sense that the artist knows exactly what he/she is doing; that
while their performance is open to new directions on every occasion, the artist has a
rehearsed choreography in mind and a good idea of what they want to accomplish. Nicky
Hamlyn’s 4 X Loops (first performed in 1974) is a good example of this tendency. The
“film”6 uses four projectors with a looping “X” intermitted with clear stock. The “X”s
can be arranged in a number of ways so that they align into larger pattern structures, such
as a straight diagonal line or an over-lapping cube grid. Hamlyn necessarily rearranges
each projector one at a time. Spectators anticipate the next pattern, and once the third
projector is in alignment one can usually deduce what it will be. Still, the full realization
doesn’t take effect until he has completed the configuration. Hamlyn creates a wonderful
sense of improvisation, all the while the “X”s have a finite number of possible
permutations.
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Nicky Hamlyn, performing 4 X Loops at the Camden Arts Centre in 2004.
Similarly, magic lanternists controlled painted and/or photographic slides in front
of a live audience with their experienced and talented hands. Eventually technologies
improved to the point where lanternists could create complex dissolving views and create
the sensation of movement. When a lanternist begins the show, there is the sense of
unfolding into uncharted territory (the way narrative does) while also having a
predetermined, rigid structure administrated by the seasoned practitioner. Jacobs
referenced the magic lantern explicitly in 2000 when he stopped performing his “Nervous
System” to focus his attention on the “Nervous Magic Lantern.” Controlling images at
the site of their exhibition seems increasingly important in today’s digital world, and it is
no coincidence that there are more artists incorporating projector performances into their
repertoire. Films can be distributed globally online with great ease, transporting the
finished product further and further out of the hands of its maker.
While projector performances certainly rearticulate fundamental ways of viewing
and exhibiting cinema, they are still predominantly exhibited as single-screen works.
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McClure’s multiple projectors, for instance, are layered overtop one another to form a
composite image. If we take a step back, even Hamlyn’s 4 X Loops, while using four
projectors and moving in and out of layered patterns, is still cast upon a frontal, contained
surface. There is a profound difference when these images move from a single frontal
screen or surface and onto the walls around you, activating the entire space around the
spectators as a potential screen. In chapter two, I examine the relationship between
immersive multi-projector cinematic environments, like Vanderbeek’s infamous MovieDrome, and the panorama, a 360° painting developed by the Irish-born painter Robert
Barker in 1787.
The panorama was designed to situate spectators in an inescapably realistic
simulation of a particular view, often of nature or a modern metropolis, like London. A
visit to a nautical scene by Mrs. Sarah Earle, a chambermaid, was recorded in Joan!!! A
Novel (1796): “The panorama did not suit her taste for having been once frightened on
the water, her nerves were affected; but she was really astonished how the sea, for the sea
it was, and the water was salt, could come up to Leicester Fields: she supposed it ran at
the back of the houses; - she thought that river had been the Thames – at least so she had
been told.”7 Her story testifies to the strength of the illusion that mesmerized audiences.
This was also the reason many were critical of the panorama. It was seen as too
convincing, and critics like Hester Piozzi detested the simplicity of the illusion and the
public’s willingness to buy into it; “a mere deception,” she wrote, “ad captandum vulgus
[to attract the rabble].”8 The diorama emerged as the descendent of the panorama, and
already the narrowing of the gaze towards more directional imagery is apparent. Whereas
in the panorama spectators are free to roam around the viewing platform and choose what
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to look at, the diorama made viewers immobile, part of a mass seated audience where the
views were mobilized using a system of pulleys and rollers.
The creation of immersive cinema environments counters this narrowing effect
that commercial cinema so fundamentally depends upon. In comparing the above
comments on the panorama’s realism with remarks on Belson’s “Vortex Concerts,” for
instance, we can already note both similarities and important differences. “The impact of
“Vortex” on the average audience is extreme. The experience of being engulfed and
overwhelmed by the patterns of sound and light seems to produce both awe and
exhilaration. Laughter, applause, oh’s and ah’s are frequent during the performance”;9
“Especially magnificent was the sense of space – limitless, incomprehensively vast, and
awe-inspiring in its implications.”10 The two characteristics of ideas the panorama and
expanded environments – realistic illusion and cinematic engulfment – converge in
contemporary cinema, with increasingly sophisticated 3-D technologies, sound
orchestration, and virtual reality. It is important to trace this lineage back to its roots so as
to maintain awareness of the social and political history embedded in such immersive
realities, a project that lays outside the scope of this thesis.
In chapter three I arrive at a historical destination within the early years of
cinema. The development of modernism, theoretically often associated with Clement
Greenberg and notions of medium specificity, largely eschewed earlier late-19th century
experiments with synaesthesia and synaesthetic art, such as colour organs. As I noted
earlier, one of the projects of expanded cinema is the deconstruction of the cinematic
dispositif; isolating elements like the screen, the projector’s beam of light, etc. In this way
it operates in the theoretical framework of Greenberg et. al.. However, this notion is
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complicated by expanded cinema in regards to other media and the formation of hybrid
forms. How, then, can we explain the persistence of medium specificity within a
postmodern, “post-medium” culture?11 In particular, I focus on two of the most important
considerations in the history of expanded cinema: the addition of theatrical performance
and sculpture, which combined with the 1960s video boom resulted in the emergence of
installation art. The modes of expanded cinema discussed in the first two chapters are
still, by and large, contained onto surfaces; theatre and sculpture give cinema a body.
These other mediums add a level of tangibility and extension of live bodies out of the
two-dimensional that is remarkably different from these other forms of expanded cinema.
Here one is reminded of Buster Keaton’s infamous action in Sherlock Jr. (1924). The
projectionist, having fallen asleep, walks up past the orchestra pit and up on the stage in
front of the screen and enters the perilous diegesis. Artists like Schneemann, Gill
Eartherly, Guy Sherwin, David Hall, and Tony Sinden, perform the opposite movement
of Sherlock Jr.. Rather than stepping into the screen, they break out of it, towards and
around the audience rather than merely in front of them. It is a dual function that shows
us not only what cinema can be, but in comparison, what commercial cinema has denied.
While my focus on pre- cinema and early modernism is by no means an original
point of departure, previous writings, many of which are in the Tate anthology, are
limited in terms of their historical scope. Yet an in-depth chronological study on
expanded cinema seems chimerical. Would such a study include references to the
Mareorama and Hale’s Tours, or László Moholy-Nagy’s kinetic sculptures? While I
cannot lay claim to representing or mapping all of these possibilities and historic
occurrences, I hope to provide an alternative framework for the discussion and analysis of
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expanded cinema that might be useful for further elaborations by other scholars and
artists.
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Chapter One - Expanded Showmanship
In an essay on the relation between early cinema and American avant-garde film, Tom
Gunning notes there is an “immense gulf separating the technical, economic, and
ideological aims of the pioneers of cinema from those of the avant-garde films made in
the U.S. since the 1940s.”12 Arguably, the “immense gulf” between pioneering cinema
and expanded cinema is even greater.13 Pre-cinematic optical machines are often, if only
retrospectively, described using terminology like “clunky” and “primitive,” whereas the
concept that Youngblood put forth (and has since been “expanded” on) emanated from
the burgeoning complexity of video art in combination with analogue and the
incorporation of other mediums toward a heightened stimuli. Nevertheless, if “one of the
projects of the avant-garde is to return to the origins of cinema,” as the abundance of rich
work on the matter no doubt indicates, “that return can only be historically aware.”14 This
is to say that in the long period of optical devices and methods, starting with Athanasius
Kircher’s treatise Ars magna lucis et umbrae in 1646 and up to and beyond the Lumière
brothers’ Cinématographe of 1895, the seemingly unbridgeable relations between
expanded and proto-cinema are at their most evident. A prevalent practice within
expanded cinema is the culture of projector performances, where the projector’s
capabilities and the apparatus itself is put on display, displacing the traditional hierarchy
of predetermined images as the primary signifier. Projector performance artists are the
contemporary reincarnation of magic lanternists. Both deliver a live and ephemeral array
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of images, though the logical imperatives of each are essentially reversed, moving to and
away from cinema proper.
In the 1970s, apparatus theorists such as Jean-Louis Baudry, Stephen Heath, and
Christian Metz traced the origins of narrative spectatorship back to an ideology formed in
Renaissance perspective,15 embroiling proto-cinematic projection devices within that
historical trajectory.16 The avant-garde, however, is resistant to such claims of
disembodied spectatorship and ‘transcendental idealism.’17 The effect sought out by
apparatus theorists cites an incredibly complex and varied theorization of spectatorship
dependent on narrative film language. Spectatorship in pre- and early cinema, however,
was relatively simple. The “apparent realism of the image makes it a successful illusion,
but one understood as an illusion nonetheless;” a “vacillation between belief and
incredulity.”18 Expanded cinema moves beyond and outside of illusion to create an
embodied level of spectatorship that actively incorporates the viewer into the space of
reception. In comparing both practices of projector art and performance (proto-cinematic
projection and avant-garde projector performances) it becomes apparent that both operate
in modes of image-making that lay outside of apparatus and suture theory as well as
evading the fixed objectification as a commodity or document.
There were a tremendous number of new vision machines created in the 18th
century that were revised in the 19th century that like expanded cinema offered new ways
of seeing. It was the age where tinkerers and inventors were also showmen. Within this
historiographical framework we find the remarkably consistent element of light-play and
screen address, what Charles Musser calls “a history of screen practice.”19 This includes
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the biunial and triunial magic lantern, phantasmagorias, stereopticons, animatographs,
and a number of other apparatuses and methods of casting images onto a screen.
And while the most prevalent way of looking at these vision-machines is to
analyze how they manipulated illusion to create ‘realism,’20 equal weight must be
brought to the fact that these illusions were imperfect.21 There were always gaps in space
and time that brought about a certain disillusion in the spectator, despite their respective
willingness to ‘buy in’ and accept the illusion of what they were seeing; “the illusionistic
arts of the nineteenth century cannily exploited their unbelievable nature, keeping a
conscious focus on the fact that they were only illusions.”22 Gunning reminds us
elsewhere that this awareness and simultaneous delight in trickery, in spectacle, was the
compositional force behind cinema’s earliest years up until around 1903-1904, a period
of filmmaking he has termed “the cinema of attractions.”23
In his analysis, Gunning notes that both early film and avant-garde cinema have
their own respective styles that differ from commercial film. This “difference” in early
cinema, however, “is not the same ‘difference’ by which the American avant-garde
separates itself from commercial cinema.”24 One must take into account “not the
similarity these later films bear to the audience engagement of early films . . .” but rather
“the difference both forms share with classical narrative [film].”25 The methods by which
both pre- and expanded cinema generate disillusion are indeed rather polemic, with the
former undergoing dynamic technological transformations, eventually becoming cinema,
while the latter combats the normative, stagnate state that developed out of those
transformations. Experimentation with new methods and ways of viewing images was the
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norm before cinema, a project later resumed and recontextualized by expanded cinema
artists.
A number of expanded cinema practitioners appropriate the forms, images, and
methodologies of pre-cinema in a conscious act, and equally, there are those who do so
unconsciously. The former acknowledge their fascination with early forms of visual
technology and pay tribute to it in their own work.26 Ken Jacob’s Nervous Magic
Lantern, for instance, recreates the magic lantern apparatus while subverting its
inclination to more realistic depictions with abstract-expressionist imagery. On the other
side there are expanded cinema artists like Stan Vanderbeek, Carolee Schneemann, David
Hall, who make no reference to proto-cinema. Their reappropriation of certain
characteristics paralleling their distant, if unspecified and unacknowledged early
cinematic predecessors, thus becomes an unconscious act.
As I mentioned in the introduction to this thesis, while a definition of expanded
cinema seems analytically impractical (this would imply a ‘reductive’ analysis,
antithetical to the very term ‘expanded’ cinema) given the vast and disparate approaches
the mode encompasses, there are to an extent, shared concerns, forms, and methods that
appear in a number of expanded works.27 The basic cinematographic apparatus, dating
back to the Camera Obscura, is the projection of images in a darkened room onto a
surface. Expanded cinema interrogates and deconstructs this basic arrangement. On one
hand what is emphasized is the act of image projection, and on the other, the space of the
auditorium or viewing arena.28 Much longer than the history of cinema proper is that of
the magic lantern and the showmen who operated them. These showmen were
responsible for the mastery of the apparatus and the casting of images. The trade
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demanded itinerancy, with lanternists often traversing national borders, even continents.
The theatrical space of reception was actually less important than the projection of
images (however, one might argue that the notion of unfixed space, both public and
private, attests to the incredulity of the spectator, their eagerness for entertainment).
Artists who focus on the mechanics of projection via projector performances and
modified machines do nevertheless affect the space of reception. Space is posited as an
active element, rather than the black space of the auditorium that seats the audience and
becomes forgotten during the development of intense identification between screen
diegesis and the passive, or ‘immobile’ spectator. But there is a pronounced difference
between spatial activation by those who stand behind the projector, like Sandra Gibson
and Luis Recoder, and an immersive environment like Vanderbeek’s Movie-Drome.
Screens are not ‘windows’ to another world, but compositional exponents.
Projection artists are the contemporary reincarnation of the “showmen” and
“lecturers” of cinema’s past. Their work can be single or multi-screen, though the
perception of liveliness and presence of showmanship is generally greater when the work
is single-screen, the apparatus is revealed, or when the live manipulation of multiple
screen images is evident.29
As Charles Musser points out, Kircher’s 1646 Ars magna lucis et umbrae was not
the first description of a magic lantern, though it does occupy an important place in the
history of “screen practice.”30 Through a complex system of lenses Kircher was able to
reflect natural sunlight off of painted mirrors, which contained both text and image, and
onto a wall in a darkened room. He called the reflecting device a “catoptric lamp.” When
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more than one lamp was used motion could be created, and when combined with text and
colour created theater-like scenes, usually of satires of tragedies. Important to Kircher’s
methodology was his “militant stance toward the demystification of the projected
image.”31 Kircher made available a book that both described and illustrated the scientific
mechanisms used to project the images, so that they were understood to be “art” rather
than magic.32 He also urged other exhibitors to do the same, lest they be accused of
witchcraft and tortured to death. Knowledge allows for entertainment, whereas ignorance
can be frightening.
A cross diagram of Kircher’s Ars magna lucis et umbrae (1646).
By 1659 the Dutch scientist Christiaen Huygens developed a much simpler
version of Kircher’s catoptric lamp, called the lanterne magique. The commercial
development of Huygen’s device was left to Thomas Walgensten, a Dane living in Paris.
The Huygens/Walgensten model differed from Kircher’s in a number of ways. Its
illumination came from a flame inside the lantern rather than the sun, it used painted
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glass rather than painted mirrors, and it was portable. Thus, Walgensten initiated the
tradition of the itinerant magic lantern showman, a tradition that would continue well past
the debut of cinema in the aid of the lecturer, until conventions allowed the cinema to
‘speak for itself’ without the need for external exposition.
In the 19th century multiple lanterns (biunial and triunial devices) and
sophisticated dissolving views were often combined to create composite images and to
bring movement to the screen.33 For instance, one lantern may provide a background of a
seaport while the other projects a ship that “slides” across the background and exits the
harbor. Travel and tourism made for popular lantern performances,34 but the lantern was
also used at London Polytechnic and other venues as an educational/instructional
device.35 Although some magic lantern performances used rear projection, usually a
narrator or lecturer would stand beside the screen and address the audience. Historically,
revealing the means of production has been associated with more sophisticated audiences.
Mr. Child, a lanternist who many claim to have invented the dissolving view around
1843, used rear projection behind a transparent screen when performing his dissolving
views. Concealing both himself and the apparatus behind a curtain ensured viewers
would not see the image’s light source and decreased the chance of spectators noticing
any breaks in the illusion, such as the black bottom line that flashes when quickly
removing a slide; “[t]his is the whole art and mystery of the dissolving views.”36 When
Child performed at the London Polytechnic, however, he moved the lantern to the same
side as the screen and only used one lantern, suggesting that the self-referential flashes of
switching slides was not taken as a distraction.
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In the case of travel shows, the lecturer would identify the locations and provide,
at times, historical background information. Or the lecturer would verbally connect the
otherwise diverse images and form narratives out of them. Music could also accompany a
performance, as background gestation to the lecturer. A variety of materials were
therefore required for an enjoyable performance, harnessing elements of liveliness
(narrator, musician, and the lanternist) with a constant flowing set of prepared images to
create an illusion of space and temporality.37
The basic magic lantern apparatus was a catalyst for a vast number of lantern
variants that became rapidly more elaborate. As early as 1834, Henry Langdon Childe
introduced the lantern to dissolving views. Double and triple lanterns emerged, allowing
for increased visual complexity. The development of the albumen and collodion
processes in the late 1840s made it possible for a photographic image to adhere to a glass
surface, bringing the far superior reproduction of photographic images to the lantern, now
commonly referred to as the Stereopticon,38 instead of hand-painted slides.39 There were
countless new devices created to aid the lanternist in manipulating the slides while also
increasing the speed of projection, including: flexible bands (William Speirs Simpson,
1893), cassette trays (William Henry Duncan, 1884), chained stacks (Edmund Hudson,
1894), and William Friese-Greene’s automated lantern, which could project four or five
pictures a second.40 The magic lantern became an incredibly elaborate operation. In 1894,
for instance W.R. Hill’s production, Gabriel Hill, featured a single scene of a churchyard
that required fifteen combined effects.41
Hence, what astonished early spectators of the Cinématographe was not the
presence of movement, which they had long been accustomed to from the cultural
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tradition of magic lanterns, but the detail of movement in time, what Dai Vaughn refers
to as “spontaneities.”42 This observation has lead Deac Rossell to poignantly state:
“[c]inema did not being motion to the screen; it brought the duration of motion.”43 Yet
the limitations of the magic lantern led to some of the most dazzling variants and creative
reconfigurations in cinematic pre-history. As mentioned previously, this was an era of
rapid technological experimentation. A telling figure, though taken from a somewhat
later era, is that “[b]etween 1895 and 1910 over 200 patents in America, France,
Germany, and England proposed elements of optical projection systems.”44 Most of the
inventors created them with commercialism and entertainment in mind, and subsequently
most of the inventors operated the mechanisms personally.
The human element was by necessity a pivotal part of any given magic lantern
performance. The technology demanded that every act be “live,” hand manipulated by a
showman, who stood behind the lantern and controlled the imagery with his hands. The
effectiveness of any given performance was dependent on the skill of the showman,
whose reputation could reach, to an extent, that of star status. As Rossell notes, “[m]any
professional touring lanternists painted their own slides, and the quality can frequently be
astonishing. The reputation of a lanternist depended as much on the merit of his
brushwork and visual interpretation as on an ability to manipulate special effects in the
lantern.”45 Consequently the showman was an artist in numerous ways. Not only did the
handling of the lantern require artistic capabilities but a number of lanternists also created
their own subject material. Likewise, the first edition of a publication entitled The Magic
Lantern, from 1 November 1822, features a short story entitled “The Gallant-ee Show.”
A father, having been to a magic lantern performance, is questioned by his two daughters
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and wife what the show was like, and if he will take them. ““Is it a good thing?”” his
daughter asks. “”That depends on the showman,”” he says, “”if he is a man of spirit,
selects proper subjects, and handles them well, much rational amusement, and no little
instruction, may be gathered from such an exhibition.””46
Each performance possessed a sense of ephemerality. The combination of live
manipulation with self-made slides (though the manufacture and selling of slides became
a huge enterprise) resulted in a performance that was unique and subject to chance, no
matter how many times the lanternist repeated and perfected each respective routine.
Contemporary showmen often revel in this sense of liveliness, what Peggy Phelan calls
an “ontology of performance,” to the point where they refuse documentation of their
work.47 These artists, including Ken Jacobs, Bruce McClure, the duo of Sandra Gibson
and Luis Recoder, Alex MacKenzie, Ben Russell, and the French group Metamkine,
emerge as contemporary “showmen.” They operate and control the imagery by
manipulating either the projector itself, or the beam of light emanating from the lens.
Sandra Gibson and Luis Recoder, in their 2008-present piece Untitled rig an electric
humidification system to produce mist in front of glass panes situated in front of two
16mm projectors. The resulting imagery is a constantly shifting, directionless
monochromatic blur on screen. In his 2008 dual piece, The Black and the White Gods,
Ben Russell commands two custom-made 16mm projectors with such physical intensity,
starting and stopping the motors, waving his hand back-and-forth in front of the lens, that
he reminds one of a kind of DJ, but with light. That he situates himself and the projectors
at the front of the auditorium only makes the “show” all the more engaging. His role of
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showman48 is so strong that one is obliged to consider what to pay attention to, the
flickering images on screen, or Russell himself.
Sandra Gibson and Luis Recoder perform Untitled at the 2012 25 FPS Festival.
Untitled (Gibson, Recoder, 2012).
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Ben Russell performing The Black and the White Gods at the 25 FPS IFF in 2011. In the lowerright corner one can see Russell operating the projectors.
Ben Russell, The Black and the White Gods.
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Unlike Gibson and Recoder, who develop new manipulative projector
configurations for each piece, and Russell, whose forays into performance are far less
frequent than his single-screen projects, Bruce McClure’s work is more consistent and
characteristic.49 His performances involve multiple 16mm projectors (typically anywhere
from two to four) running loops, often with coloured gels and metal plates with shapes
cut out of them. As I have experienced on numerous occasions at the Media City
International Film Festival, in Windsor, Ontario, a deafening electronic audio track is
patched through a number of guitar pedals that allows him precise control over a wide
availability of distorted sounds. Crucial to a number of McClure’s performances, and
which provides another level of chance and ephermerality, is the bi-packing of the film
projector. The added strain of two film loops forces the claw mechanism to simply grab
at whatever sprocket holes it can. The selection of compositions is therefore out of
McClure’s hands and left up to the machine, and exact repetition becomes impossible,
unlikely, or at the very least, unnoticeable. In the program notes he provided at a 2006
performance at Ocularis, in Brooklyn, New York, McClure writes:
This presentation will consist of works that articulate the willful glow of the
projector bulb while shunning the cozening effect of cinema. The camera is now
off our backs and film, typically an intermediate agent, takes on a new identity.
Here the projector will be our dutiful companion perched over our shoulders
motoring through time with the beat of intermittent light. Film, once criticized as
out of focus, becomes recognizable. The projector, whose machinery, optics, and
sound system have been shunted to the wayside, re-enter the theater not as
cinema’s silent and faithful servant, but as a star. 50
The projectionist is usually seen (or more literally, not seen at all) as a neutral technician
rather than a tradesman or performer; one who administers the film but does not shape it.
Rossoni 27
Though McClure is much more likely referencing commercial cinema than magic lantern
culture, there is nevertheless a historical narrative being deployed. The projector “reenters” the theatrical space, suggesting both physical relocation and historical lineage to
when the magic lantern was placed in front of the screen. Neither Gibson, Recoder, nor
McClure have made any claims of drawing inspiration from magic lantern culture. Yet
their manipulation of the image in a live setting harbors back to the traveling magic
lantern showmen (after all, these artists must travel to present their work) who hold the
power of the image in their hands. McClure’s acclamation of the projector as a “star”
testifies to a conviction that he shares with many, that, in the words of Canadian
filmmaker Keewatin Dewdney, “the projector, not the camera, is the filmmaker’s true
medium.”51
Bruce McClure performing with bi-packed 16mm projectors at Rotterdam IFF, 2007.
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Here it might be useful to acknowledge analogous experiments in music. Though
most often associated with 1990s DJ culture, turntablism - the use of a turntable as an
instrument - has a much longer history dating back to the 1920s. Laszló Moholy-Nagy, a
Hungarian-born artist and theorist, proposed the following in 1922: “Since it is primarily
production (productive creation) that serves human construction, we must strive to turn
the apparatuses (instruments) used so far only for reproductive purposes into ones that
can be used for productive purposes as well.”52 To this end he proposed notching
different sized grooves into phonograph records by hand. Doing so would produce sound
without external instruments or an orchestra, carrying “no prior acoustic message.”53 In
the 1930s, Paul Hindemith, Ernst Toch, and John Cage fulfilled Moholy-Nagy’s vision.
For instance, in his 1939 piece, Imaginary Landscape, No. 1, Cage manipulated variable
speed turntables and studio test recordings to create a fusion of sirens, percussion
instrumentation, and strummed piano strings. In the 1940s Pierre Schaffer created
musique concrete by producing rhythmic loops and sharp contrasts through sampling
train sounds in his first piece, Étude aux chemins de fer (Railroad Study) (1948).
Inspired by William S. Burroughs’ tape cut-ups, Throbbing Gristle invented industrial
music in 1976, and were soon followed by bands like Cabaret Voltaire and Einstürzende
Neubauten in Berlin. Most of these artists were either working in the parameters of high
modernism, or at the least were inspired by them.
These techniques, however, were brought into the realm of pop culture by way of
disco, dub reggae, and the birth of HipHop music. In 1974 DJ Kool Herc isolated
breakbeats and extended their duration using two turntables and two records at once. This
is widely considered the most important development in the history of HipHop, as all
Rossoni 29
subsequent developments in the genre were based off of it. Scratching was another key
innovation, discovered accidentally by Grand Wizard Theodore in 1976 and popularized
by his mentor, Grandmaster Flash. As John Oswald explains, a “phonograph in the hands
of a “HipHop/scratch” artist who plays a record like an electronic washboard with a
photographic needle as a plectrum, produces sounds which are unique and not reproduced
– the record player becomes an instrument.”54 By moving the needle against its proper
direction, Flash et. al. reappropriated the record player and initiated a new form of
African-American modernism. The term “turntablism,” however, was not introduced
until 1995 by DJ Babu, a member of the Beat Junkies crew. For Babu, the term signified
the difference between DJs and turntablists. The former is someone who merely plays
already existing records, while the former samples these records and uses them and the
turntable as an independent instrument.55 The use of turntables and other music playing
platforms as an instrument is comparable to the use of the film projector as the creator of
images.
To return to an analysis of expanded cinema and the debt it owes to pre and early
cinema, let us also note that crucial to projector performances is the live experience itself.
These works are as much an experiment to the artists’ themselves as they are to the
spectator.56 Despite the great technological divide, both magic lanterns and projector
performances necessitate live presentation. Malcolm Le Grice, in his essay “Time and the
Spectator in the Experience of Expanded Cinema”, states that the effect of expanded
cinema “breaks down the singularity of the experience – but more particularly breaks
any assumption that there is a singular (authorized) interpretation based on matching
spectator experience to artistic intention. Meaning becomes latent and unfixed”; the
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viewer becomes “aware of occupying the space of the presentation.”57 The visual and
sonic dynamism of a McClure performance, for example, actively resists interpretation.
To do so would require consideration after the film-piece has concluded and would miss
the point. Its ‘meaning’ is experiential and ends when motors stops.58
Le Grice’s comment, that time in expanded cinema “breaks any assumption that
there is a singular (authorized) interpretation” marks a point of historical divergence
between magic lanterns and projector performances. The former were interpreted to a
degree by a singular individual: the lecturer.59 But on a practical level this was necessary
to make sense of and clarify narratives, travelogues, and science lectures. The magic
lantern, and other optical toys, were often seen to be primarily consumed by the workingclass; lowbrow entertainment.60 The avant-garde, meanwhile, has always been criticized
in the opposite direction, as appealing only to the cultural elite. The second half of Le
Grice’s comment, again, that time “breaks any assumption that there is a singular
(authorized) interpretation based on matching spectator experience to artistic intention,”
indicates a neutralization of viewing tastes based on class structure. The local viewer who
works as a waiter and the curator from England may both walk out of a McClure
performance and say, “I liked the flickering images and the loud sound,” and they would
both be correct. The “unfixed” nature of expanded cinema more readily opposes the
“fixed” codification system of commercial film, what Noël Burch calls the “closure” of
the “institutional mode of representation.”61 Burch contrasts this to what he terms the
“non-closure of the PMR [primitive mode of representation],”62 a set of characteristics
found in early cinema that, like Gunning’s “Cinema of Attractions,” was gradually
abandoned around 1906 with the standardization of narrative film conventions.
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Kircher purposely sought to demystify the projected images in his Ars magna
lucis et umbrae. Subsequent lanternists, however, sought to make their illusions as
believable as possible, initially for entertainment purposes, and later for analytical and
scientific purposes, via the chronophotographs of Eadweard Muybridge and Étienne-Jules
Marey . Without the ability to recreate motion fast enough to exploit the persistence of
vision, however, even the most elaborate and talented lanternists could not present
images moving in real time and could not immobilize the spectator to the same degree
that Baudry et. al. claim the cinema to be capable of doing. Kircher’s bold
demystification, his laying out of the apparatus for all to see, was not followed suit by
others, despite his urging for them to do so.
A popular reconfiguration of the magic lantern was Étienne-Gaspard Robertson’s
Phantasmagoria, which opened in Paris in 1797. Constructed within an abandoned
Capuchin monastery, Robertson used a complex arrangement of mirrors, lenses, and
concave reflectors to produce apparitions and spectres. The physical setting of the
abandoned monastery only enhanced the effectiveness of his “macabre entertainment.”63
The images were projected from behind a screen, making the ‘apparitions’ appear out of
nowhere, and would be accompanied by sound effects. The performances demanded
several talented lanternists to project multiple slides, often producing composites, and to
physically move around the rear stage, making the images move. The key difference
between Robertson and many itinerant lanternists was that he moved the lantern from its
traditional place in front of the screen, within the audience’s view, to behind the
translucent screen. By hiding the means of production he sought to make the apparitions
seem more convincing, to produce “an illusion of unmediated referentiality.”64
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Yet Robertson was still forthright in dispelling the Phantasmagoria as illusion,
though on a more reserved scale than Kircher.65 He would address the audience before
the show began, and in one recorded instance said:
That which is about to happen before your eyes, messieurs, is not frivolous
spectacle; it is made for the man who thinks, for the philosopher who likes to lose
his way for an instant with Sterne among the tombs.
This is a spectacle which man can use to instruct himself in the bizarre effects of
the imagination, when it combines vigor and derangement: I speak of the terror
inspired by the shadows, spirits, spells and occult work of the magician: terror
that practically every man experienced in the young age of prejudice and which
even a few still retain in the mature age of reason.66
He thus sought a sophisticated audience composed of spectators who were conscious of
the illusion on hand and whose enjoyment of the spectacle “played on the simultaneous
realization that the projected image was only an image and yet one that . . . was real.”67
Additionally, by admitting to the audience the falsity of the image and simultaneously
concealing where that image comes from, Robertson could create an element of
anxiousness and anticipation in the spectator.
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E.G. Robertson’s Phantasmagoria, engraving from Le Magasin Pittoresque, 1845.
Robertson’s model thus prefigures the concealment of the apparatus as part of the
post-1906/8 “institutional mode of representation.” A dichotomy between apparatus
demystification and concealment can hence be considered an important factor leading to
the IMR, although usually the emphasis is placed on factors like editing techniques and
camera mobility. This dichotomy resurfaces in projection-based performances, though
the element of liveliness stays whether the viewer can see the artist or not. In seeing the
apparatus, one is reminded of Gunning’s assertion that “[e]arly audiences went to
exhibitions to see machines demonstrated . . . rather than to view films. It was the
Cinématographe, the Biograph or the Vitascope that were advertised, not Le Déjeuner de
bébé or The Black Diamond Express.”68 Similarly, one often attends an expanded cinema
Rossoni 34
performance based on the reputation of the “showman” in conjunction with either past
experiences or some kind of gained knowledge about “what they do.”
Ken Jacobs offers a prominent example of this tendency; the apparatus as
attraction. He has constructed a number of projector machines, which he performs with
for years at a time, in which the name of the machine is also the overarching title of each
performance (this is not always the case, though original/independent titles still make use
of the projector). The first of these is the Nervous System, a set-up he used from 19752000.
It consists of two identical motion picture film prints on two 16mm analytic or
35mm filmstrip projectors capable of advancing one frame at a time and freezing
single images on screen. An exterior shutter, in the form of a spinning propeller
positioned between the two projectors, is used rapidly to alternate between, blend
together, the two frames by interrupting the projections with imageless intervals .
. . . Using short film sequences projected as a series of stills, the Nervous System
operates on the temporal and spatial difference between two near-identical film
frames that are often only one frame apart from one another in filmic sequence.69
The result of the Nervous System differs with each performance. It can, for example, be
single-screen, multi-screen, superimposed, etc. The first five pieces devised for the
system in particular accentuate the idea of the apparatus as attraction. They are THE
IMPOSSIBLE series, beginning in 1975 with THE IMPOSSIBLE: Chapter One
“Southwark Fair” and ending in 1980 with THE IMPOSSIBLE: Chapter Five “The
Wrong Laurel. The Nervous System typically re-works footage from early cinema, with
Billy Bitzer’s 1905 film Tom, Tom, the Piper’s Son appearing in three of the first five
THE IMPOSSIBLE series. Importantly, Jacobs would always reveal the apparatus,
leaving it visible to the audience.
Rossoni 35
This branding of the apparatus also resides in Jacobs’ follow-up and revision of
the Nervous System, the Nervous Magic Lantern. Immediately with the title Jacobs
invokes the magic lantern. He first devised the system in 1990 and committed to it in
2000, after ceasing to perform the Nervous System.
The Nervous Magic Lantern operates on the same principal as a traditional magic
lantern projector: objects and transparencies, placed between a bright theater lamp
and an arrangement of lenses, are projected at large scale and with no definable
edges onto a projection screen or wall. An external spinning shutter, such as that
used in the Nervous System, is mounted in front of the lens, introducing a heavy
strobing effect that sets the “externalized” image in perpetual 3-D motion.70
Ken Jacobs, Nervous Magic Lantern at the Blackwood Gallery, 2011.
Rossoni 36
Nervous Magic Lantern (Ken Jacobs, 2011).
As can be seen in the pictures of Jacobs’ performance, the image well exceeds the
screen. Jacobs’ screening space knows no boundaries, which in turn enhances the 3-D
effect of the film and extends the imagery into the audience’s space of reception.71 In the
Nervous Magic Lantern Jacobs revitalizes the spirit and physical body of the magic
lantern in an unparalled manner. While others have imbued the idea both consciously and
unconsciously, Jacobs has gone to the extreme by not even using film in his projector,
which of course the magic lantern of the 17th-20th century could not do, unless we
consider the scientific experiments of the lantern.72 While this apparatus lacks the
sequential or chapter-like structure of the Nervous System, which can be seen initially as
an advertisement for the machine, the Nervous Magic Lantern more readily
acknowledges the tinkerer as showman by first off (and as he had done earlier), creating a
machine that is entirely unique, and secondly, by creating projection material that is
original and ephemeral. Whereas the Nervous System usually sampled and re-worked
Rossoni 37
early films, the lantern’s abstract-expressionist and gradually transforming imagery is
pure Jacobs; like lanternists who used to paint their own slides. Additionally, a
performance may be shown silent or to the accompaniment of live music or field
recordings. Unlike the Nervous System, however, in the Nervous Magic Lantern the
apparatus is concealed from view. Jacobs does not specify why, but perhaps it has
something to do with the extra hint of “magic” and wonderment that Robertson achieved
with the Phantasmagoria.
Conscious or not, expanded cinema artists who concentrate on isolating the
projection apparatus reinvigorate the paradigm of the itinerant magic lantern showman.
Both are, very often, tinkerers, those who invent or revise previous technologies to alter
the act of projection. Once the apparatus is assembled, the tinkerer must travel to
exhibition spaces with his machine and projection material in hand. The apparatus is
often revealed, exposing its mechanics and source of imagery. The showman then
projects those images and manipulates them live, by hand or with the aid of mechanical
devices, to administer a sequence of images existing in ephemerality. Similarities, both
conscious and unconscious, can also be found between other pre-cinematic and expanded
cinema occupations, as we shall see in the next chapter. Large scale film events like the
spilling over of imagery from the screen and onto the walls found in Jacobs’ Nervous
Magic Lantern are still relatively contained.
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Chapter Two - Cinema Without Borders
As I discussed in the last chapter, there are strong parallels between certain forms of precinematic optical entertainment and the projector performances of artists working in
expanded cinema. This can be a conscious decision, like Ken Jacobs’ Nervous Magic
Lantern performances, but more often it is unconscious and unintended. The same is true
with another form of pre-cinematic art that also bears strong resemblance to forms of
expanded cinema: the panorama. The panorama was a 360° painting developed by the
Irish-born painter Robert Barker in 1787 and made its first exhibition, a view of
Edinburgh, in London in 1799. “La nature à coup d'oeil,” as Barker called it, was a
radical break with the world of traditional painting, offering viewers a virtual, immersive
environment. It erupted the canvas beyond the limitations of the frame in a way that went
well beyond the boundaries of even fresco painting, creating an ultra-realistic
simulacrum. Hence it is often referred to as ‘painting without borders.’ The panorama’s
influence on cinema is well documented.73 Technical issues aside, the panorama, like
cinema, opened viewers to illusionistic representations of reality, transporting them
through space and later - with the development of the moving panorama - time.
One of the primary motivations of expanded cinema is activating the space of
reception. The artists discussed in chapter one do this by hand-manipulating projection
devices live, creating an ephemeral experience. Like the operators of the magic lantern
and other projection devices, however, these artists, who often use multiple projectors,
layer the images overtop one another, creating composite images. This is true not only of
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Bruce McClure, Sandra Gibson and Luis Recoder, but also Jürgen Reble and the French
group Metamkine. Though the notion of expanded cinema tends to be rather inclusive, a
clear distinction can be made between artists working with single-screen/composite
imagery and those working with multi-screens and/or the surrounding space of reception.
Artists like Jordan Belson, Stan Vanderbeek, Carolee Schneemann, David Hall, Lis
Rhodes, and Steve Farrer all create extended multi-screen environments reminiscent of
the panorama’s immersive characterization. Tracing traditional cinema to the panorama,
as numerous scholars have done, disregards one of its main features: that attendants could
walk around the observation platform and decide what to look at and for how long. They
were completely surrounded by images. To recall Gunning’s assertion from the first
chapter, there are immense technological and socio-cultural divides between early cinema
and avant-garde film. The same can be said for the panorama and multi-screen cinema.
Like the panorama’s radical break with perspective and the framed painting, immersive
film environments challenge traditional screening practices.
At a physical level there are numerous examples of specially designed 360°
cinematic screens that try to achieve an effect similar to that of the panorama. Notably,
these imitations first appear shortly after the advent of cinema, which was itself
responsible for the panorama’s rapid decline in popularity. At the 1900 Paris Exposition,
Raoul Grimoin-Sanson introduced his ten-projector, 360° Cinéorama, which showed
views on 70mm film taken from a hot air balloon. Also debuting at the Exposition was
the Lumière brothers Maréorama, which simulated the view one would have from the
deck of a ship. Fred Waller developed Cinerama in the 1950s, though it involved three
synchronized 35mm projectors onto a 146° convex screen.74 The Walt Disney Studio was
Rossoni 40
responsible for the 360° Circorama at the 1958 World’s Fair in Brussels, and the
infamous Expo ’67 in Montreal, the “fair of film,”75 featured two panoramic film
displays, Carousel and Canada ‘67. One of the most iconic examples of expanded
cinema in Britain is Steve Farrer’s The Machine (1975), a 360° screen utilizing one
centrally located modified projector-device.
But the screen itself need not be a true panorama to function as an immersive
environment. Aldo Tambellini’s Black Zero (1965) for instance, uses a variety of
projection devices all pointed in one general direction. He does create a number of
composite effects, but his images are not placed precisely overtop one another. Rather,
they intersect at odd angles that combine with various shaped images: rectangles, squares,
and circles, and they are not fixed on a screen, or even a wall for that matter. Sometimes
one or more images will be slanted halfway against the wall and the ceiling, or a corner in
a room. Nevertheless, the effect creates an immense and entrancing visual field that is
difficult to assimilate into an all-encompassing view. One of the things that the panorama
– and its related successor, the Diorama76 – share with these forms of expanded cinema is
that they require a specially designed, purpose-built structure.
Rossoni 41
Raoul Grimoin-Sanson, Cinéorama, at the 1900 Paris Exposition.
Aldo Tambellini, Black Box (1965). This image is from the artist’s
Black Gate Electromedia Theatre in New York.
Rossoni 42
Barker’s new form of painting required a new kind of structure for its display.
The panorama “aimed to simulate as completely as possible – from the viewing platform
– the experience of a given scene as though the viewer were on that very spot.”77 Stephen
Oettermann, in his rigorous international study The Panorama: History of a Mass
Medium describes the 19th century zeitgeist as being one by the bourgeoning bourgeois
class’s fascination with travel and tourism. Industrial mechanization made doing so
incredibly easier than ever before, as new forms of communication and locomotion,
including the telegraph, train, steamboat, and the hot air balloon, rapidly increased the
pace of modern urban life. In the wake of the industrial revolution working hours became
more regulated and the accompanying accretion of leisure time, now necessary to
rejuvenate the worker for the next day of work, brought about new forms of
entertainment. This newly developed cultural ethos of exploration lead to an intense
infatuation with the idea of “horizon,” from the ideological point of view as much from a
technological, cultural, and artistic perspective. By definition the horizon was an
unknown and distant place. Never before had conquering it seemed so tangible. “It is no
accident”, writes Oettermann, “that the discovery of the horizon and the first successful
balloon flights occurred at about the same time. One could almost believe the balloonists’
ascents were fueled by people’s cravings to experience the horizon.”78 Traveling to
distant and “exotic” places may have become far easier, but to do so was both expensive
and time consuming.
The panorama, then, was a successful substitute for would-be travelers, a form
of “armchair tourism.” Distant locales were transported into major urban centres like
Paris and London, and a new painting brought about a new journey. As one observer
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commented, “[p]anoramas are among the happiest contrivances for saving time and
expense. . . . What cost a couple of hundred pounds a half century ago, now costs a
shilling and a quarter of an hour.”79 The panorama clearly satisfied the inquisitiveness of
its modern audience, as evidenced by its incredible popularity worldwide. It is estimated
that between 1870 and 1900, 100 million people visited the 300-400 panoramas located
in Europe and North America alone.80 Technologically, the panorama offered a rapid
break with artistic antecedents: a new phenomenon and form of entertainment. It broke
outside of the frame and contained perspective of Renaissance painting and beyond the
restrictive nature of the stage. Later on, it was able to satisfy the public’s hunger for
verisimilitude while not subscribing to the decontextualization inherent in the
photograph.
For the illusion to be convincing there could be no breaks or distortions in the
visual field. Indeed, one of the important differences between panoramic illusion and that
of trompe l'oeil is that the former “lacked a visible framing device.”81 To access the
panorama attendants would enter through a tunnel located beneath the viewing platform.
This prevents a doorway from breaking the illusion. The viewing platform was large
enough to fit a crowd of people, who could leisurely walk around the platform and ‘enjoy
the view.’ The painting scene was usually of an impressive and unobstructed view of
nature or a cityscape. Later popular fads combined with the rise of nationalism and
resulted in a number of scenes depicting epic war battles, or other important historical
moments that helped to forge the nation as an “imagined community.”82 The steps
necessary to create a painting that duplicates in exact detail a free-floating view that
Rossoni 44
matches how the human eye naturally perceives the same view was an exhaustive and
highly complicated process.
A cross-section of Barker’s panorama, 1792.
Exterior view of the panorama rotunda.
Rossoni 45
From the preliminary steps, which involved an artist traveling to and finding an
ideal viewpoint, sketching the view onto a number of paper sheets (later daguerreotypes
were used) which the painting would be based off of, to the final product took
approximately one year, depending on the size of the canvas, skill of the painters, and
scope of the project. Various sized canvases were erected, usually between one and two
thousand square feet, but could be much larger. Anton von Werner’s Panorama of the
Battle of Sedan (1883) was, for instance, over 7000 square feet.83 In the 1830s the size of
the canvas became more or less stabilized at a diameter of one hundred feet and a height
of forty-five to fifty feet.84 Before the bare canvas was painted it weighed approximately
four tons, which doubled once painting was completed. Extreme care was taken when
erecting the rotunda and hanging the canvas. Even a small ripple in the fiber could spoil
the illusion.
Integrated into this complex technological system was its lighting mechanism. For
the traditional painter the angle of light and shading presented little problem. He simply
chooses a lighting effect they like or that suits their purpose and carefully shade their
subjects so as to maintain credibility of light sources contained within the picture. The
panorama painting, on the other hand, must privilege its lighting source in a threedimensional manner in order to appear as naturalistic as possible. Hence certain parts of
the painting will appear too bright, as if one is looking at the sun, and others too dark. To
make matters more complicated, the light source on the canvas must coincide with the
panorama’s physical lighting system. To solve this dilemma natural daylight illuminated
the canvas through skylights hidden above the viewing platform. In keeping with the
complete replication of nature the ceiling was painted to look like the sky or some kind of
Rossoni 46
canopy, and hence the light emitting from outside the building was convincingly
portrayed as sunlight. When viewers looked down from the platform they would see an
equally realistic foreground. In some cases, objects and three-dimensional cutouts, such
as trees, animals, and even human figures, would be added so as to enhance the effect.85
What I have described up to this point has largely been the physical
characteristics of the painting’s supporting elements: its size and spatial layout. Even the
skyline and ground can be considered additions to the main display, the detailed painting.
The technology behind the painting’s illusion is considerably more complicated and
carries with it a rich historical divergence whereby perspective, in the Renaissance
tradition, expands to such a degree that it becomes unnoticeable. I will return to this idea
later when discussing the subjective perceptual effects of multi-screens and, to borrow
from Gene Youngblood, the notion of an “expanded consciousness.”86 Before I do so,
however, I will return to discussing the importance of alternative exhibition sites in
expanded cinema in comparison to the standard movie theatre.
The conventional space of reception in commercial cinema utilizes a three-part
system. The audience sits stationary in the middle with a screen in front of them where
motion pictures are projected onto from behind them. Just as projection performance
artists counter the notion of a film being “complete” once it leaves the cutting-room,
other artists challenge the inactive space of reception that exists between the projection
booth and the screen. It is thus fitting that a 2009 conference on expanded cinema held at
the Tate Modern in London, England, was entitled “Expanded Cinema: Activating the
Space of Reception.”87 Unlike the panorama, which necessitated a minimal diameter for
Rossoni 47
the illusion to function properly, the space of an expanded cinema event need not be as
strict to be considered immersive.
Such events can be substantially large, like John Cage and Ronald Nameth’s fivehour inter-media event HPSCHD (1969) – which involved eleven one hundred foot
screens enclosed by a ring of one hundred and twenty-five foot screens, fifty-two loud
speakers, 8000 slides, and one hundred films - staged in the 16 000-seat Assembly Hall at
the University of Illinois in 1969. On the other hand, implementing small spaces can be a
strategy in itself, like the sonic reverberations achieved by Carla Liss in her piece
Dovecoat at the 1973 Independent Avant-Garde Film Festival in London. Jonas Mekas,
reporting on the festival for his ‘Movie Journal’ column in the Village Voice, wrote: “In
the room, five or six 8mm projectors throwing images of doves, flying or just strutting, as
seen from the depths of some well or tower – in any case, they fly in this round circle
against the sky, as the sounds of the fluttering wings and cooings is reproduced in the
room, from all sides.”88
John Cage and Ronald Nameth’s HPSCHD (1969) at the University of Illinois.
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As with many of the apparatuses created by projector performance artists, viewers
attend not necessarily for a specific showing of films, but to see the constructed space
itself. Many of the most prolific reoccurring multi-screen and intermedia events are
referred to by the site’s name. In the 1960s Stan Vanderbeek created the Movie-Drome, a
dome shaped structure that like the panorama, had to be entered via a tunnel in the middle
of the floor. Beginning in 1958 Milton Cohen developed the Space Theatre, which
Youngblood describes as “a rotating assembly of mirrors and prisms adjustably mounted
to a flywheel, around which is arranged a battery of light, film, and slide projectors.”89
From 1957 to 1959, Jordan Belson and Henry Jacobs transformed San Francisco’s
Morrison Planetarium into the site of psychedelic “Vortex Concerts.” It is not so much
that these artists preferred alternative spaces so much as it is they necessitated specific
environments to demonstrate their respective concepts.
Stan Vanderbeek standing in front of his Movie-Drome in Stony Point, New York.
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Interior view of the Movie-Drome.
Centers: A Ritual of Alignment performed at Milton Cohen’s Space Theatre, 1969.
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Aside from the panorama’s primary role as a tourist attraction, it also laid claims
as an educational tool. Professionals in the field of “geognosy,” the study of the earth
(cartography, biology, geology, and geography), commended the panorama for its
accuracy and precision. At the time of the panorama’s launch, artists were still
encumbered by the idea of what an aesthetically pleasing picture should look like.
Distorting and altering the view for cosmetic reasons was a difficult tendency to
overcome. “Geonostic” drawings were aided by technical devices like the camera obscura
or the “Claude glass,” a small convex mirror, that transferred three-dimensional space
onto a two-dimensional surface. Hans Conrad Escher von der Linth (1767-1823), a Swiss
student and artist, describes the inherent difficulty in transitioning from artistry to
scientific illustrations:
Artistic considerations must be disregarded in these geognostic drawings.
Art demands a perspective of distance, harmonious lighting effects,
avoidance of harsh contours and all strikingly jagged forms, but the
geognost has no need for the first two, while contours and jagged edges
are of the greatest importance to him. The aim of a geognostic illustrator is
to seek out with a telescope those lines in a distant massif that may one
day provide him with information about the stratification of other massifs
as yet completely unknown to him. An artist, on the other hand, must pay
no attention to nearby strata with clear profiles, because they produce a
harsh effect and would interfere with the aesthetically pleasing play of
light and shadow.90
Information was not exclusive to only scientifically literate attendants. According
to Oettermann, the panorama’s status as a “public” enterprise, rather than a private
collection, necessitated changing the themes and subject matter of its exhibitions to better
suit the needs of its diverse audience:91
Representations of mythological and allegorical figures comprehensible only to
educated connoisseurs now gave way to realistic cityscapes, recognizable to hard-
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headed businessmen and even property dealers. And scenes from biblical or
church history were replaced by recent political events, such as battles or sieges,
that would be of interest to the average newspaper reader.92
The panorama also worked to visually supplement information and descriptions of places
and events that before the 1840s could only be read about in newspapers.93 Brochures and
booklets were sold as accompaniment pieces to the panorama. They contained “[a]s a rule
. . . only extensive , indeed sometimes exhaustive, geographical and historical
descriptions of the locale depicted.”94 Here one is reminded of the lecturers that would
accompany magic lantern performances and narrate background information and/or
narratives to the viewers. None of the brochures or other publications ever made any
reference to or supplied information on the panorama structure itself. Again we are
reminded of the important differentiation between magic lanterns that are placed in front
of the screen, revealing the mechanism, and those that project from behind, concealing
the apparatus from view. Historically: [t]he mimicking of the real has long been noted as
a feature of “low-brow” cultural production and of popular taste. . . . Indeed, the
deliberate revelation of the means used to produce the illusion has often been a defining
element of more advanced art and of a more sophisticated attitude toward film and
photographic media.95 It is interesting to note then, that many multi-screen systems have
also laid claims as new forms of information exchange and as potential educational tools.
Nowhere was this more evident than at Expo ’67. According to event staff,
Expo’67 featured 5000 films, and some of the national pavilions had up to 300 films. But
it was not the sheer number of films being shown that led some filmmakers to exclaim,
“Expo will change film-making history more than any other event in history.”96 It was
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that the majority of the films, certainly the most memorable, were incorporated as
specially designed architectural structures. A keen Youngblood writes:
While videotape cartridges and cable television will bring conventional cinema
into the home on an individual level, society will seek its communal mythic
experiences in elaborate intermedia environments found today only at world
expositions where the average citizen is able to experience, for a limited time, the
wealth and inventiveness that is kept from him in everyday existence.97
Youngblood was not alone in his enthusiasm for such unique spectacles. Indeed, his
wildly optimistic reverence for special events and their potential impact is actually less
bold than some of the claims made for technologies featured at Expo.
The cover of Life magazine’s 14 July 1967 edition reads “Revolution in film at
Expo 67. MOVIES THAT BLITZ THE MIND.” An accompanying article by Frank
Kallper makes the claim, after having been witness to various exhibitions at Expo:
“[m]ost of these mixed-media devices will make their way into American culture.
Theaters will have to be built especially for multiscreen shows and no school will be
complete without its mixed-media auditorium.”98 Colin Low, creator of Labyrinth (1967),
suggested that educational possibilities were possible but only with certain technical
advancements.99 Similarly, Francis Thompson100, co-creator of We Are Young (1967), a
six-screen film project, stated “[t]his could be the most powerful communications
medium . . . ever devised, but it would have to be used with enormous care.”101
Thompson’s cautious advice, that multi-screen must be used with “enormous care” likely
responds to the negative feedback that underachieving exhibitions drew. Austin F.
Lamont commented, “[s]ome of the films showed that some film-makers failed to think
out their purpose clearly, emphasizing merely the spectacular gimmick. Others failed to
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coordinate film structure with architects and designers.”102 The problem for these critics
and filmmakers was that while many were excited about the potential of multiple screens,
no one was sure how to proceed while adapting it for narrative uses.
Richard Fleischer, director of the split-screen film The Boston Strangler (1968),
believed that “multiple image techniques should not be used for “informational”
purposes, but rather to create a mood or atmosphere.”103 Likewise, Norman Jewison,
director of The Thomas Crown Affair (1968), felt that using these techniques for anything
other than story-telling aides “”pulled [the audience] out of the proscenium”, an
undesirable effect . . .”104 Film technologies created for Expo were predominantly being
advocated as potential enhancements for narrative cinema. But there is a profound
difference in the kinds of films that succeed in the mainstream market, like those by
Fleischer and Jewison, and those presented at Expo. The former use multiple images
within a single screen, whereas many of those commissioned for Expo feature multiple
screens in specialized facilities that cannot be accommodated on a single screen.
International expositions naturally spawn large projects with high investments.
The public expects technological innovations to appear at such occasions. Tom Gunning
observes this practice dating back to the early twentieth, including the Pan American
Exposition in 1901 and the St. Louis Exposition of 1914. As mentioned previously, the
1900 Paris Exposition featured Grimoin-Sanson’s 360° Cinéorama, as well as the
Lumière brothers Maréorama.105 Expo was no different. It “provided filmmakers with the
opportunity (money, prestige, presentation, and so on) to work on a large scale,
developing some aspect of the Expo theme, “Man and His World.”106
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Francis Thompson worked with Alexander Hammid to produce We Are Young
(1967), using six curved screens in a 600-seat, 12-sided auditorium. The film followed
two young girls relocating to a big city, and the multiple screens were used to provide
multiple angles and simultaneous coverage of them doing things like riding motorcycles
and dancing at parties. The total screen area was just shy of 3000 square feet, about seven
times the size of a normal commercial theatre screen, and twice that of Cinerama.
Thompson had already created a number of multi-screen environments, and expressed
interest in further exploring the idea of cinematic immersiveness:
What I would like to see is a theatre with so great an area that you no longer think
in terms of a screen: it’s the area you’re projecting on. Your images should come
out of this great, completely surrounding area and hit you in the eye or go off into
infinity. So you’re no longer working with a flat surface but rather an infinite
volume.107
Another one of Expo’s most popular sites was Roman Kroitor’s Labyrinth that
like We Are Young was funded by the National Film Board of Canada. Labyrinth,
however, required a far more complex structure. It was a five-story building divided into
three chambers, each of which contained a different screen concept. The first chamber,
and reports suggest it as the most memorable, placed viewers in one of four vertically
stacked oval balconies, surrounded by 800 speakers. A vertical screen nearly 50 feet high
was fixed to the wall, while a second screen lay vertically on the floor beneath the
viewing platforms. In continuance with Expo’s theme, the various films in each chamber
depicted the international ascent of humankind. Thus, for instance, a montage compared a
Russian astronaut being launched into space with Ethiopian ritual dancing. It should be
noted that montage brings the exploration of distant spaces to the viewer, an effect
Rossoni 55
similar to the “armchair tourism” that historically was essential to the panorama’s
success. The two screens in the first chamber work in unison, maximizing the space by
forcing viewers to look back and forth between the two. A Japanese child, appearing on
the wall-screen, throws a stone toward the screen, which subsequently splashes on the
floor-screen.
Expo also saw the realization of the Walt Disney-backed Circle-Vision, a
complete 360° field comprised of nine screens that served as the exhibition space for
Canada ’67 (Robert Barclay, 1967). It was essentially a travelogue of Canadian themes
and scenery. Shatnoff remarks: “Look front, look to either side, look over your shoulder,
you see a scene much as if you’re in a round glass observation car. . . . [N]o matter where
a viewer stands in relation to a 360° image his peripheral vision is involved . . .”108 Other
observers were less enthusiastic, since one could not physically see the entire film at
once. Whereas with the panorama, a static image, one can freely walk around and take
time to study in detail the painting.
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Alexander Thompson and Alexander Hammid’s We Are Young (1967).
Roman Kroitor’s Labyrinth (1967).
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Circle-Vision 360°.
Technical innovation and popularity aside (Expo drew 50 306 648 admissions,
totaling approximately 16 million different people)109 the much-lauded cinematic forms
that emerged from Expo were doomed in the long run. First off, they were far too
difficult and expensive to produce. 450 non-professional actors were needed to film We
Are Young, which took nine months to shoot and another five to edit. Its total running
time was only 22 minutes. Labyrinth took three years to produce, cost $4.5 million, and
only had a running time of 45 minutes. A four-man crew shot Canada ’67 over the course
of nine months, utilizing a number of land and sea vehicles, including a specially
designed 450 lbs. nine-camera configuration affixed to a converted B-52 bomber.110 The
other main problem was that like the panorama, the buildings were far too specialized of
a structure to be easily adapted to other uses.111 In fact they may have even been less
practical. How many uses can there be for a 50-foot screen on the wall with another
screen on the floor below it? Three years after Expo ended, in 1968, the donated national
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pavilions were reopened as a public exhibition named after Expo’s theme, “Man and His
World.” Interest gradually died down until the area closed permanently in 1981.112
In terms of educational claims, both Expo ’67 and Expo ’70 led John Driscoll to
conduct a research experiment in 1973 on the validity of “simultaneous film learning”113
within the classroom. The experiment is a follow-up to Frank R. Hartman’s 1961 study,
“Recognition Learning Under Multiple Channel Presentation and Testing Conditions.”
Despite the gap between the two studies, and the incredible growth of computer
technology in that brief time span, the reports are similar in their findings. Hartman finds
that in certain conditions, multiple channel presentations were more effective than single
channels. Simultaneously exposing students to “redundant” audio and pictorial is more
effective than exposing them to only one of them. When interference between the two
occurs, it is the visual that is least affected.114 “Children”, writes Driscoll,
at least today’s visually conditioned children, can attend more than one screen
image and more than one sound track simultaneously and still learn from them. If
producers put more than one image on the screen, there is at least some evidence
that what they create might be educationally useful as well as aesthetically
curious.115
While multi-media clearly has a place in the modern classroom, none of the educational
claims made by those who attended or worked at Expo ever materialized, despite the
findings of Driscoll and Hartman. It is interesting to note, however, that computers and
interactive touch-screen boards are now firmly apart of a child’s classroom. Keyboard
typing has replaced lessons in cursive writing.
Such ideas of “expanded” communication form a part of the much larger
cultural discussion on multimedia made popular by the work of Marshall McLuhan,
Buckminster Fuller, and Norbert Wiener. These writers were interested in cybernetics,
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systems theory, and new forms of communication and media technology. According to
Wiener, “[i]nformation is a name for the content of what is exchanged with the outer
world as we adjust to it and make our adjustment upon it . . . to live effectively is to live
with adequate information.”116 According to Youngblood, however, access to
information, even in the “Paleocybernetic Age,” is obstructed by commercial cinema and
television. A stabilized, enduring film language discourages experimentation and hence
the discovery of new forms. “We . . . have found entertainment to be inherently entropic,
opposed to change, and art to be inherently negentropic, a catalyst.”117 Beginning in the
1960s new forms of computer technology, increased global communication, and the
increasing visibility of avant-garde/ “underground” cinema, changed humankind’s
environment, creating what Youngblood refers to as the “intermedia network.”118
“The cinema isn’t just something inside the environment; the intermedia
network of cinema, television, radio, magazines, books, and newspapers is our
environment, a service environment that carries the message of the social organism.”119
Youngblood’s ideas of cultural entropy and advocacy for synaesthetic art echo those of
Dick Higgins, an artist associated with the Fluxus movement, who in the mid-1960s saw
intermedia as a liberating combination of happenings, event pieces, chance music,
computer art, and mixed media films.120 Trying to adapt these kinds of technologies to
suit narrative films, like most of the exhibitions at Expo did, is a difficult task. The
success of commercial films that approach such considerations are few in number and
limited in terms of experimentation, using multiple images but not multiple screens.
Some of them date back to the silent era. Suspense is likely the earliest example
of split-screen, dating back to 1913. One of the more technically innovative early films
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was Abel Gance’s Napoleon (1926), filmed in Polyvision: a system that uses three
adjacent screens and was a precursor to Cinemascope.121 The dominant form of film and
television, however, has always been single-screen. Even when rapid contrapuntal
imagery is used, it still appears sequentially, and does not appear on the same picture
plane. As mentioned previously, there are exceptions dating back to the 1920s, but as
Friedberg notes, “these exceptions also prove the rule. The rapid and recent remaking of
cinematic, televisual, and computer-based forms of imaging and display force us to note,
in retrospect, the remarkable historical dominance of the single-image, single-frame
paradigm as an intransigent visual practice.”122 (192) Multiple screens are ill suited to fit
the needs of commercial cinema. Roman Kroiter remarked that “multi-screen is to singlescreen as poetry is to prose.”123 This is to say that multi-screen cinema actively
challenges the viewer by foregrounding its mode of address. The “entropy” of
commercial narrative cinema has long been sustained, and radically breaking outside its
set of conventionalized tropes has historically been one of the projects of the avant-garde.
Excitement over the potential of new technologies like those showcased at Expo
parallels that of the panorama. Angela Miller states: “[d]espite pedagogical and
educational claims routinely made by panoramic entrepreneurs and promoted through the
publication of explanatory pamphlets that accompanied the panorama, their appeal . . .
was that of a dramatic and sensationalized access to the real . . .”124 They both offered
temporary access to spectacle as entertainment. It is no coincidence, therefore, that the
panorama met its demise in the early years of cinema. It could simply not compete with
the newfound popularity and spectacle of film. Its static nature was superseded by images
that moved in real-time through a multitude of spaces. This occurred even before the
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codification of cinematic language around 1906. Six decades later, multiple screens and
alternative architectural venues are once again kept at bay by the popularity of
mainstream cinema, which had by this time been secured as narrative single-screen
cinema. Similarly, the cultural and artistic environment that the panorama grew out of
was one of deep-rooted longevity in perspective and the fine arts.
Central perspective supposes a fixed point of vision of the viewer.
Mathematically, all vanishing points are composed to lead the eye to meet this central
spot that coincides with the horizon. To view the painting properly, to see it in correct
perspective, one must stand in precisely the exact spot that aligns with this fixed point.
Other techniques, such as double-framing, further enclosed the pictorial within the
frame.125 Oettermann thus claims that “[t]he special quality and significance of the
panorama lie not in its similarity to earlier art forms, but in its divergence from them.
What may appear to resemble and build on older art has in fact acquired new meanings
and functions: in more ways than one the panorama represents a break with the previous
history of painting.”126 In order to create a realistic view, a substitute reality, Barker had
to rid the painting of this central locus. After he opened his first panorama, Barker
portrayed himself as “not just the inventor of an ingenious amusement, but as a radical
artistic inventor who had swept aside the conventions of landscape painting.”127
Oettermann explains how Barker was able to do so on a technical level:
Now if there is a viewing point for every point of view, this means two things for
the panorama: first, all viewing points become one vis-à-vis the horizon, and
second, the infinite number of points of view are matched – theoretically – by an
infinite number of viewing points from which observers can look at the picture
without distortion. Clearly, practical limitations will arise, but when the
mathematical viewing point was actually constructed as a platform, there was
room for up to 150 people to view a panoramic painting at the same time.128
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Essentially, then, what Barker did was create an “infinite” number of perspectives that
amass to the degree where a singular point becomes imperceptible.
Doing so was revolutionary in another sense as well, in that the panorama created
a democratization of perspective. There was no longer a fixed position from which to
view the painting correctly.129 As Jonathan Crary summates, “[o]ne was compelled at the
least to turn one’s head (and eyes) to see the entire work.”130 This factor was one of the
reasons the panorama succeeded so well as a popular entertainment. It was also why it
came under criticism from the cultural elite. Unlike previous art forms, no specialized
knowledge was necessary to enjoy the panorama. Thus, “[i[f the power of high art was to
select, idealize, and refine experience, the power of the panorama was to simulate it.”131
According to John Constable, Eugène Delacroix, and others, the panorama was not art
because it too closely resembled nature. Constable wrote in 1823, “[a]rt pleases by
reminding, not deceiving.”132 This criticism of unmediated reproduction would also
hamper photography from being considered an art, as well as cinema thereafter.
It is important here to delineate the panorama’s relation to cinema in terms of
spectatorship. Like cinema, the panorama situates the viewer in front of a substitute
reality. Friedberg writes:
The panorama did not physically mobilize the body, but provided virtual spatial
and temporal mobility, bringing the country to the town dweller, transporting the
past to the present. The panoramic spectator lost, as Helmut Gernsheim described,
“all judgment of distance and space” and ”in the absence of any means of
comparison with real objects, a perfect illusion was given.”133
As Gernsheim indicates, part of the criticism of the panorama was rooted in a fear that
that illusion “could result in an inability to perceive reality.”134 Replacing reality with
representation is also a phenomenon linked to modern alienation, a defining characteristic
Rossoni 63
of cinematic spectatorship. In Society of the Spectacle, Guy Debord writes “[i]n the
spectacle, one part of the world represents itself to the world and is superior to it. The
spectacle is nothing more than the common language of this separation. What binds the
spectators together is no more than an irreversible relation at the very center which
maintains their isolation. The spectacle reunites the separate, but reunites it as
separate.”135 At risk of a teleological determinism, it is worth noting that the panorama’s
successors, the moving panorama and the diorama, move closer to the level of passive
immobility associated with theories of cinematic spectatorship.
Contrary to the panorama, where viewers are still mobile in the sense that they
can walk around and choose what to look at, even if being confined to a virtual reality,
those who attended moving panoramas and dioramas were seated in a fixed position as
representations of nature move in both space and time.136 Friedberg notes:
Both the panorama and its successor, the diorama, offered new forms of virtual
mobility to its viewer. But a paradox here must be emphasized: as the “mobility”
of the gaze became more “virtual” – as techniques were developed to paint (and
then to photograph) realistic images, as mobility was implied by changes in
lighting (and then cinematography) – the observer became more immobile,
passive, ready to receive constructions of a virtual reality placed in front of his or
her unmoving body.137
However, it is beyond the scope of this study to explore fully these off-seeds of the
panorama.138 Still, while apparatus theorists in the 1960s and 1970s would attempt to
account for the ideological positioning of the cinematic viewer (the spectators immobility
and fixity in relation to the screen), the panorama, more so than its descendants, falls
outside the paradigm of apparatus theory, as does expanded cinema (and avant-garde
cinema in general).
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Apparatus theorists attempted to characterize a cinematic dispositif and its effects
on the spectator as a subject. Though their theories differ in many respects, Friedberg
summarizes that all of the major apparatus theorists: Jean-Louis Baudry, Christian Metz,
Stephen Heath, and Jean-Louis Comolli, “assumed a direct and unquestioned
genealogical continuity between Renaissance perspective, the camera obscura, and the
photographic subject.139” Baudry, for instance, locates the construction of the fixed
cinematic point in Renaissance art rather than the model of perspective developed by
Greek art. He writes, “the pictorial construction of the Greeks correspond to the
organization of their stage, based on a multiplicity of views, whereas the painting of the
Renaissance will elaborate a centered space. . . . The center of this space coincides with
the eye which Jean Pellerin Viator will so appropriately call the “subject.”140 Hence, the
multiplicity of views is subsumed by the monocular aperture of the camera, which
coincides with the central focal point in Renaissance perspective. This in turn forms a
“virtual reality.”141 Likewise, Heath situates Renaissance perspective as the foundational
model for cinema and photography as “a machine for the reproduction of objects (of
solids) in the form of images realized according to the laws of the rectilinear propagation
of light rays, which . . . constitute the perspective effect.”142 Friedberg uses Stan
Brakhage as a filmmaker who challenges the laws of perspective in both his films and
manifesto, “Metaphors on Vision”, “without invoking “ideological critique.””143 But, as
she continues, “his filmmaking was still reliant on the spectatorial conditions of a
darkened room and a viewer facing framed, luminous moving images projected onto a
screen. As films complicit with the conditions of exhibition and display, they rely on the
projective properties of light in a dark room.”144
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The claims made by apparatus theorists, Friedberg contends, is both reductive and
teleologically determinate in that it eschews the proper historical lineage of the camera
obscura as a model for central perspective. Also questioning suture theory, she instead
proposes: “it is not narrative and not the optics of projection that recenter the spectator,
but the frame itself. It is the consistency of the frame that performs the unity of space, not
narrative. Even in films where shots are geometrically variant, the frame positions the
viewer.”145 This claim is much more accommodating to avant-garde cinema than those of
apparatus theory. Avant-garde cinema challenges the passivity required for apparatus
theory, and as a predominantly non-narrative art form, is outside the boundaries of suture
theorists. But as Friedberg noted in regards to Brakhage’s work, most of the avant-garde
cinema that has been produced still relies on the single screen. Except, of course, for the
kind of immersive, multi-screen environments found in expanded cinema.
Questioning traditional projection and viewing protocols, multi-screen is to
single-screen what the panorama is to perspective. The idea of “expanded consciousness”
and pursuit of intermedia art forms, as espoused by Youngblood, explode the viewer’s
identification with not just the subject, but also the screen. To create a virtual image free
of central perspective, we recall that Barker had to form an infinite number of perspective
points that in their gross accumulation nullified their independence. Likewise, expanded
cinema artists utilize an abundance of projection devices and competing images that
neutralize fixed perspective. Vanderbeek’s Movie-Drome, for instance, would use not
only film and video projections, but theatre, dance, and other performative art. According
to Vanderbeek, the Movie-Drome functioned as such:
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In a spherical dome, simultaneous images of all sorts would be projected on the
entire dome screen . . . the audience lies down at the outer edge of the dome with
their feet towards the center, thus almost the complete field of view is the domescreen. Thousands of images would be projected on this screen . . . this imageflow could be compared to the “collage” form of the newspaper, or the three ring
circus . . . (both of which suffice the audience with an collision of facts and data) .
. . the audience takes what it can or wants from the presentation . . . and makes its
own conclusions . . . each member of the audience will build his own references
from the image-flow, in the best sense of the word the visual material is to be
presented and each individual makes his own conclusions . . . or realizations.”146
Daryl Chin seems to confirm the Movie-Drome’s intended perceptual bombardment in
his review of the Stan Vanderbeek Retrospective at Anthology Film Archives in 1977. He
recalls: “As many as thirty images would get projected all around, enveloping,
surrounding, engulfing the viewers.”147 Vanderbeek’s development of multimedia, not
just in his film/video work, but also in his writings, as a tool of mass communication that
activates the spectator’s space and reforms audience reception is one of the most vital
formulations in both the history and theory of expanded cinema. Despite its cult status,
however, the Movie-Drome was a “brilliant failure” in that there were technical issues
that Vanderbeek could not overcome, ending the Drome’s screening history rather
prematurely.148
Also using a dome-like structure for projections were Jordan Belson and Henry
Jacobs for their “Vortex” concerts at the Morrison Planetarium. Like the Movie-Drome,
the intent of a Vortex concert was to assail the senses. To that end, Jacobs designed the
sound to suit the complex rotating sound system of the planetarium, which had around 40
speakers and enabled him to control the direction of the sound with great precision.
Belson handled the visuals, using approximately 30 projection devices, including “the
planetarium’s star and rotational sky projectors, kaleidoscope and ‘zoomer’ projectors,
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strobes, slide projectors, rotating prisms, 16mm film projectors, and interference pattern
projectors,” all of which projected onto the 65 foot dome surface.149 Belson and Jacobs
describe their apparatus in the Vortex IV program:
Vortex is a new form of theatre based on the combination of electronics, optics
and architecture. Its purpose is to reach an audience as a pure theatre appealing
directly to the senses. The elements of Vortex are sound, light, colour, and
movement in their most comprehensive theatrical expression. These audio-visual
combinations are presented in a circular, domed theatre equipped with special
projectors and sound systems. In Vortex there is no separation of audience and
stage or screen; the entire area becomes a living theatre of sound and light.150
Henry Jacobs (left) and Jordan Belson at the Morrison Planetarium in San Francisco.
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Planetarium projector shown equipped with two interference-pattern projectors.
It is worth recalling the panorama’s claims as an educational tool, and that both Belson/
Jacobs’ Vortex concerts and Vanderbeek’s interactive piece Cine Dreams (1972) were
staged in planetariums, the latter being shown at the Strasenburgh Planetarium in
Rochester, New York. The battery of sensations delivered by both these forms, and their
emphasis on instruction, recalls Oetterman’s description of edifying perception to reflect
more modern sensibilities. He writes: “[p]anoramas became a medium of instruction on
how to see, an optical simulator in which the extreme sensory impression, the sensational
new experience, could be practiced over and over again, until it became routine . . .
Panoramic paintings became a pattern for organizing visual experience.”151 Working
against established cultural codes, expanded cinematic environments, by contrast, cannot
be ‘mastered’ and the sensations not easily subdued.
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The panorama painting, initially having an ‘infinite’ number of things to look at,
greatly intensifies the viewers’ visual stimuli, forcing them to teach themselves how to
look at the new form properly. It is, however, one picture. Images in cinema change 24
times a second. Multiplying the number of image alterations already inherent in the
cinematic medium, and to place those formulas over and across special distances, ensures
that viewers will be unable to digest the stimuli thrown at them. The Vortex concerts and
the Movie-Drome may situate viewers in fixed, if unorthodox, positions, but create active
rather than passive spectators. And like the panorama, one is “compelled at the least to
turn one’s head (and eyes) to see the entire work.”152
Other well-known examples of multimedia environments include the highly
publicized San Francisco art troupe US Company, or as they are more commonly referred
to as, USCO. Formed in 1962 by Gerd Stein, Stephen Durkee, and Michael Callahan,
they were heavily influenced by LSD experiments, which led Durkee to assert that “the
strobe is the digital trip.”153 A promotional brochure for a 1968 USCO presentation at
New York's Whitney Museum of Art described the group this way: USCO "unites the
cults of mysticism and technology as a basis for introspection and communication.”154
The group was also known to associate with video artist Jud Yalkut and Stewart Brand,
creator of The Whole Earth Catalog. A number of other prominent multimedia groups
were also well known to the public, having primarily performed light shows at rock
concerts. In New York the most popular group was Andy Warhol’s Exploding Plastic
Inevitable, who used strobes, other kinds of lights, and dancers in accompaniment with
the Velvet Underground and Nico. Coming from a stronger avant-garde tradition was
Single Wing Turquoise Bird, based out of Los Angeles. They used a wide variety of
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projection mechanisms, including 16mm, 8mm, video, liquids, and laser interferometry.
Youngblood describes them thus: “[t]hey don’t produce an object in the sense that a
movie is an object; they produce software, not hardware. We witness an expression of
group consciousness at any given moment. The range of their vocabulary is limitless
because its not confined to one point in time, one idea, one emotion.”155 Collectively,
these groups represent then-new experiments with new forms and combinations of
technology that surround the audience in dynamic, booming auditory-visual
environments.
Single Wing Turquoise Bird performing at Art Forum in 2011.
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An image from a SWTB performance.
The works I have primarily described here have been American. Furthermore, they
emphasize multiple projections on walls and occasionally specially designed projection
surfaces that add a sculptural element. Expanded cinema in Europe, particularly Britain,
is no less prolific, though different in very fundamental ways. A.L. Rees believes that
“common to all US work . . . was the exploration of new forms of subjectivity in art, and
a reinvigorated expressionism that challenged the formal boundaries of art media”.156 The
UK, and in Europe generally, was much more gallery based. Works emerging in this
environment were also “less absorptive and participatory than in the American variants,
[and] the intent was to provoke differences in perception rather than new totalities and
fusions.”157 Rees may generalize UK expanded cinema as “less participatory,” but two of
the films featured in the Tate’s “Expanded Cinema: Activating the Space of Reception”
exhibition clearly demonstrate a combination of audience and spatial involvement as well
as with more structural-materialist forms of perception.
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The first of these is Lis Rhodes Light Music (1975-7), a dual-screen projection
event that has each 16mm projector sitting on the ground facing each other. The images
bear a clear material resemblance to the optical variable density soundtrack, resembling a
number of dark bands fluctuating in thickness. The result, Nicky Hamlyn suggests, “is a
sense that we are ‘seeing sound’ as opposed to “hearing image.’”158 Hamlyn also testifies
to the work’s function as a fully participatory cinematic environment:
The image, meanwhile, could be experienced in a number of ways: through direct
concentration on the screen, through looking at the activated walls of the room,
and through literal interaction, by stepping into the path of the beams, as well as
watching others do the same. The work is thus environmental and interactive,
para- and ex-cinematic.159
Whereas the conventional spectator is seated in a fixed position directly in line with the
screen for the duration of the filmic event, viewers of Light Music can either stand or sit
on the floor, and are invited to freely engage with the joint apparatus. If someone devises
a new relationship to the film beyond what Hamlyn lists, they are encouraged to do so.
Practically any combination or variation is possible. The only thing that is unattainable is
to view the film as one would in a traditional cinema, that is, from a fixed position
directly in front of the screen. The two screens are separated far enough apart that “[i]t is
difficult, if not impossible, to watch the two screens at once.”160 Even without instruction
or provocation, viewers are therefore motivated to move around the space and discover
what kinds of viewing positions are possible.
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Lis Rhodes, Light Music (1975).
We have seen that expanded cinema reconfigures traditional notions of space, both in
terms of what is visible on-screen and the screen’s extension into the viewing area. In the
case of Light Music, the space of projection and reception are the same. Other multiscreen/image artists keep the viewing position separate form the screen while still
questioning the spatial identification soaring overhead. Cinema, however, is time and
space. Avant-garde cinema contests the conventional perception of narrative time. The
structural-materialists of the 1960s and 1970s explore the time-base of cinema even
further. In narrative cinema everything is done to reduce awareness of the actual
screening time and spatial immobility. In contrast, structural-materialists invert this
relationship, prioritizing spectator time and making the viewer acutely aware of their
physical presence and the duration of the film. Expanded cinema comes from a similar
theoretical approach, but at times forms a much more ambiguous relationship. Malcolm
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Le Grice, drawing from his own work, identifies four alternatives to narrative time: nonrepresentational abstraction, structural or structural materialist, post-narrative symbolic,
and expanded cinema.161
Time in expanded cinema, he writes, “breaks down the singularity of the
experience – but more particularly breaks any assumption that there is a singular
(authorized) interpretation based on matching spectator experience to artistic intention.
Meaning becomes latent and unfixed”, and the viewer becomes “aware of occupying the
space of the presentation.”162 In Light Music, time becomes foregrounded by the viewers’
interaction with it. They can step into the middle of the beams and measure their body
movements against the shifting lines of the projectors. Steve Farrer’s The Machine (197788) accomplishes something similar, in that it organizes time perception with viewers
contained within its visual circumference. The Machine is a custom 35mm projector that
doubles as a camera.163 It is turned on its side so that the film runs through it horizontally
rather than vertically.164 The camera/projector spins once the motor is engaged, therefore
both films and projects only one kind of shot, a circular pan. Unlike in conventional film
projectors, the shutter has been removed, resulting in a single panoramic picture with no
black gaps separating each sequential frame; a continuous image. However, the
camera/projector is only half of the total apparatus. The Machine’s projection surface is a
specially designed 360° panorama. At one level, then, the combination of the single
picture with the panorama screen replicates Barker’s panorama, offering an unbroken
view. But it is much more complicated than that. The camera mechanism still only
records with one single lens as it spins around, rendering it incapable of replicating a true
360° view, which as we have seen, requires multiple cameras. Instead, “[w]hen the film is
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run at the original speed at which it was shot, it is paradoxically both in constant motion
and at the same time static in relation to the projection surface (as a caterpillar track
remains “still” in relation to the ground as the vehicle runs over it.”165 Since only
fragments of the total circumference are filmed at a time, the viewer would literally have
to quickly spin in a circle to follow the continuous sweeping motion.
External view of Steve Farrer’s The Machine’s panoramic screen.
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A glimpse of The Machine’s circular sweep.
Steve Farrer standing with The Machine at the Tate Modern Oil Tanks in 2009.
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Hamlyn refers to it as “a kind of spatial temporal spiral” whereby “it becomes the
viewer’s job to create the scenario they wish from the continuous sweep of the projector’s
beam, as opposed to being subjected to a predetermined order of fixed images.”166 Jihoon Kim believes the inability to fully take in the image prevents The Machine from
creating an immersive space: “[i]nstead, the continuously moving camera-projector
prevents the viewer from being immersed in the image space, as it undermines a stable
perceptual identification with the image.”167 However, Kim is neglecting the implications
of the very ineptitude spectators face when surrounded by The Machine; a sense of
helplessness as the flickering light bombards the audience from literally all sides, and
physically overwhelms the possibility of perceptual mastery or containment. Farrer
reinvigorates the panoramic art form but subverts its purpose from stable simulacrum of
reality to a fragmentation of cinematic parts and codes. The spectator becomes aware of
the individual mechanisms compromising cinema proper: the screen, projector, film, and
their own relation to them.
The panorama’s access to “the real” made it a phenomenally popular form of
entertainment with an equally impressive commercial longevity. It functioned as an
inexpensive and easy form of armchair tourism while also claiming to have educational
and documentary value. More importantly, it was a radical break with artistic tradition,
breaking out of the long history of central perspective. The panorama is often discussed
in relation to cinema because of its convincing representation of reality and its standing
as an immersive environment. Too often, however, those same writers who link it as a
predecessor to cinema forget the relative freedom of the spectators, who were free to
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move and gaze at their own respective will. Later, with the diorama and the moving
panorama, viewers became more permanently fixed and made into passive spectators,
robbed of their mobility. These are the codes that incorporate commercial narrative
cinema. Expanded cinema arose at a time of incredible technological change and around
new theories of communication as heralded by McLuhan et. al. Artists working in this
mode of experimental intermedia combine these various ideas into strategies of
synaesthesia, information exchange, and as ways to challenge the classical codes of
commercial cinema. As Youngblood declares, “[w]hen we say expanded cinema we
actually mean expanded consciousness.”168 Synaesthesia and “expanded” consciousness
have been influential concepts since the early 20th century. As I discuss in the next
chapter, synaesthesia in art has existed long before expanded cinema of the 1960s, though
the combination of art forms is often overlooked, overshadowed by the modernist idea of
medium specificity.
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Chapter Three – Black Box, White Cube, and the Proscenium
Arch.
In the first chapter I discussed the theoretical and philosophical parallels between two
temporally disparate forms of optical light play, the magic lantern and projector
performances. In the second, I again focused on the conceptual reinvigoration of earlier
art forms within the origins of expanded cinema in the late 1950s/early 1960s, that of the
panorama painting and immersive cinematic environments. This chapter will similarly
explore interactions between earlier art forms - theatre and sculpture - and their
subsequent reappraisal beginning in the 1960s through installation art (exemplified by
David Hall, Anthony McCall, Tony Sinden, Paul Sharits, Michael Snow, Ian Breakwall
and Nam June Paik) and film performances incorporating theatrical elements( as in the
work of William Raban, Malcolm Le Grice, Gill Eatherly, Guy Sherwin, Peter Weibel,
VALIE EXPORT, Paik again, Tony Conrad, Carolee Schneemann, and Birgit & Wilhelm
Hein). The work of these artists not only harks back to the much older models of
sculpture and theatre, but also, and more importantly, also functions as a kind of ‘hybrid’
art that seems to reinvoke and indeed continue the project of concretizing “synaesthesia,”
the blending or crossing-over of human senses, first taken up by early modernists in
cubism, orphism, color light organs, and futurism. These works are also divided by the
historical categories of modernism and postmodernism. Modernist concerns with medium
specificity undergo a dynamic shift once postmodernism paradoxically abandons
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materialist concerns while simultaneously expanding the field of introspection through
mixed media configurations.
A common unifier amongst early modern art movements was the influence of
music. Synaesthesia is a rare neurological condition in which “sensory perception of one
kind may manifest itself as a sensory experience of another”, for example, tasting sound
or associating certain numbers with colour.169 While synaesthesia can affect any of the
five senses, within art circles it most frequently refers to and incorporates musical ideas.
Due to its ephemeral, intangible nature, music is often regarded as the most abstract form
of art. Consequently, musical ideas were enormously influential in the development of
abstract art, influencing art forms like cubism, orphism, symbolism, synchronism, and
futurism, but also influencing the natural sciences, who sought to find a linkage between
colour and musical harmony. From Isaac Newton in the seventeenth century, the colour
theories of Goethe in the eighteenth, to Hermann von Helmholtz in the nineteenth,
philosophical theories and treatises on the relationship between colour and music were
rampant.170
Unlike the apparatuses discussed in the first two chapters, sculpture and theatre
are far less idiosyncratic mediums than magic lanterns and panoramas, nor are they
mediated by technology as an apparatus. In comparison they can almost be considered
timeless. It is not necessary to undergo a detailed history of either one’s genesis.
However, it is essential to consider the practical application of each when surveying the
development of contemporary media art, let alone expanded cinema. Indeed, theatre and
sculpture are inseparable elements from the theorization, practice, and review of
expanded cinema. I have decided to chart an analysis of these two art forms within a
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single chapter for the practical reason that they both function as corporeal mediums. In
different ways, surely, but one does not need three-dimensional glasses to convince
oneself of their verisimilar presence. Unlike cinema, one can walk around a sculpture to
view it from a variety of angles and distances, and linger unassumingly at a small detail.
In the theatre we are once again seated. But mobility is not needed for us to see all sides
of the action, or to believe that the actor is really present. The actor turns and calls out to
us, unfolding in real-time and space.
Cinema, including both film and video, is the Swiss army knife of the arts. It can
be been combined with other media in plethora of ways, more of which are becoming
manifest in the ongoing digital revolution. It is arguable that cinema in its near 120-year
existence has undergone more radical transformations than any other preceding art form.
Starting with Edison’s Kinetoscope in 1888, the first ten years alone saw the evolution
from private peephole moving pictures to awkward devices (the Skladanowsky brothers’
Bioscope), the Lumière brothers’ static one-minute long takes; Méliès’ trick films, the
beginning of camera movement in Porter’s The Great Train Robbery (1903), the
formation of an institutionalized film language brought about by Griffith around 19068.171 But even before 1900 and the impending influence of modernism, the idea of
merging art forms was well conceived, though as we shall see, the execution of ‘hybrid’
art was to make a profound acceleration in the 1960s.
The period of the enlightenment in the 17th and 18th centuries maintained a strict
separation between the arts, as perhaps best exemplified by Gotthold Ephraim Lessing’s
1776 study Laocoon, or On the Limits of Painting and Poetry.172 These ideas differ from
those of romanticism, which advocated for artistic convergence. The German painter
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Philipp Otto Runge wrote that “[m]usic, after all, is always that which we call harmony
and serenity in all three arts. There must be music through words in a beautiful poem, just
as there must be music in beautiful picture, and in a beautiful building, or in the diverse
ideas expressed in line.”173 In 1849 Richard Wagner published a treatise entitled The
Artwork of the Future. Though independent of one another, this text more thoroughly
expands Runge’s idea. Wagner appeals for a synthesis of the arts in what he calls the
“Gesamtkunstwerk”, or “total artwork.”
He proposes the fusion of the “trinity sisters” of art - dance, tone, and poetry and
the subcategories of painting, architecture, and music – as a means to counter the state of
the modern opera, which he accuses of being stagnant, lifeless, and elitist.174 Opera may
technically sample each of the arts but they remain detached, revealing themselves
sequentially and in isolation from one another. He describes the modern opera thusly:
Opera becomes the mutual compact of egoism of the three related arts. To rescue
her supremacy, Tone contract with Dance for so many quarters-of-an-hour which
shall belong to the latter alone: during this period the chalk upon the shoe-soles
shall trace the regulations of the stage, and music shall be made according to the
system of the leg-, and not the tone-, vibrations; item, that the singers shall be
expressly forbidden to indulge in any sort of graceful bodily motion, - this is to be
the exclusive property of the dancer, whereas the singer is to be pledged to
complete abstention from any fancy for mimetic gestures . . .175
Wagner believed the drama as the ideal medium to incorporate each art, “for reason that
its art is not complete until every helping artifice be cast behind it, as it were, and genuine
life attain the faithfullest and most intelligible show.”176 Importantly, the artist must work
with the greater public’s interest in mind, appealing to and satisfying the taste of those
who do not possess, in Bourdieu’s terminology, the “cultural competence” necessary to
comprehend or “decode” the high art status of opera.177 Wagner details the role each
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particular medium will fulfill and how the artist will benefit from contributing to the
whole. For instance, in architecture:
The Scene has firstly to comply with all the conditions of “space” imposed by the
joint . . . dramatic action to be displayed thereon: but secondly, it has to fulfill
those conditions in the sense of bring this dramatic action to the eye and ear of the
spectator in intelligible fashion. In the arrangement of the space for the
spectators, the need for optic and acoustic understanding of the artwork will give
the necessary law, which can only be observed by a union of beauty and fitness in
the proportions; for the demand of the collective . . . audience is the demand for
the artwork, to whose comprehension it must be distinctly led by everything that
meets the eye. . . .178
Every aspect of the drama’s production will compliment the other at the service of the
audience.
In a radical departure from Elizabethan theatre, Wagner required the orchestra to
remain hidden in a lower pit from the audience. Concealing the means of production
ostensibly enhances the audience’s identification with the stage narrative. Wagner was
finally able to bring practice to theory in 1876, when construction had finished building
his ideal, specially designed theatre: the Festpielhaus in Bayreuth. Contemporary theatre
aside, the framework of Gesamtkunstwerk provocatively foreshadows classical cinematic
spectatorial codes. Noam M. Elcott makes the comparison: “[t]he production of
concealment . . . belongs less to an underlying commodity logic than to the dispositif in
which cinema would come to thrive. For the concealment of the orchestra at Bayreuth
proved to be but the first series of innovations, many of which translated so easily into
cinematic terms as to seem prophetic.”179 Though incorporating a variety of media,
Wagner’s conception of artistic compounding seems to find semblance more in the
likening of commercial cinema than what is now recognized as mixed media, or
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‘multimedia.’ The audience enters the Festpielhaus, a site-specific building (like picture
palaces), to sit in a darkened auditorium, where the music emits from an unknown source,
and where all the spectator’s attention is directed towards the action on center stage,
which is intellectually unchallenging. As discussed in chapter two, apparatus and suture
theory attempted to explain the model of cinematic identification; the basic arrangement
of cinematic viewership is comparable to Wagner’s Festpielhaus whereby spectators sit
in a darkened room and become passively engaged with the on-screen action.
By contemporary standards Wagner’s proposal for artistic fusion seems weak and
unconvincing in comparison with multimedia art. Writing well before the advent of
cinema, he could not have known the complexities that the medium of cinema would
make available. Still, if Wagner’s total-drama comes across simply as contemporary
stage theatre, and commercial cinema is heavily influenced by it, this remains an
important consideration when reviewing the birth and practice of modernism in the 20th
century.
As Peter Tscherkassky explains, the key shift that led to modernism was the
replacement of enlightenment doctrine with philosophical rationalism.180 Art was
liberated from its subservience to religious art and in its stead turned inward towards selfexamination. A radical break with the past meant abandoning inherited norms and
prerequisites; objective representation gradually gave way to non-objectivity, abstraction,
and dissonance. But there were other important influences on the development of
modernism as well. Increasing urbanization, industrialization, science – particularly
motion pictures – led artists to interpret the world as increasingly fast-paced and, after
World War One, inhuman. Thus the relation between Wagner’s harmonious music-drama
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and conventional cinema gains tract in comparison to modern art and the self-referential
politics of modern theatre, as exemplified, for example, in Bertolt Brecht’s “Epic
Theatre,” which also unified music and multimedia, but to different ends.
Modernism was intrinsically linked to a philosophical and artistic interest in
synaesthesia, particularly the search for an analogy between music and the other arts.
This coincides with what John Berger has referred to as “the moment of cubism.” It was
Picasso, he writes, who around 1907 introduced fragmentation and temporality into
modern art. “Cubism broke the illusionist three-dimensional space which has existed in
painting since the Renaissance”181 and abandoned “the habit of looking at every object or
body as though it were complete in itself.”182 Music plays an important influence on
cubism in general, but especially in the work of its two most revered artists, Picasso and
Georges Braque. Both often included musical symbols into their paintings. For example,
in the former’s Still Life on a Piano (1910-1911) and Violon “Jolie Eva” (1912), and the
latter’s Violin and Poster (1912), which includes in text the names “Mozart” and
“Kubelick”, as well as Hommage à Bach (1912), which does the same with Bach’s name.
Picasso’s Still Life on a Piano (1910-1911).
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As an inherently abstract art-form, that is, immaterial (other than notes on a page),
the impact of music on Cubism seems like a natural extension. As Karin V. Maur notes:
The disintegration of the unified pictorial space, the fragmentation of the object,
the autocratic employment of liberated motif elements, the autonomy of color,
form, and line, and the increasing dynanism of all three – these developments,
which took place between 1908 and 1914 in the guise of Cubism, Futurism,
Orphism, Vorticism, or Synchronism – were basically directed towards opening
visual art to the dimension of time.183
Painting is a static medium, whereas music is in a constant state of flux. The systematic
and formal appraisal of musical forms on painting was a global affair, and can also be
seen in the diverse work of, for example, Marcel Duchamp, Paul Klee, the Czech orphist
František Kupka, the American synchronists Morgan Russell and Stanton MacdonaldWright, Wassily Kandinsky, Daniel Vladimir Baranoff-Rossiné, et. al.. All sought to find
a direct synathestic link similar to Newton’s early theories.
Importantly, a number of these artists also experimented with colour light
machines. These were machines that in general used coloured plates, prisms, and mirrors
to produce coloured projections onto a solid surface. Many of them, like British artist
Alexander Wallace Rimington’s early device (1895), appeared to be an ordinary organ or
piano, but instead of emitting sound they produce coloured light projections.
Unfortunately the only supporting documents of these early machines are rare archival
photographs. But Rimington provides a detailed and sensitive, if somewhat selfindulgent, description of his performance:
A delicate primrose now appears, and with little runs and flushes of pulsation
leads through several passages of indescribable cinnamon colour to deep topaz.
Then suddenly interweavings of strange green and peacock blue, with now and
then a touch of pure white, make us seem to feel the tremulousness of the
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Mediterranean on a breezy day, and as the colour deepens there are harmonies of
violet and blue green which recall its waves under a Tramontana sky. More and
more powerful they grow, and the eye revels in the depth and magnificence of the
colour as the executant strikes chord after chord among the bass notes of the
instrument.184
Rimington describes the device as a subtle and ephemeral shifting array of abstract
colours. Composed of abstract, free-floating, non-objective imagery, it is clear how his
colour organ attempted to express the non-corporeality of music.
It should be noted that many of these experimental machines were first devised in
the same period as modernism, though somewhat later, once the logical progression of
modernism demanded the need to move beyond the still easel.185 1912 Russell and
Macdonald-Wright devised a kinetic light machine that used coloured tissue paper,
though it never materialized. Baranoff-Rossiné presented his “piano optophonique” in
1922 at the Bolshoi Theatre in Moscow. Baranoff-Rossiné described his performance in a
letter to the abstract painters Robert and Sonia Delaunay. His commentary is typical of
the kind of sentiment expressed by various colour organ artists:
My apparatus gives me an unusual freedom in exploring dynamic painting that I
could hardly have dreamed of before. An artist is no longer a slave to the surface .
. . but lord of his ambitions and master of his freedom. That is where a really
immense field for creation of paintings opens up. There are billions of paintings
that appear to be expressing a multitude of desires kaleidoscoped into a mere
moment. Music is, of course, a compromise with the audience. Like music, a
painting should always be in motion.186
This last statement by Baranoff-Rossiné, that “[l]ike music, a painting should always be
in motion” is complicated by the work of later colour organists like the Danish Thomas
Wilfred and the Hungarian Alexander László.
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Both of these artists began working in the early 1920s, when research into colour
music machines had dissipated and cinema was already well established. This was a full
decade after the futurists Ginna and Corra had worked on painting films (now considered
lost), though it is doubtful that Wilfred or László ever saw them, though whether or not
they had seen the films hardly seems consequential. They were working in a medium
undoubtedly “cinematic” but imperatively outside of “moving pictures” in the technical
sense.187 This is also the decade that saw the proliferation of avant-garde film in the
French ‘impressionist’ cinema and in the German “graphic” or “absolute” cinema of
Hans Richter, Viking Eggeling, Walter Ruttman, and Oscar Fischinger. Particularly in the
work of the Ruttman and Fischinger is a definite sensuousness and visual rhythm that is
akin to music. Such is the case that Fischinger, one of the most celebrated abstract
animators in history, collaborated with László in 1925 by providing animated visuals to
his “Farblichtmusik,” or “colour-light-music” performance piece. William Moritz notes
that Fischinger’s images “proved overpoweringly modern and dynamic” and were
cancelled after a few performances.188
By 1926 Fischinger was working independently on a number of multiple projector
performances. Entitled “Raumlichtkunst,” Fischinger believed he had created a new art
form.189 While his films can be considered the very pinnacle of “visual music,” his
description of the apparatus is far more ambitious and more akin to Wagner’s proposed
synthesis of “total artwork”: “[o]f this Art everything is new and yet ancient in its laws
and forms. Plastic – Dance – Painting – Music become one. The Master of the new Art
forms poetical work in four dimensions . . . Cinema was its beginning . . .
Raumlightmusik will be its completion.”190 Moritz interviewed László, who confirmed
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that he had seen Fischinger’s solo performance R-1 – Formspiel in Munich in 1926.
Moritz writes: “Fischinger . . . prepared his own multiple-projector shows (including
some of the imagery from the László shows) with three side-by-side images cast with
three 35mm projectors, slides to frame the triptych, and at climatic moments, two
additional projectors which overlapped the basic triptych with further colour effects.”191
Provided all the evidence, Fischinger can perhaps be credited with conducting the first art
piece that can be considered, retrospectively, to be expanded cinema, a claim that has
barely registered in historical discussions of expanded cinema.
Raumlichtkunst at the Whitney Museum of American Art in 2012.
Nevertheless, Fischinger’s use of multiple films is a strong measure of the
potential that cinema can provide in creating a total synthesis of the arts. Cinema can
incorporate painterly images moving in space to musical rhythms. Yet if one recalls the
project of modernism, the reflexive scrutinization of a medium’s materials and properties,
a contradiction emerges. How can an artwork investigate its own medium specificity
while at the same time reference another medium, as Picasso and others did with music?
Before investigating the paradigmatic shift in medium specificity, we must first review
how the theory has impacted the arts since the 20th century and how it has been
reinterpreted beginning in the 1960s.
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In “Modernist Painting”, Greenberg states: “The task of self-criticism became to
eliminate from the specific effects of each art any and every effect that might conceivably
be borrowed from or by the medium of any other art. Thus would each art be rendered
‘pure’, and in its ‘purity’.”192 Thus for Greenberg, the primary limitation of painting also
becomes that which best defines it, in this case its flatness. Rudolf Arnheim is perhaps
best known for promulgating along similar lines a listing of cinema’s shortcomings in
Film as Art. Among them, he lists the reduction of imagery from three-dimensional to
two-dimensional, the loss of colour in black-and-white-stock, the loss of non-visual
senses like smell, and in silent cinema – the loss of natural sounds. As with Greenberg, he
states that these limitations are not really shortcomings, but are in fact best understood as
the source of cinema’s expressive potential. If the filmmaker does not stress these
shortcomings, “[t]here is serious danger that the film maker will rest content with . . .
shapeless reproduction.”193 But as Noël Carroll has demonstrated, the theory itself is rife
with flaws and contradictions once pursued to its most literal degree. For example,
Carroll asks “why urge artists to make certain that they exploit the peculiarities of their
medium if this is unavoidable and bound to happen anyway?”194 A great deal of artistic
excellence would be unnecessarily be sacrificed if Arnheim’s theory came to fruition.
Medium specificity has been a productive concept for the practice and
theorization of avant-garde cinema. John Hanhardt argued in 1976 that it was so
profound and prominent as to be considered the central concern behind the entire history
of the avant-garde film: “[t]his cinema subverts cinematic convention by exploring its
medium and its properties and materials, and in the process creates its own history
separate from that of the classical narrative cinema. It is filmmaking that creates itself out
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of its own experience.”195 For Malcolm Le Grice, exploring cinema’s material essence is
an important consideration in the face of commercial cinema, which has always “been
dominated by the aim of creating convincing illusory time/space, and eliminating all
traces of the actual physical state of affairs at any stage of the film, from scripting,
through shooting, editing, printing, promotion to projection.”196 The highly toted
structural film movement of the 1960s and 1970s has often been read as the culmination
of medium specificity in cinema. As the 1960s wore on and structuralism seemingly
provided an abundance of solutions to its own inquiries, an important shift occurred.
One of the charges against the “second wave” of structuralism was that it simply
reiterated the same material processes again and again. Jonathan Walley examines this
paradigmatic following structuralism in his essay “The Material of Film and the Idea of
Cinema: Contrasting Practices in Sixties and Seventies Avant-Garde Film.” The
1970s/1980s period marked the transition from the “essentialist paradigm” of medium
specificity towards an interest in historiography and the early years of cinema. Historians
have termed this movement the “New Talkie” or the “New Narrative,” films that
reconsider both the relationship between the avant-garde and narrative as well as material
concerns.197 Walley proposes that another emergent alternative to structuralism deserves
equal consideration. “Paracinema,” he writes,
identifies an array of phenomena that are considered “cinematic” but that are not
embodies in the materials of film as traditionally defined. That is, the films I am
addressing recognize cinematic properties outside the standard film apparatus, and
therefore reject the medium-specific premise of most essentialist theory and
practice that the art form of cinema is defined by the specific medium of film.
Instead, paracinema locates cinema’s essence elsewhere.198
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The two primary examples he gives are Paul Sharit’s “locational” installation pieces and
Anthony McCall’s radical “film” Long Film for Ambient Light (1975). Scott MacDonald
describes it as “an installation, without projector or a screen or film, which refers to
conventional cinema - a single electric light bulb reflects on the white paper covering
the installation windows (“screens”) during a twenty-four hour installation period – from
the greatest distance possible.”199 McCall invokes the metaphysical aspects of cinema –
light, a darkened space, and duration – without any of their corporeally bound qualifiers.
These and similarly non-filmic “films” operate not as materialized but as dematerialized
works.
Anthony McCall’s Long Film for Ambient Light (1975).
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Paracinema is closely aligned with conceptual art. Both forms exemplify the
transition paradigmatic of what Rosalind Krauss calls “the post-medium condition.” She
suggests the term “technical support” as a more appropriate expression of postmodern
introspection that avoids the “unwanted positivism” of the term “medium,” while
simultaneously signaling the dissolution of boundaries between mediums.200 Video
served as a prominent tool and medium within conceptual art because of its ability to
easily record lengthy live events (often Fluxus) and for its non-materiality, therefore
bypassing the trappings of a commodified art object. Paradoxically, conceptual art is
dependent on the idea of a formal medium as a way of justifying its negation. Walley
suggests that “[b]y seeking out cinematic qualities or effects in nonfilmic materials, and
often fleeting or ephemeral ones like light and time, paracinema opened up a much more
heterogeneous range of cinematic practices than what the film medium as we know it
could offer.”201 That an artwork can interrogate its own absence is useful when
examining Greenberg’s vehement opposition to mixed media in a period that habitually
incorporated musical ideas into other fixed mediums like painting.
Here it is useful to consider Greenberg’s stance on collage art, invented by Braque
and Picasso around 1910. Cubism, as we recall, can be defined as the collapse of the
painted image onto its material signifier, its surface flatness. Anything that goes against
this is considered unnecessarily “decorative.” But the notion of the “decorative” could
also be invoked as an analytical concept, given the right context and applied correctly.
“While on the one hand it could degenerate into superficial ornament, into the pejorative
status or the negative decorative,” as Gill Perry argues, “it was also the element which
could articulate the abstractness of the work, which would structure an art of ‘pure
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surface.’”202 In a similar vein, Greenberg writes: “[i]f the actuality of the surface – its
real, physical flatness – could be indicated explicitly enough in certain places, it would be
distinguished and separated from everything else the surface contained.”203 Hence, a
reference outside the context of the painterly surface is permissible only if it forces
comparison and recognition of that surface. The relatively inconspicuous tack casting a
shadow on the top of the frame in Braque’s Still Life With Violin and Pitcher (1910), for
example, is visually at odds with the rest of the painting. It breaks the surface into two
distinct planes, suggesting deep space, which in turn makes enhances the flatness of the
literal plane.
Still Life With Violin and Pitcher (Braque, 1910).
Even this explanation does not satisfactorily account for the experimentation with
music in modern art. Colour organs are a prime example of something that cannot be
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reduced to an extreme substance, even when juxtaposed with its polar opposite. It is not
“painting” because it is flat, or not flat, just as it is not “music” because it is silent. It is a
synthesis of the two. Perhaps the discrepancies in Greenberg’s modern art and all its
nuanced forms can be explained by lack of recognition. Modernist art critics and
scholarly trends have focused on Greenberg’s provocative theory to the point of
accepting it for the whole of modernism. Judith Zilczer believes that the role of musical
analogy in early modern art has been underestimated, yet “[f]ar from an evasion or a
source of aesthetic confusion, the powerful idea of visual music fueled the search for
purity in the visual arts even as it spawned the birth of new hybrid genres.”204 Thus a
complex dualism appears in modernist art between medium specificity and synaesthesia.
The former demands much more formal stricture while the latter is more inclusive. While
it stems to reason that these forms be set in opposition to one another, as we have seen in
the work of Picasso, Braque, et. al., they can also be mutually correspondent and might
have originated concomitantly.
This insight helps us make light of the work being done by expanded cinema
artists starting in the 1960s. The notion of expanded cinema is an extremely elastic
concept attempting to account for over fifty years worth of practice where the only
clearly shared conception is the heterogeneity of forms and assemblage of new media.
Variously termed “intermedia,” the creation of new artistic forms and the potential for
introspective analysis of those forms leads us to oblige that just as McCall’s Long Film
for Ambient Light is “cinema,” so are, for instance, the explosive light shows of
Exploding Plastic Inevitable in 1966-67. Gene Youngblood attempts to account for the
profusion of cinema’s presence in what he calls “the intermedia network.” He writes,
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The cinema isn’t just something inside the environment; the intermedia network
of cinema, television, radio, magazines, books, and newspapers is our
environment, a service environment that carries the messages of the social
organism . . . .In earlier periods such traditional meaning and value
communication was carried mainly in the fine and folk arts. But today these are
subsumed amongst many communicating modes. The term ‘arts’ requires an
expansion to include those advanced technological media which are neither fine
nor folk.205
That everything around us possesses cinematic potential echoes the romantic sensibility
of fusion and synaesthesia. A.L. Rees notes that for Jonas Mekas “expanded cinema
instantiates the primacy of the dream as an analogy for film, into which it might be
finally absorbed by virtue of shared hypnagogic imagery and the dissolution of the
senses.”206 This also explains why many of the foremost practitioners of expanded
cinema began elsewhere; theatre for Robert Whitman, and painting in the case of
Schneemann and Vanderbeek.
The advent and eventual access to video equipment was to play a critical
role in creating new dynamics for artists. This is especially true for those approaching
experimental cinema from, as Annabel Nicholson distinguishes between, “artistfilmmakers” (she mentions Schneemann, Conrad, and Sharits) and “artists who make
films,” who make manifest certain ideas using the medium of cinema, selecting it for its
suitability to whichever project requires it, and who are consequently less technically
proficient. 207 As a wholly new technological medium and not an off-branch of some
other, video needed to be interrogated in the modernist sense. However, one of the
realizations that quickly became apparent is that video itself is extremely elastic and
suitable for creating new medium amalgamations.
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Video also created a new oppositional binary between television and itself, just as
historically one of the main projects of avant-garde cinema had been to work against the
state of commercial cinema. Video art shifted the battlefront from the movie theatre to
the living room, where television’s explosive popularity turned it into a common piece of
“furniture” found in the household. Vito Acconci explains that
[j]ust as furniture fits into a room and takes up floor space inside a house,
sculpture fits into and takes up space in an art-exhibition area. Take this “thing”:
it isn’t as big as a room, so it’s only furniture; it isn’t as big as architecture, so it’s
only sculpture. In its early days, the TV set took, inside the house, the position of
specialized furniture: the position of sculpture.208
Video and sculpture synthesized to form installation art. The other primary difference
that video made apparent was its liveness. William Kaizen makes note that even when
delayed by several hours, television was always thought of by its audience to be live.209
Mike Leggett and Ian Breakwall, who collaborated often on projects dealing with the
televisual apparatus, vividly describe the cultural compulsion to associate liveness with
television:
Study and observe the piece of equipment known as a television receiver in its
most common environment; the living room, the lounge, the drawing room,
whatever you may call it. . . . Functioning perfectly, is it not just simply a 21”
picture window? Another standard lamp in the corner? A constantly changing
pattern of new wallpaper? . . . Between 20 and 30 million people watch television
each night: the engaging guest who’s staying permanently, who’s impossible to
ignore and won’t tolerate being turned off. For so many people to entertain such
an insufferable guest is intolerable.210
While immersive film environments made by artists like Vanderbeek and Belson (and as
discussed in chapter two) proliferated around this same historical period, video enabled
truly interactive spaces. One could walk around a video installation as a sculpture in a
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museum, but in this case, the sculpture (or at least components of it) change in real-time
as video images. This is of course an aspect of its medium specificity that clearly
distinguishes it from film, where the exposed stock must be sent off to a lab or taken to a
dark room for processing. With video one could record an image, which had the
additional innovation of direct sound-to-image recording, and play it back immediately
afterwards. One could set up a monitor or closed-circuit television station and watch the
image as it was recording in real-time, create loops between the multiple channels, and
combine imagery. Such is the flexibility of video that Francis Torres hailed it as “the art
of the possible.”211
Installation and participatory cinema meant the removal of the apparatus from the
so-called “black box” of the movie theatre and into the “white cube” of the gallery, which
was itself a difficult transition for artists.212 A number of pieces developed early on were
concerned with exploring new perceptual possibilities that could be created for the
spectator, a process more investigative of the updated cinematic dispositif than of the
stark (im)material of video. David Hall’s 1975 installation Progressive Recession at the
Serpentine Gallery is a good example of this tendency. Nine cameras and nine monitors
were set up into units, with the camera directly above the monitor, with a live feedback
connecting each camera to a different monitor than the one below it. The physical result
is that “[a]s the viewer moves through the space, he/she is progressively distanced from
his/her image.”213 Hall intended the installation to force spectators to consider their
“condition poised between the real and the virtual.”214 Hall’s piece synthesizes the
mediums of sculpture and cinema while also exploring and interrogating the new
spectatorial and exhibition relationships founding installation art. Here the viewer is no
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longer merely watching the artist’s work in the fixed formulation of the theatre/projection
space (film is almost always pointed to and focused on a flat surface), but interacting with
it and incorporating their bodies into the “projection” event itself.
Other installations, like Steina Vasulka’s Allvision (1976) or Michael Snow’s De
La (1971), also incorporated live camera feeds into the surrounding environment. Unlike
Hall’s Progressive Recession, however, they are not dependent on the spectator’s
physical presence to engage its internal process. Both use rotating cameras to survey their
surroundings that are then displayed on monitors. In Vasulka’s case, two cameras face
inwards towards a large mirrored sphere with two monitors set up to either side of the
sphere. The work creates a “machine vision” of itself that enables the spectator to view
the object from three potential angles simultaneously. The candid appearance of the
sphere emphasizes the discrepancy between natural unmediated vision and the shifting
glare arising from electronically mediated vision. A piece like Tony Sinden’s Behold
Vertical Devices (1974/6) has a much more concentrated sculptural alignment, whereas
Wojciech Briszewski’s From X to X (1976) extends outward, turning its surrounding
gallery walls into part of the work’s closed-circuit.
All these examples feature the video monitor as an integral component.
Technologically, up until the mid-1980s video projection was not only expensive and
unreliable, but of horrendous pictorial quality. Artists instead experimented with the
sculptural possibilities brought about by adding and/or rearranging the television box.
Even this relatively uncomplicated concept, however, could lead to complex
configurations not possible with analogue film, which again points to the medium’s ultra-
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elastic properties. Chris Meigh-Andrews describes some of the simple yet intricate
challenges a spectator may face:
Viewers confronted with a bank or array or monitors in a gallery or exhibition
space were immediately required to assess the implied relationship between the
images on display. A multi-channel work challenged the viewer to engage the
work on a spatial level; she/he was deliberately left free to make decisions about
the order of priority of the images and the relationship between the multiple
screens and the viewing position, and to consider the space between the monitors,
their relative size, and even the method in which they were mounted or
displayed.215
Progressive Recession (David Hall, 1975).
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Allvision (Steina Vasulka, 1976).
Behold Vertical Frames (Tony Sinden, 1974).
Another tendency in video installations was to explore the limitations and
shortcomings of video as a medium, recalling both Greenberg and Arnheim’s belief that
these are actually areas of strength and should be emphasized. Most of the cameras
available to artists in the early 1970s used light-detecting pick-up plates called vidicon
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that recorded things in black-and-white. The tubes were very sensitive to bight light, and
if held in front of bright source would flare and produce an after-image in negative that
would fade after a few seconds. Hall utilized this effect in a video and later adapted it into
an installation piece entitled Vidicon Inscriptions (1974-76). Stephen Partridge explains
how the installation worked: “[u]pon approaching the video monitor, the viewer would
trigger a lens attachment and be briefly ‘exposed’ under very bright film lights positioned
to either side of him/her. The subject’s head and shoulders would first appear on the
monitor normally, but would slowly disappear to be replaced by a negative ghostly
version.”216 The effect reveals “the clear materiality of [the] electronic form.”217
The primary property of video is its liveness. Since it is in not bound to a physical
material like celluloid, it is more abstract and akin to the ephemeral nature of music.
Installation and television, however, provide a skeletal if temporary physical form. In this
way “it is closer, both rhetorically and technically, to the present tense of theatre than to
film.”218 In “The Politics of Culture: Institutional Change”, Stuart Laing suggests the
1960s be read as a period best characterized by the live cultural process. He writes,
This emphasis on the live event, the cultural process (‘performance’, ‘happening’)
rather than the fixed product was a central feature of much would-be
revolutionary culture of the decade which explains both why many existing
cultural institutions simply could not accommodate new work and also why live
theatre, although not in the traditional ‘proscenium arch’ sense, became the
paradigmatic form of the counter-culture.219
Laing also cites poetry performances, such as those by Pete Brown and Mike Horovitz,
the American poets Allen Ginsberg and William S. Burroughs, jazz festivals, and openair concerts as representative of the period’s live culture. Theatre is an important
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constitutive element for both the proliferation of new artistic categories and as a way of
examining those categories.
It seems fitting that theatre, long set in opposition to the motion picture industry,
find its assent with cinema not through radical divergence (by either medium) but in
consonance with one another. The two mediums have a long and tenacious relationship.
Because they vied over popular appeal and, all pedagogical distinctions aside, many
likened film to theatre, modernist theorists and practitioners were particularly adamant
about distinguishing film from theatre, and vice versa. Georg Lukács wrote in 1913 that
“[t]he stage is the absolute present,”220 whereas “[t]he essence of the “cinema” is
movement in itself, an eternal variability, the never-resting change of things.”221
Threatened by the new and popular form of entertainment, theatre suffered dwindling
attendance numbers and risked fading out of relevance and out of commercial
sustainability. As the newcomer, however, cinema was eager to establish itself as a
respected art form by creating its own language independent of “canned theatre.” Herbert
Tannenbaum, an early contributor to film theory, argues along Greenbergian lines that the
two should be kept strictly separate:
The photographic image is by no means an inferior imitation of the theater . . .
[O]ne attempts wish such a comparison to conflate two areas of human artistic
endeavor that are built upon entirely different laws, that wish to achieve entirely
different effects, and that do not at all mutually interfere with one another if only
each type of art is conscious of its borders and strives, within its area of activity,
toward the perfection that enables both, each for itself, to create for mankind
beautiful hours of solemn artistic pleasure.222
Artists in the 1960s were very “conscious of the borders” between cinema and theatre,
and in turn, they exploded the frame. As Laing explaines, theatre and/or liveness in this
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context had moved beyond the proscenium arch. Expanded cinema lowered the stage to
include everyone in the spectator’s position; it raised the entire floor so as to bring
everyone to the artist’s arena; it transformed the screen into an actor; and carried the arch
into the street.
Different types of theatrics emerge within a broad field of concerns and analytical
directions. The most obvious form of theatre occurs when actors step in front of an
audience and perform. Birgit and Wilhelm Hein performed variety show-like acts in their
Movie Show (1982). In one number, Die Monster, they wore Frankenstein masks while
dancing wildly in the path of the projector beam to kitsch rock. Tony Conrad has
frequently performed Bowed Film (1974-2006), where he sits on the floor straining a loop
of film taught with his head while “playing” it with a violin bow. As with early
investigations between music, painting, and colour, there are divergent paths that choose
performance as a critical inward gesture just as there are those whose ‘intermedia” cannot
be disconnected.
In Vienna we find strong examples of the former. Peter Weibel opened an
evening’s program in 1967 with an Action Lecture 1, during which he stood in front of a
8mm projector’s beam while reading aloud theoretical texts on cinematography. In
another piece, Nivea (1967), he held up a Nivea beach ball in front of the white screen
while the sound of a camera running was played from a tape recorder. Both pieces
acutely strip down cinema into its bare components. Weibel differs from structural or
structural-materialist filmmakers in that he does not pin down one of cinema’s properties.
Rather, “[t]he intention behind both Actions was to release constituent elements of film director, light, sound, camera, projector - from their illusionistic unity and reconstellate
Rossoni 105
them.”223 Weibel collaborated with VALIE EXPORT on a number of works in 1968.
Among the most notorious of these is EXPORT’s Tapp und Tastkino (Touch Cinema).
Standing outside on a busy street, EXPORT strapped a box to her chest that was
open on both ends. The far side was decorated so as to look like a small stage, and people
on the street were invited to reach inside the box, past the ‘curtain,’ to feel her bare
breasts. In an interview with Duncan White, Weibel explains that before Tapp und
Tastkino was slowly turned into a feminist piece it was first formulated with primarily
abstract material concerns.224 If sight is representational, than touch is tactile. The hands
of the volunteer may be able to feel but they are deprived of visual pleasure. This is a
reversal of traditional cinema where one can see as a voyeur into the diegetic realm but is
incapable of touching it. A “[t]actile reception counteracts the fraud of voyeurism,”
writes EXPORT.225 Primarily formal yet minimalist, Tapp und Tastkino negates cinema
via theatre and forces to the surface their perceptual qualifiers.
Tapp und Tastkino, (VALIE EXPORT, 1968).
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Carolee Schneemann represents the opposite of this tendency towards theatre. Her
performances, like Ghost Rev (1966), Illinois Central (1986), and Snows (1967) use
materially diverse media as a basis for a form of synthesis rather than for an opposition of
ideas like in conceptualism. EXPORT and Weibel break down the components of
cinema, Schneemann creates new forms that in turn can potentially lead to new medium
amalgamations. She makes this distinction fairly clear in an interview with Gene
Youngblood:
[I]n intermedia theatre, the traditional distinctions between what is genuinely
“theatrical” as opposed to what is purely “cinematic” are no longer of concern.
Although intermedia theatre draws individually from theatre and cinema, in the
final analysis it is neither. Whatever divisions may exist between the two media
are not necessarily “bridged,” but rather are orchestrated as harmonic opposites in
an overall synaesthetic experience.226
In Snows, a “kinetic theatre” piece, she combines performance and film “in order to
‘extend the visual densities’ of the live event.”227 The film projections came from her
earlier 1965 film Viet-Flakes, in which she photographed newspaper photographs of the
Vietnam war with a magnifying lens. These images were projected against a white disc at
the back of the stage while two additional projectors swung 360 degrees around the stage.
A number of actors gave improvised performances, responding to the images, each other,
and an ‘audience-activated electronic system’ so that “movement and related imagery
spilled onto the “snow bound” audience.”228
The sheer profusion of diverse imagery – performers, swinging lights, newspapers, and
combining pre-planned with improvised methodologies - results in the idea of
synaesthesia in its highest, most complete form.
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Snows (Carolee Schneemann, 1967).
As we have seen, the idea of synaesthesia and medium specificity both
proliferated around the turn of the twentieth century. It was the most alluring intellectual
art trend of the time up until the 1960s shift towards postmodernism and the impact of
conceptual art. Lost in this same time period, however, are works of art whose interest in
merging art forms was not to emphasize differences between media but to create new art
forms that can then be scrutinized by others. The “live” culture of the 1960s and the
advent of video art provided ample fodder for experimentation in combining new media,
especially video, while also promulgating investigations into the materiality of these new
media. The ability by artists to lead these investigations while amongst an everbroadening media field is promising for our contemporary culture that may soon no
longer have access to the medium of motion pictures. Analogue film has been the source
and inspiration for a rich and exciting history of expanded cinema and avant-garde film.
Rossoni 108
Undoubtedly new forms will be discovered and similarly interrogated, ensuring a
continuingly innovative and provocative regenerative lifecycle for the arts.
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Conclusion
This thesis only begins to delve into the rich and intricate history of expanded cinema.
But as I have attempted to show, by considering earlier forms of image art we can see
that ideas and methods in artistic practices are often cyclical in nature. Technology
impacts artists in a variety of ways, creating new forms of cinematic production,
distribution, exhibition, and consumption that require careful consideration. It also allows
the revisitation of these earlier ideas and expansion or further development. Yet the role
of technology is more complicated than that, and impacts different artists in different
ways.
On the one hand, new technologies allow us to see, read, and learn about things
that we would otherwise have no way of accessing. Contemporary artists can more easily
research and receive inspiration from contact with their artistic ancestors, while revisiting
those older concepts with new technology, as exemplified by Ken Jacob’s Nervous Magic
Lantern. Or the opposite can be true, and artists will revolt or abstain from using newer
technologies by reverting to more personal, organic ways of producing imagery, like
projector performance artists who rely on the factor of ‘presence’ which is absent in
digital projection. There are also artists who readily embrace new technology in the
Youngblood, McLuhan-esque kind of hybridization. Yasunao Tone, an improvisational
musician who associated with happenings, experimental music, and digital art in the
1960s, acknowledges this dichotomy: “When a new technology appears which makes old
technology obsolete, two typical reactions occur: some artists discover an abnormal use
for the new technology in order to expand artistic expression, and sometimes the obsolete
Rossoni 110
technology itself becomes an art form.”229 Vanderbeek exemplifies the former; he gave
up painting and hand-animation to explore computer technology as an art form by
simultaneously working as a Fellow at the György Kepe’s Center for Advanced Visual
Studies at MIT and as an artist-in-residence for the Television as Art programme at the
legendary WGHB station in Boston. The same can be said for a number of British artists
that I have discussed, like David Hall, David Dye, and Tony Sinden, who began working
with video as soon as it was commercially available. More recently, Iraqi-born artist
Wafaa Bilal has worked with computer and internet art using remote controlled webcams,
video games, and even having a web camera mounted to a titanium plate implanted on
the back of his skull.
That new technologies combine with more traditional media to create new forms
allows for a ecological state of artistic development. As I have shown, this has been the
case with expanded cinema and pre-cinematic optical devices and art forms. Modern
projector performances and magic lanterns both utilize the live manipulation of images.
The role of the lanternist is that of a showman, whose skill and craftsmanship cultivate a
certain level of star status. In the age of cinema, however, the projectionist is usually
regarded as a neutral technician rather than a tradesman; one who administers the film but
does not shape it. Isolating the projection at the back of the auditorium in a soundproof
booth removes the projector as a distraction from the screen diegesis. In contrast, by
placing the projector amidst the audience, or by making the role of the projectionist
evident, artists are able to turn the projector into an instrument and the auditorium into a
concert arena. While projector performances have been performed since the 1960s, with
Ken Jacobs in the US and Nicky Hamlyn in the UK as two of the preeminent forerunners,
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they have become increasingly popular in the last decade. This includes Bruce McClure,
Luis Recoder and Sandra Gibson, Metamkine, Alex MacKenzie, and Ben Russell. The
impending discontinuation of motion-picture film stock manufacturing, the so-called
“death of cinema,” though perhaps an overstatement, makes the work of these artists
more important than ever. We live in the midst of the digital revolution. As I have
mentioned earlier in chapter one, images are increasingly being carried further out of the
hands of their original makers, in more formats and sizes than ever before. Projector
performances demand we come to them, not only to see the film, but also to see the film
“played” or manipulated live before our eyes. DCP systems have already over-taken
35mm film projectors as the standard in exhibition, and films now come on hard-drives
rather than on reels. McClure et. al. remind us that cinema exists beyond screen stars and
narrative plots, that there is a history of skilled craftsmen whose invisibility behind the
scenes has not, after all, gone unnoticed.
Immersive cinematic environments also provide alternatives to commercial
exhibition. Like panoramas, they surround and overwhelm the spectator. The panorama
painting is often compared to cinema in that it lured viewers into accepting a false reality
as true, as an illusionistic substitute. The avant-garde has historically countered this
correlation by creating cinematic environments that combat immobilizing structures like
those critically outlined by apparatus and suture theorists in the 1970s. In expanded
cinema practices, viewers are presented with multiple screens that throw a curve in
Charles Musser’s “history of screen practice.” Immersive cinema environments also
negate Anne Friedberg’s inclusive theory that “it is not narrative and not the optics of
projection that recenter the spectator, but the frame itself.”230 The creation of large-scale
Rossoni 112
exhibition sites seems to be increasingly important, if difficult, in today’s digital culture.
What was once only available in a movie theatre and 35mm film can now be seen on
small phone screens and computers. Films can be easily paused and resumed, disrupting
the context that films were originally designed to be theatrically seen. New commercial
technologies have been developed to improve the “realism” of a diegesis, including vast
improvements with 3D technology and seats that move in accordance with the screen
action (similar to the Mareorama and Hale’s Tours). These technologies, however, are
geared towards creating even more passive spectators by way of greater identification
with the narrative. Expanded cinema explodes the idea of passive identification and
demands the viewer actively decide what to look at or attempt to figure out exactly how
to look at the overabundance of pulsating images.
Interactive connectivity between technology and spectatorship results in
immersive environments. This includes the visual scanning that one must do in an
environment like Vanderbeek’s Movie-Drome, but it also includes installation art and
certain theatrical performances. In Snows (1967) Carolee Schneemann hid SCR
electronic switches underneath the audiences seats, so that their behaviour (quiet, excited,
loud) would affect the projectors’ illumination as well as signal cues to the performers,
who would then alter their actions. Installation art is the most interactive form of cinema
in a number of ways. Like sculpture, viewers can walk around and choose their position
in relation to the images as opposed to staring straight ahead or having them cascade
around you. There are also artists like David Hall, who created work that operates only
when viewers are present or interact with the piece. These works also demonstrate what
“cinema proper” is not: that is, commercial/conventional cinema is not three-dimensional,
Rossoni 113
interactive, or formed in the moment. Multimedia pieces demonstrate the enduring
effectiveness of a notion of medium specificity even within postmodernism, often by
combining dissonant media to create stark comparisons that emphasize what cinema is
not and what it can be. This again harks back to the idea of regenerative growth, where
new media will continue to develop and be probed in the process.
At the same time, expanded cinema revisits earlier forms of technology while
recontextualizing their purposes. Roughly seventy years passed before artists took up a
great number of these devices and methods, like the magic lantern and panorama, in the
1960s. As we move on into the digital world, a world that will very likely not include
“film” as we know it, it is interesting to think about what other earlier forms or art and
methods will be revisited by new artists. It is interesting to note that in contemporary
commercial cinema, VHS has replaced Super-8 as the “vintage” look featured in
nostalgic scenes. Perhaps early video mixers and image processors will be taken up
again. Whatever the state of cinema may be, expanded cinema will continue to offer
dynamic possibilities and solutions in the realm of contemporary multimedia art and
avant-garde cinema.
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End Notes
Notes to Introduction
1
Jonathan Walley proposes expanding recognition of “the idea of cinema” to include
paracinema and Conceptual art. See his essay “The Material of Film and the Idea of
Cinema: Contrasting Practices in Sixties and Seventies Avant‐Garde Film,” in October
No. 102 (Winter 2003), 15‐30.
2
A.L. Rees, “Expanded Cinema and Narrative: A Troubled History,” in Expanded
Cinema: Art, Performance, Film. Rees, A.L, Duncan White, Steven Ball, and David
Curtis, eds. (London: Tate Publishing, 2011), 12.
3
VALIE EXPORT, “Expanded Cinema: Expanded Reality,” in Expanded Cinema: Art,
Performance, Film. Rees, A.L, Duncan White, Steven Ball, and David Curtis, eds.
(London: Tate Publishing, 2011), 288‐298.
4
Schneemann writes: “[m]y first impulse: to attack media celluloid hallucination flat
linear dimension stream light beam: flesh it paint it draw dimensions from
projected imagery into image in concrete motion. Actual. That audience is going to
FEEL us and were going to feel them” [sic.]. ‐ Carolee Schneemann, “Free For
Recollections of New York,” in Expanded Cinema: Art, Performance, Film. Rees, A.L,
Duncan White, Steven Ball, and David Curtis, eds. (London: Tate Publishing, 2011),
96.
5
On this topic I recommend Bart Testa’s Back and Forth: Early Cinema and the
AvantGarde as well as Jeffrey Skoller’s Shadows, Specters, Shards: Making History in
AvantGarde Film.
6
This is one of the few occasions when I will use brackets around the term “film” in
the context of expanded cinema, the other when I discuss paracinema, for which
brackets are a necessary use. I use the term film, or cinema, in an inclusive manner
derived from Jackie Hatfield. She writes, “I would prefer to use the term cinematic to
describe what I do as an artist. I do not use film, but I do make cinema – it moves, it
is composed of moving images. Bill Viola makes cinematic work, although working
digitally; Chris Hales, Malcolm Le Grice and Grahame Weinbren make cinematic
work although working electronically and digitally.” By extension, and important to
this thesis, the term cinema also includes elements of theatre, music, sculpture,
painting, and Paracinema/Conceptual art. See Jackie Hatfield, “Some Reasons for a
Review of the Avant‐Garde Debates Around Narrativity,” in Millennium Film Journal
(Winter 2003), 50‐65.
Rossoni 115
7
Markman Ellis, “’Spectacles within doors’: Panoramas of London in the 1790s,” in
Romanticism Vol. 14:2 (2008), 142.
8
Ibid., 142.
9
Junius Adams, “Entertainment for the Space Age,” in Highlights of Vortex: Electronic
Experiments and Music, Folkways Records LP (1959) FSS 6301:
http://media.smithsonianfolkways.org/liner_notes/folkways/FW06301.pdf
10
Ibid.
Notes to Chapter One
11
I borrow the term “post‐medium” from Rosalind Krauss. See “A Voyage on the
North Sea”: Art in the Age of the PostMedium Condition, (Thames & Hudson, 1999).
12
Tom Gunning, “An Unseen Energy Swallows Space: The Space in Early Film and Its
Relation to American Avant-Garde Film,” in Film Before Griffith, ed. John L. Fell
(Berkeley: U of California P, 1883), 355.
13
If expanded cinema is a formally narrower category, a sub‐sect of the avant‐garde,
what does one call the reversal of such a process? Non‐expanded cinema? Can the
avant‐garde reach a point so far “forward” as to turn the corner onto a one‐way
street? Seemingly logical answers: normal, standard, common, typical, are
unquestionably inadequate.
14
Gunning, “Unseen Energy,” 366.
15
See Jean‐Louis Baudry, “Ideological Effects of the Basic Cinematographic
Apparatus,” in Movies and Methods Vol. 2, ed. Bill Nichols (Berkeley: U of California
P, 1985), 531‐542; Stephen Heath, Questions of Cinema (London: Macmillan Press,
1981), 28‐29; also see Bart Testa, Back and Forth: Early Cinema and the AvantGarde
(Toronto: Art Gallery of Ontario, 1992), 23‐47.
16
See Anne Friedberg, The Virtual Window: From Alberti to Microsoft (Cambridge,
Massachusetts; London, England: The MIT Press, 2006), 59‐93.
17
18
Ibid., 80.
Tom Gunning, “An Aesthetic of Astonishment: Early Film and the (In)Credulous
Spectator,” in Viewing Positions: Ways of Seeing Film, ed. Linda Williams (New
Brunswick; New Jersey: Rutgers U P, 1995), 119.
Rossoni 116
19
Charles Musser, “Toward a History of Screen Practice,” in History of the American
Cinema. Vol. 1: “The Emergence of Cinema: The American Screen to 1907.” Ed.
Charles Musser (Charles Scribner’s Sons: New York; Collier Macmillan Canada:
Toronto; Maxwell Macmillan International; New York, 1990), 15‐54.
20
Gunning writes: “[c]ontemporary film theorists have made careers out of
underestimating the basic intelligence and reality‐testing abilities of the average
film viewer and have no trouble treating previous audiences with similar disdain.”
Gunning, “(In)Credulous Spectator,” 115.
21
In his manual Book of the Lantern, T.C. Hepworth provides advice on how to
correct ‘imperfect projection’ and restore proper registration of dissolving views.
Mistakes often led to comical effects. Hepworth describes one such humourous
incident: “First of all there came a woman in a peasant’s dress. This was followed by
a man whose lower extremities were clothed in tight‐fitting white unmentionables.
It so happened that one figure occupied on the screen exactly the same place as the
other, so that when the lady was slowly dissolved into the gentleman, the
astounding effect was produced of her clothes gradually melting from her form.”
Hepworth, The Book of the Lantern. Being a Practical Guide to the Working of the
Optical (or Magic) Lantern (London: Wyman and Sons, printers, 1888), 272‐3.
22
Gunning, “(In)Credulous Spectator,” 117.
23
See Tom Gunning, “The Cinema of Attractions: Early Film, it’s Spectator, and the
Avant‐Garde,” in Early Film: Space, Frame Narrative, eds. Adam Barker and Thomas
Elsaesser (London: BFI Publishing, 1990), 56‐62.
24
Gunning, “Unseen Energy,” 356.
25
Ibid., 361.
26
Here Bruce McClure is an interesting case, as a conscious/unconscious artist. In
2006 he was interviewed by Brian Frye (Rail):
Rail: So, would you say the stroboscope was the lead into your eventual
filmmaking?
McClure: Yeah, it was an attempt to address what might be called a proto‐cinematic
approach to filmmaking, one that didn’t involve a lot of technology, although the
stroboscope is a fairly recent, technological thing. But short of doing flipbooks, . . a
hyped up, souped up phenokistascope. The technology was more sophisticated than
just a rotating disk with slits cut in it that you look at, a painted image on a mirror,
you know?
Rossoni 117
McClure used stroboscopes in his early career as a way of avoiding the use of a
camera, film, and other production materials. He has always been more interested in
the projector itself. Once he moved past the stroboscope, his deliberate
reinvigoration of pre‐cinematic methods subsides.
See Brian Frye, “Bruce McClure with Brian Frye,” in The Brooklyn Rail (July‐Aug.,
2006), sec. Film.
27
Indeed, the term is “notoriously difficult to pin down or define” and includes such
diverse examples “from the vividly spectacular to the starkly materialist”, from Stan
Vandeerbeek’s “synthetic multimedia” MovieDrome of the 1960s, to the “analytical
and primal cinema” of the 1970s Filmaktion screenings in the U.K. See A.L. Rees
introductory chapter, “Expanded Cinema and Narrative: A Troubled History,” in
Expanded Cinema: Art, Performance, Film. Rees, A.L, Duncan White, Steven Ball, and
David Curtis, eds. (London: Tate Publishing, 2011): 12‐23.
28
One could justifiably break it down even further and isolate the screen. But since
those interested in projection and those who investigate reception space often
approach the screen surface in similar ways, I think it best to share this category
with both parties.
29
A good example of this latter tendency (and that I discussed in the introduction to
this thesis) is Nicky Hamlyn’s 4 X Loops (1974‐), which uses four projectors to form
striking visual patterns. The projectors are usually cast separate from one another,
though they do sometimes overlap somewhat (and in one section of the
performance, all four projectors overlap one another). Regardless, one can clearly
determine that Hamlyn is controlling the projectors one at a time, whereas in a large
scale image environment like Vanderbeek’s MovieDrome, for instance, there are so
many images that live manipulation would be unnoticeable, unless Vanderbeek
were to move a projector’s beam around the ceiling of the dome, drawing attention
to its mobility.
30
Musser, 17, 20.
31
Ibid., 17.
32
This insistence on exposing the mechanism calls to mind the self‐referential
efforts of the structural/materialist wave in the 1960s and 70s, with films like
George Landow’s Film in Which There Appear Edge Lettering, Sprocket Holes, Dirt
Particles, Etc. (1966) and Michael Snow’s Wavelength (1967) serving as but two
examples.
Rossoni 118
33
Numerous manuals and catalogues list the multitude of available mechanical slide
effects. These mechanical slides made dissolves and slide movement easier for the
lanternist, and include, for instance, slipping slides, chromotropes, the Pandiscope,
the Choreutoscope, the Cycloidotrope, etc. The Indispensable Handbook to the Optical
Lantern, compiled and ed. by Walter D. Welford and Henry Sturmey (London: Iliffe &
Son, 1888), 336‐345.
34
Marcy’s Sciopticon Manual has an article entitled “Traveling by Magic” that
describes the benefits and joys afforded by the device, even in one’s own home:
“[g]ive us the Sciopticon, with the necessary slides, before a screen or a white wall,
and we will carry you as fast or as slow as you wish, wherever the foot of man has
trod, in excellent and comfortable style.” Marcy, 128.
35
Samuel Highley wrote about the educational possibilities of magic lanterns on
numerous occasions. In 1870 he argued that magic lanterns could aid in assisting
learning about subjects like astronomy, botany, physiology, history, geography, etc.,
by providing visual aids to students learning materials. He writes: “[i]n recent years
came the application of photography to the magic lantern, and it became apparent
that that which had only been employed for mere amusement was destined to
become, in the hands of the professor and schoolmaster, an important philosophical
instrument of great educational value.” Highley, “Optical Instruments X: Apparatus
Employed for Educational Demonstrations,” Technical Educator: An Encyclopadeia
of Technical Education (London, Paris, and New York: Cassell, Petter, and Galpin,
1870), 244. Also see Highley, Optical Instruments XXII: The Magic Lantern,”
Technical Educator: An Encyclopadeia of Technical Education (London, Paris, and
New York: Cassell, Petter, and Galpin, 1870), 231‐234.
36
See the collection of The Magic Lantern Journal articles “’Can Any of the Readers of
These Pages Inform me who Originally Invented Dissolving Views?’.” In Magic
Images: The Art of HandPainted and Photographic Slides, Dennis Crompton, David
Henry, and Stephen Herbert, eds. (The Magic Lantern Society of Great Britain, 1990),
15.
37
Though generally associated with the computer age, and more often than not with
the gallery space rather than the theatre, the term “multi‐media” comes to mind
here. Here we have multiple mediums, projected imagery, music, and oratory,
synthesizing to create a single performance piece. Could the magic lantern be
considered an ancestor to contemporary multi‐media art?
38
Despite its indications, the Stereopticon is neither some kind of primitive yet
highly advanced form of 3‐D, nor any kind of dual‐slide projection. Rather, it is a
result of the practice of cutting stereographic slides in half and using them
separately as lantern slides.
Rossoni 119
39
Musser marks this transition to photographic slides as the midpoint between the
three most pivotal developments in the history of “screen practice,” the first being
the initial development of the magic lantern in the 1650s, and the last being the
projection of chrono‐photography around 1895. Also see Ramsaye, Terry, A Million
and One Nights: A History of the Motion Picture (New York: Simon and Schuster,
1926).
40
See the tenth footnote in Deac Rossel’s essay “Double Think: The Cinema and
Magic Lantern Culture,” in Celebrating 1895: The Centenary of Cinema, ed. John
Fullerton (London: J. Libbey, 1998), 33‐34.
41
Deac Rossell, Living Pictures: The Origins of the Movies (New York: State U of New
York P, 1998), 14‐15.
42
Dai Vaughn, “Let There be Lumière,” in Early Cinema: Space, Frame, Narrative, ed.
Thomas Elsaesser and Adam Barker (London: BFI Pub., 1990), 63‐67.
43
Rossell, “Double Think,” 31.
44
Rossell, Living Pictures, 11‐12.
45
Ibid., 15.
46
See [Cinema.1, Magic Lanterns] [Electronic Resource] 1754‐1892 (Marlborough,
England: Adam Matthew Digital, c.2007).
47
She writes, “[p]erformance’s only life is the present. It cannot be saved, recorded,
documented, or otherwise participate in the circulation of representations of
representations . . . Performance occurs over a time which will not be repeated . . .
and disappears into memory, into the realm of invisibility and the unconscious
where it eludes regulation and control,” qtd. in White, Duncan, “Expanded Cinema:
The Live Record,” in Expanded Cinema: Art, Performance, Film. Rees, A.L, Duncan
White, Steven Ball, and David Curtis, eds. (London: Tate Publishing, 2011), 29.
48
Russell’s admiration for pre‐cinema is evident even on his website, where he
refers to himself as an “itinerant media artist.” www.dimeshow.com.
49
I have seen Bruce McClure perform on three occasions. At the Media City 18 last
year, I asked him if there was a way I could view more of his performances.
Grinning, he told me “if you’ve seen one, you’ve seen them all.”
Rossoni 120
50
Jonathan Walley, “’Not an Image of the Death of Film’: Contemporary Expanded
Cinema and Experimental Film,” in Expanded Cinema: Art, Performance, Film. Rees,
A.L, Duncan White, Steven Ball, and David Curtis, eds. (London: Tate Publishing,
2011), 247.
51
William C. Wees, “The Apparatus and the Avant‐Garde,” in Cinema Canada, special
edition on Film and the Future (no. 97, June 1983), 45.
52,
Laszló Moholy‐Nagy, “Production‐Reproduction: Potentialities of the
Phonograph,” in Audio Culture: Readings in Modern Music, Christoph Cox and Daniel
Warner, eds., (New York; London: Continuum, 2004), 331.
53
Ibid., 332.
54
John Oswald, “Bettered by the Borrower: The Ethics of Musical Debt,” in Audio
Culture: Readings in Modern Music, Christoph Cox and Daniel Warner, eds., (New
York; London: Continuum, 2004), 131.
55
Tara Brabazon, Popular Music: Topics, Trends & Trajectories (Los Angeles: Sage,
2012), 115.
56
One loses a great deal of the meaning in these works when viewing recorded
performances. A factor that makes researching them somewhat disheartening.
57
Malcolm Le Grice, “Time and the Spectator in the Experience of Expanded
Cinema,” in Expanded Cinema: Art, Performance, Film. Rees, A.L, Duncan White,
Steven Ball, and David Curtis, eds. (London: Tate Publishing, 2011), 160‐170.
58
While this is often the case, with McClure the “performance” seems to carry on
outside the film‐piece itself. He is very much a performer when he addresses the
audience before or after his film. His comical, somewhat maniacal behavior is
reminiscent of a vaudeville act.
59
Although in iterinant performances, lecturers would often revise or restage slides
to reinterpret them for local audiences.
60
Although many lantern audiences were illiterate, some shows were held at
scientific institutions and universities such as the Polytechnic Institution that were
for more educated audiences well versed in media literacy.
61
Noël Burch, “A Primitive Mode of Representation?” in Early Film: Space, Frame
Narrative, Adam Barker and Thomas Elsaesser, eds. (London: BFI Publishing, 1990),
221.
Rossoni 121
62
Ibid., 221.
63
Ceram, 28‐32.
64
Anne Friedberg, Window Shopping: Cinema and the Postmodern (Berkeley: U of
California P, 1993), 23.
65
In fact, attendants of the Phantasmagoria were first exposed to a “pre‐show”
before entering the main auditorium. In the exterior corridor Robertson laid out a
number of popular scientific experiments for viewers to admire before the main
show. See Erkki Huhtamo, “Peristrephic Pleasures: on the Origins of the Moving
Panorama,” in Allegories of Communication: Intermedia Concerns From Cinema to the
Digital, John Fullerton and Jan Olsson, eds. (Rome: J. Libbey Publishing, 2004), 244,
footnote 83.
66
Musser, 24.
67
Ibid., 24.
68
Gunning, , “The Cinema of Attractions,” 43.
69
William Rose, “Annotated Filmography and Performance History,” in Optic Antics:
The Cinema of Ken Jacobs, Michele Pierson, David E. James, and Paul Arthur, eds.
(Oxford; New York: Oxford U P, 2011), 270.
70
Ibid., 273.
71
There are also recorded instances of magic lanternists projecting onto the ceilings
and members of the audience.
72
There were also a number of “slideless” magic lantern set‐ups that projected light
through glass tanks filled with water. Chemicals and dyes could be added to the
water and the reaction and circulation of the additive could be observed. L.J. Marcy,
a Philadelphia optician who invented the “sciopticon,” lists a number of possible
chemical experiments in his Sciopticon Manual. For instance, “Experiment 4th. Into a
tank of water drop slowly a strong solution of acid perchloride of tin. This on the
screen will resemble the eruption of a submarine volcano. When a pretty strong
solution has thus been made in the tank, put in it a strip of sheet zinc, and long leaf‐
like blades if metallic tin will at once be seen to shoot out in all directions.” Plants
and small insects could also be added, and as with chemical reactions, their form
and movement could be observed in great detail. L.J. Marcy, Sciopticon Manual, 6th
ed. (Philadelphia: James A. Moore, printer, 1877), 85‐6.
Rossoni 122
Notes to Chapter Two
73
See Angela Miller, “The Panorama, the Cinema, and the Emergence of the
Spectator.” Wide Angle, Vol. 18:2 (April 1996), 34‐69; Anne Friedberg, Window
Shopping: Cinema and the Postmodern (Berkeley: U of California P, 1993); Vanessa R.
Schwartz, Spectacular Realities: Early Mass Culture in FindeSiècle Paris (Berkeley: U
of California P, 1998); For a comprehensive history of the panorama, see Stephan
Oettermann, The Panorama: History of a Mass Medium, trans. Deborah Lucas
Schneider (New York: Zone Books, 1997).
74
For an insightful article on the financial backing and technical history of
Cinerama, see Hazard Reeves, “This is Cinerama.” Film History, Vol. 11:1 (1999), 85‐
97. Hazard Reeves was a key contributor to the creation of Cinerama. He was not
only a producer and shareholder, but designed the multi‐channel surround‐sound
system. Also see Fred Waller, “The Archeology of Cinerama.” Film History, Vol. 5:3
(1993), 289‐297.
75
Judith Shatnoff, “Expo 67: A Multiple Vision.” Film Quarterly, Vol. 21:1 (Autumn,
1967), 2‐13.
According to event staff, Expo’67 featured 5000 films, and some of the national
pavilions had up to 300 films. Some filmmakers were quoted as saying “Expo will
change film‐making history more than any other event in history.” See Austin F.
Lamont, “Films at Expo – A Retrospect.” Journal of the University Film Association,
Vol. 21:1 (1969), 3‐12.
76Numerous
variations of the panorama were subsequently developed, including the
extended panorama, double extended panorama, cosmorama, neorama, moving
panorama, cyclorama, myriorama, and scene panorama.
77
Sophie Thomas, Romanticism and Visuality: Fragments, History, Spectacle (New
York: Routledge, 2008), 121.
78
Oettermann, 13.
79
Schwartz, 151.
80
Oliver Grau, “Into the Belly of the Image: Historical Aspects of Virtual Reality.”
Leonardo, Vol 32:5 (1999), 367.
81
Thomas, 121.
Rossoni 123
82
See Benedict Anderson, Imagined Communities: Reflections on the Origin and
Spread of Nationalism (London; New York: Verso, 1991).
83
Grau, 367.
84
Early panoramas were still experimenting with different sized canvases and
buildings. Before the size became more‐or‐less standardized, viewers who attended
relatively small‐sized panoramas experienced feelings of dizziness. Though the
illusion suggested they were very far away, their close physical proximity to the
painting resulted in viewers covering great distances in few steps, causing
disorientation. According to Oettermann, “this effect can still be experienced at the
panorama in Thun, Switzerland; painted in 1814 it is the oldest panorama still in
existence; it has a diameter of only thirty‐seven feet” (59).
85However,
some complained that these objects ruined the effect since they were
stationary and not a part of the painting itself. Other flaws could be detected as well.
As mentioned earlier, the proximity between the viewer and painted wall could
undermine the illusion if it was too short. Sophie Thomas points out that “[a]nother
was the sheer profusion of visual detail, which surrounded the viewer completely,
and undermined any stable viewpoint – though this surfeit, and the inherently
excessive nature of the illusion, was the very thing that made the panorama so
sensational” (16).
86
Youngblood, Gene, Expanded Cinema. (New York: Dutton, 1970), 130.
87
The conference was conducted by David Curtis and Duncan White, and featured
many of the essays featured in the 2011 anthology Expanded Cinema:
Art, Performance, Film. The conference also featured artists talks with William
Raban, Malcolm Le Grice, Peter Weibel, and Valie Export, as well as a number of
performances and pieces by important artists such as David Dye, Stephen Partridge,
Sandra Gibson and Luis Recoder, Tony Hill, and recreations of work by Jordan
Belson and Oskar Fischinger.
88
Jonas Mekas, “Expanded Cinema: Extracts from Village Voice ‘Movie Journal.”
Expanded Cinema: Art, Performance, Film. Rees, A.L, Duncan White, Steven Ball, and
David Curtis, eds. (London: Tate Publishing, 2011), 78. Mekas spells Liss’ piece
“Dovecoat”, but according to the BFI website and other sources it is spelt “Dove
Cote.” Regardless, each of Mekas’s daily reports on the festival, as well as coverage
of other expanded cinema events, have been compiled in the anthology cited above.
89
Youngblood, 371.
90
Oettermann, 34.
Rossoni 124
91
Magic lantern performers also had to adjust their respective routines based on an
audience’s regional diversity.
92
Oettermann, 32.
93
Friedberg, Window Shopping, 24.
94
Oettermann, 60.
95
Miller, 43.
96Austin
F. Lamont, “Films at Expo – A Retrospect.” Journal of the University Film
Association, Vol. 21:1 (1969), 3.
97
Youngblood, 352.
98
Frank Kappler, “The mixed media – communication that puzzles, excites and
involves.” Life, July 14, 1967, 28C.
99
Andreas J. Rabe, “Multiple Image Techniques.” Journal of the University Film
Association, Vol. 21:1 (1969), 22.
100
Thompson and his partner, Alexander Hammid (husband of Maya Deren) made
numerous multi‐screen films prior to We Are Young. Their multi‐image film To Be
Alive was a smash hit at the New York World’s Fair in 1964, and won a Special
Award from the New York Film Critics Circle. It is also interesting to note that the
film was originally barred from Oscar consideration because of its three‐screen
format. A single‐screen 70mm version was then created, and the film won the award
for Best Documentary Short Subject in 1965.
101
Rabe, 21.
102 Lamont,
11.
103
Rabe, 20.
104
Ibid, 21.
105
Tom Gunning, “An Unseen Energy Swallows Space: The Space in Early Film and Its
Relation to American Avant-Garde Film,” in Film Before Griffith, ed. John L. Fell
(Berkeley: U of California P, 1883), 362.
106
Shatnoff, 3.
Rossoni 125
107
Youngblood, 358.
108
Shatnoff, 2.
109
Lamont, 3.
110
Kappler, 28C.
111
Oettermann, 59.
112
Many of the buildings deteriorated simply because they were not built to last
much longer than Expo itself. Some even burnt down, while Buckminster Fuller’s
infamous “geodesic dome” is now the Montreal Biosphere.
113
John Driscoll, “Some Psychological Bases for Split‐Screen Utilization.” Journal of
the University Film Association, Vol. 25:1 (1973), 6.
114
Frank R. Hartman, “Recognition Learning Under Multiple Channel Presentation
and Testing Conditions.” Audio Visual Communication Review, Vol. 9:1 (1961), 24‐43.
115
Driscoll, 7.
116
Norbert Wiener, The Human Use of Human Beings; Cybernetics and Society (New
York: Avon Books, 1967), 26‐7.
117
Youngblood, 65.
118
See Youngblood, 54‐9.
119
Ibid, 54.
120
See Dick Higgins chapter “Intermedia”, in Horizons, the Poetics and Theory of the
Intermedia. (Carbondale: Southern Illinois U P, 1984),18‐28.
121
Henri Chrétien got the idea for his “hypergonar” lenses after seeing Napoleon in
1926. The lens system eventually led to the creation of Cinemascope. For a detailed
description of the development of Cinemascope, see Stephen Huntley, “Sponable’s
Cinemascope: An Intimate Chronology of the Invention of the Cinemascope Optical
System” in Film History, Vol. 5:3 (Sept. 1993), 298‐320.
122
Anne Friedberg, The Virtual Window: From Alberti to Microsoft (Cambridge,
Massachusetts: The MIT Press, 2006) 192.
123
Rabe, 21.
Rossoni 126
124
Miller, op cit 55.
125
A simple example of double‐framing is two trees on either side of the painting. It
thus creates a natural frame within the frame, hence “double‐frame.” It is also a
popular technique in cinema. John Ford, for instance, would often use doorways and
fence lines to create natural frames.
126
Oettermann, 22.
127
Barker also “billed his picture as an “improvement on painting, which relieves
that sublime Art from a Restraint it has ever laboured under.” See Thomas, 17.
128
Oettermann, 32.
129
There were, nevertheless, attempts to reproduce class distinctions within the
panorama apparatus. In some cases, panoramas were erected with two viewing
platforms. The lower platform was larger and could house more people, and was
also cheaper. However, the view from this platform was slightly distorted. To view it
properly, patrons had to purchase a ticket to the higher platform, which was both
more expensive and smaller in size.
130
Jonathan Crary, Techniques of the Observer: On Vision and Modernity in the
Nineteenth Century, (Cambridge, Massachusetts: MIT Press, 1990), 113.
131
Miller, 44.
132 Ibid,
44.
133
Friedberg, Window Shopping, 22.
134
Grau, 367.
135
Guy Debord, Society of the Spectacle, (Detroit: Black & Red, 1983), 10.
136
Louis Daguerre created the diorama in 1822. Significantly, he began his career in
creating theater sets and designs, for which he was to be very successful at. He
worked for years as an assistant to the panorama painter Pierre Prévost.
137
138
Friedberg, Window Shopping, 28.
Many of the sources listed thus far also discuss the diorama, including
Oettermann, Friedberg, Thomas, and Miller. Also see Louis Daguerre, An Historical
Rossoni 127
and Descriptive Account of the Various Processes of the Daguerréotype and the
Diorama, by Daguerre, (New York: Kraus Reprint), 1969.
139 Friedberg,
The Virtual Window, 74.
140
Jean‐Louis Baudry, “Ideological Effects of the Basic Cinematographic Apparatus”,
in Movies and Methods, Vol. 2, ed. Bill Nichols, (Berkeley: U of California P, 1985),
534.
141
Ibid, 534.
142
Stephen Heath, Questions of Cinema, (London: Macmillan Press, 1981), 28.
143
Friedberg, The Virtual Window, 77.
144
Ibid, 77.
145
Ibid, 84.
146
Stan Vanderbeek. “Culture Intercom.” In Expanded Cinema: Art, Performance,
Film. Rees, A.L, Duncan White, Steven Ball, and David Curtis, eds. (London: Tate
Publishing, 2011), 82.
147
Daryl Chin, “Down Memory Lane; Found Forms.” In Stan Vanderbeek
Retrospective; Anthology Film Archives (1977). “Expanded Cinema/ Multi Image
Installations: http://www.stanvanderbeek.com/
148
According to Mark Bartlett, “Vanderbeek soon abandoned the MovieDrome
because he was unable to resolve two problems: the interference of projector noise
with the audio component of the work, and the reflective surface of the dome itself
that interfered with the quality of the still and moving imagery.” Mark Bartlett.
“Socialimagestics and the Visual Acupuncture of Stan Vanderbeek’s Expanded
Cinema.” In Expanded Cinema: Art, Performance, Film. Rees, A.L, Duncan White,
Steven Ball, and David Curtis, eds. (London: Tate Publishing, 2011), 52.
149
Cindy Keefer. ““Space Light Art” – Early Abstract Cinema and Multimedia, 1900‐
1959.” (2005), Par. 36. Center for the Moving Image. 12 Sep. 2012
<http://www.centerforvisualmusic.org/CKSLAexc.htm>
150
Ibid, par. 35.
151
Oettermann, 22.
152
Crary, 113.
Rossoni 128
153
Rees, A.L. “Expanded Cinema and Narrative: A Troubled History.” In Expanded
Cinema: Art, Performance, Film. Rees, A.L, Duncan White, Steven Ball, and David
Curtis, eds. (London: Tate Publishing, 2011), 13.
154
Fred Turner, “Stewart Brand Meets the Cybernetic Culture,” Edge: the Third
Culture, (March 2006):
<http://www.edge.org/3rd_culture/turner06/turner06_index.html>, par. 35.
155
Youngblood, 394.
156
Rees, 14.
157
Ibid, 14.
158
Nicky Hamlyn. “Mutable Screens: The Expanded Films of Guy Sherwin, Lis
Rhodes, Steve Farrer and Nicky Hamlyn.” In Expanded Cinema: Art, Performance,
Film. Rees, A.L, Duncan White, Steven Ball, and David Curtis, eds. (London: Tate
Publishing, 2011), 216.
159
Ibid, 216.
160
Duncan White. “Expanded Cinema Up To and Including its Limits: Perception,
Participation and Technology.” In Expanded Cinema: Art, Performance, Film. Rees,
A.L, Duncan White, Steven Ball, and David Curtis, eds. (London: Tate Publishing,
2011), 231.
161
Malcolm Le Grice. “Time and the Spectator in the Experience of Expanded
Cinema.” In Expanded Cinema: Art, Performance, Film. Rees, A.L, Duncan White,
Steven Ball, and David Curtis, eds. (London: Tate Publishing, 2011), 165.
162
Ibid, 169.
163
Recalling the Lumière brothers’ Cinématographe, which doubled as a portable
camera and projector.
164
This particular aspect finds its predecessor in Vistavision, a widescreen process
developed by paramount in the 1950s that ran its 35mm raw stock horizontally.
165
Rod Stoneman. “360 Degrees .” Artscribe No. 11 (Summer 1989), 12.
166
Hamlyn, 218.
Rossoni 129
167
Ji-hoon Kim “Reassembling Components, Hybridizing the Human and the Machine:
Cross-disciplining Expanded Cinema and the Possibilities for a Discourse of Interfacing.”
Artnodes No. 11 (2011), 88.
<http://www.academia.edu/2366216/Reassembling_Components_Hybridizing_the_Hum
an_and_the_Machine_Crossdisciplining_Expanded_Cinema_and_the_Possibilities_for_a
_Discourse_of_Interfacing>
168
Youngblood, 41.
Notes to Chapter Three
169
Jeremy Strick, “Visual Music,” in Visual Music. Synaesthesia in Art and Music Since
1900, ed. Kerry Brougher, et. al. (Los Angeles: Thames & Hudson, 2005), 15.
170
Judith Zilczer, “Music for the Eyes: Abstract Painting and Light Art,” in Visual
Music. Synaesthesia in Art and Music Since 1900, ed. Kerry Brougher, et. al. (Los
Angeles: Thames & Hudson, 2005), 25‐87.
171
There are of course other important figures, creations, and movements leading
up to “cinema proper,” some of which I have covered in the preceding chapters, but
many of these arguments are often teleological or seemingly argumentative for the
sake of argument. This include the ridiculous claim that “cinema” did not exist
before Griffith. See the first chapter of Bart Testa’s Back and Forth: Early Cinema and
the AvantGarde, (Toronto: Art Gallery of Ontario, 1992).
172
Clement Greenberg references Lessing’s publication in his 1940 essay arguing
similar lines of medium specificity, “Towards a Newer Laocoon,” in Abstract
Expressionism: A Critical Record, David Shapiro and Cecile Shapiro, eds. (Cambridge;
New York: Cambridge U P, 1990), 61‐75.
173
Karin V. Maur, in The Sound of Painting (New York; London; Munich: Prestel
Verlag, 1999), 10.
174
Richard Wagner, “The Art‐work of the Future,” in Richard Wagner’s Prose Works,
Vol. 1, trans. William Ashton Ellis. (New York: Broude Brothers, 1966), 132.
175
Ibid., 153.
176
Ibid., 188.
177
Pierre Bourdieu, “Introduction to Distinction,” in The Cult Film Reader, Ernest
Mathijs and Xavier Mendik, eds. (New York: Open U P, 2000), 388.
Rossoni 130
178
Wagner, 184‐185.
179
Noam M. Elcott, “On Cinematic Invisibility: Expanded Cinema Between Wagner
and Television,” in Expanded Cinema: Art, Performance, Film. Rees, A.L, Duncan
White, Steven Ball, and David Curtis, eds. (London: Tate Publishing, 2011), 40.
180
See Peter Tscherkasky, “The Framework of Modernity. Some Concluding
Remarks on Cinema and Modernity,” in Film Unframed: A History of Austrian Avant
Garde Cinema, ed. Peter Tscherkassky, (Vienna: sixpackfilm, 2012), 311‐316.
181
John Berger, The Moment of Cubism and Other Essays (London: Weidenfeld and
Nicolson, 1969), 21.
182
Ibid., 23.
183
Maur, 44.
184
Qtd. in Arthur Jerome Eddy, Cubists and PostImpressionism (Chicago: A. C.
McClurg Co., 1914), 140‐141
185
Many, but not all. Louis Bertrand Castel, a French Jesuit priest, is generally
regarded as having built the first colour organ, or clavecin, in 1734. Another colour
organ was invented by Bainbridge Bishop in 1877. Only with technical
improvements in electric illumination around 1900 were these kinds of machines
really able to be function properly.
186
Zilczer, 49.
187
For a detailed description of their painted films, and other Futurist films by
Anton Giulio Bragaglia, see Birgit Hein, “The Futurist Film,” in Film as Film: Formal
Experiment in Film 19101975, (London: Arts Council of Great Britain, 1979), 19‐21.
188
William Moritz, Optical Poetry: The Life and Work of Oskar Fischinger.
(Bloomington; Indianapolis: Indiana U P, 2004), 203.
189
Though most of the complete films are lost, The Center for Visual Music salvaged
enough of Fischinger’s material to recreate a three‐screen installation piece at the
Whitney in 2012 entitled Space Light Art. Reporting on the exhibit, Ken Johnson
writes: “it has a brightness and chromatic intensity you would expect to see in work
from the psychedelic ‘60s. Pulsating circles, flowing organic lines and blinking
rectangles; a found film clip of a spinning globe; and the momentary cartoon
apparition of a young girl in a hooded, fur‐trimmed coat together create an
exhilarating phantasmagoria of abstraction and metaphor.” See Ken Johnson, “The
Rossoni 131
Lines and Shapes of a Mystical Stenography: ‘Signs & Symbols’ and Oskar Fischinger
at Whitney Museum” The New York Times, July 27 2007, C25.
190
Cindy Keefer, “”Raumlichtmusik” – Early 20th Century Abstract Cinema
Immersive Environments,” in Leonardo Electronic Almanac 16: 6‐7. (30 Sep. 2009):
http://www.leonardo.info/LEA/CreativeData/CD_Keefer.pdf
191
Moritz, 12.
192
Clement Greenberg, “Modernist Painting,” in Art in Modern Culture: an Anthology
of Critical Texts, Francis Frascina and Jonathan Harris, eds., (New York: Harper
Collins, 1992), 309.
193
Rudolf Arnheim, Film as Art, (Berkeley; Los Angeles: U of California P, 1969), 35.
194
Noël Carroll, “The Specificity Thesis,” in Film Theory & Criticism: Introductory
Readings, 7th ed., ed. Leo Braudy and Marshall Cohen, (New York: U of Oxford P,
2009), 294.
195
John G. Hanhardt, “The Medium Viewed: American Avant‐Garde Film,” in A
History of the American AvantGarde Cinema, ed. Marilyn Singer (New York: The
American Federation of Arts,), 22.
196
Malcolm Le Grice, “Real Time/Space.” Arts and Artists, Vol. 7, No. 9, Issue 81,
(December 1972), 29.
197
For instance, Ernie Gehr’s Eureka (1974), which refilms footage of Market Street
in San Francisco around the turn of the century, or going back slightly, Ken Jacobs’
Tom, Tom the Piper’s Son (1960. A good example of this trend in expanded cinema,
rather than single‐screen, is Le Grice’s four‐screen (although it is also available in
single‐screen, After Lumière – L’Arroseur arose, first shown in 1974. Jacobs’ reshoots
his own version of the popular early comedy and “first narrative” L'Arroseur Arrosé,
shot by the Lumière brothers in 1895.
198 Jonathan
Walley, “The Material of Film and the Idea of Cinema: Contrasting
Practices in Sixties and Seventies Avant‐Garde Film,” in October, No. 102 (Winter
2003), 18.
199
Scott MacDonald, interview with Anthony McCall in A Critical Cinema 2:
Interviews with Independent Filmmakers, (Berkeley; Los Angeles; Oxford: U of
California P, 1992), 165.
Rossoni 132
200
Krauss: ““Technical support” has the virtue of acknowledging the recent
obsolescence of most traditional aesthetic mediums (such as oil on canvas, fresco,
and many sculptural materials, including bronze or welded metal), while it also
welcomes the layered mechanisms of new technologies that make a simple, unitary
identification of the work’s physical support impossible (is the “support” of film the
celluloid strip, the screen, the splices of the edited footage, the projector’s beam of
light, the circular reels?)” See “Two Moments from the Post‐Medium Condition,” in
October, No. 116 (Spring 2006), 56.
201
Walley, 30.
202
Gill Perry, “Primitivism and the ‘Modern,’” in Primitivism, Cubism, Abstraction:
The Early Twentieth Century. Charles Harrison, Francis Frascina, and Gil Perry, eds.,
(New Haven: Yale U P, 1993), 62.
203
Clement Greenberg, Art and Culture, (London: Thames and Hudson, 1973), 72.
204
Zilczer, 82.
205
Gene Youngblood, Expanded Cinema. (New York: Dutton, 1970), 54.
206
A.L. Rees, “Expanded Cinema and Narrative: A Troubled History,” in Expanded
Cinema: Art, Performance, Film. Rees, A.L, Duncan White, Steven Ball, and David
Curtis, eds. (London: Tate Publishing, 2011), 12.
207
Annabel Nicholson, “Artist as Filmmaker,” in Arts and Artists, Vol. 7, No. 9, Issue
81, (December 1972), 20.
208
Vito Acconci, “Television, Furniture, and Sculpture: The Room with the American
View,” in Illuminating Video: An Essential Guide to Video Art, David Hall and Sally Jo
Fifer, Eds. (New York: Aperture Foundation, 1990), 128.
209
See William Kaizen,“Live On Tape: Video, Liveness, and the Immediate,” in Art
and the Moving Image. Ed. Tanya Leighton. (London: Tate Publishing, 2008): 258‐
272.
210
They issued this statement in a flier, Moving Wallpaper in the TV Lounge, handed
out at Plymouth College of Art in 1971. See David Curtis. Artists’ Film and Video in
Britain. (London: BFI Publishing, 2007), 221.
211
Torres writes: “The fundamental characteristics of multi‐media installation are
its formal flexibility and its capacity to incorporate new media as they have become
available and establish links with other disciplines.” See “The Art of the Possible,” in
Illuminating Video: An Essential Guide to Video Art, David Hall and Sally Jo Fifer, eds.
(New York: Aperture Foundation, 1990), 205‐210.
Rossoni 133
212
According to Malcolm Le Grice, this transition was one of the most difficult to
overcome barriers for the burgeoning generation of video artists. “The biggest
problem to be dealt with is creating a physical ‘venue’ for this kind of work. The
most suitable existing possibility must lie in performance or installation in the art
gallery situation, and this requires the back up of a pool of suitable equipment which
can be transported, with performance or installation for longer than a one‐night
stand. Meanwhile the work will continue to develop and be seen under inadequate
conditions.” Le Grice, “Real Time/Space,” 43.
213
Duncan White, “Expanded Cinema: The Live Record,” in Expanded Cinema: Art,
Performance, Film. Rees, A.L, Duncan White, Steven Ball, and David Curtis, eds.
(London: Tate Publishing, 2011), 35.
214
Joanna Heatwole, “Media of Now: An Interview With David Hall.” Afterimage, Vol.
36, No. 1 (Jul/Aug 2008), 17.
215 Meigh‐Andrews
continues: “A further potential level of signification would be
articulated by the artist who had control of the images across multiple screens as
well as within the electronic space of the single screen, and this was of course in
addition to any manipulations of the soundtrack, including the possibilities of sound
projection.” See “Video Installation in Europe and North America: The Expansion
and Exploration of Electronic and televisual Language 1969‐1989,” in Expanded
Cinema: Art, Performance, Film. Rees, A.L, Duncan White, Steven Ball, and David
Curtis, eds. (London: Tate Publishing, 2011), 127.
216
Stephen Partridge, “A Kick in the Eye: Video and Expanded Cinema in Britain,” in
Expanded Cinema: Art, Performance, Film. Rees, A.L, Duncan White, Steven Ball, and
David Curtis, eds. (London: Tate Publishing, 2011), 140.
217
Ibid., 140.
218
Kaizen, 264.
219
Stuart Laing, “The Politics of Culture: Institutional Change,” in Cultural
Revolution? The Challenge of the Arts in the 1960s. Moore‐Gilbert, Bart, and John
Seed, Eds. (London and New York: Routledge, 1992), 90.
220
Georg Lukács, “Thoughts Toward an Aesthetic of the Cinema.” Polygraph 13,
(2001), 13.
221
222
Ibid., 15.
Herbert Tannenbaum, “Art at the Cinema (1912),” in German Essays on Film.
McCormick, Richard W. and Alison Guenther‐Pal, eds. (New York; London:
Continuum, 2004), 5.
Rossoni 134
223
Hans Scheugl, “Expanded Cinemas Exploding” in Film Unframed: A History of
Austrian AvantGarde Cinema. Ed. Peter Tscherkassky. (Vienna: sixpackfilm, 2012),
131.
224
Peter Weibel, “On the Origins of Expanded Cinema,” in Expanded Cinema: Art,
Performance, Film. Rees, A.L, Duncan White, Steven Ball, and David Curtis, eds.
(London: Tate Publishing, 2011), 193.
225
VALIE EXPORT, “Expanded Cinema: Expanded Reality,” in Expanded Cinema: Art,
Performance, Film. Rees, A.L, Duncan White, Steven Ball, and David Curtis, eds.
(London: Tate Publishing, 2011), 296.
226
Schneemann continues: “Intermedia theatre is not a “play” or a “movie”; and
although it contains elements of both, even those elements are not representative of
the respective traditional genres: the film experience, for example, is not necessarily
a projection of light and shadow on a screen at the end of a room, nor is the
theatrical experience contained on a proscenium stage, or even dependent upon
“actors” playing to an “audience.” Youngblood, 365.
227
White, 25.
228 Ibid.,
26.
Notes to Conclusion
229
Yasunao Tone and Chritsian Marclay, “Record, CD, Analog, Digital,” in Audio
Culture: Readings in Modern Music, Christoph Cox and Daniel Warner, eds., (New
York; London: Continuum, 2004), 345.
230
Anne Friedberg, The Virtual Window: From Alberti to Microsoft (Cambridge,
Massachusetts: The MIT Press, 2006), 84.
Rossoni 135
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Filmography
4 X Loops. Nicky Hamlyn, 1974.
Action Lecture 1. Peter Weibel, 1967.
Allvision. Steina Vasulka, 1976.
Behold Vertical Devices. Tony Sinden, 1974.
Black Zero. Aldo Tambellini, 1965.
Bowed Film. Tony Conrad, 1974.
Canada ’67. Robert Barclay, 1967.
Dovecoat. Carla Liss, 1973.
HPSCHD. John Cage and Ronald Nameth, 1969.
Labyrinth. Roman Kroiter, 1967.
Light Music. Lis Rohdes, 1975-7.
Long Film for Ambient Light. Anthony McCall, 1975.
Movie-Drome. Stan Vanderbeek, 1963.
Movie Show: Die Monster. Birgit and Wilhelm Hein, 1982.
Nervous Magic Lantern. Ken Jacobs, 2000.
Nivea. Peter Weibel, 1967.
Progressive Recession. David Hall, 1975.
Raumlightmusik (or, R1 – Formspiel). Oskar Fischinger, 1926.
Snows. Carolee Schneemann, 1967.
Space Theatre. Milton Cohen, 1958.
Tapp und Tastkino. VALIE EXPORT, 1968.
The Black and the White Gods. Ben Russell, 2008.
The Machine. Steve Farrer, 1977.
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Untitled. Sandra Gibson and Luis Recoder, 2008.
Vidicon Inscriptions. David Hall, 1974.
Vortex Concerts. Jordan Belson and Henry Jacobs, 1957.
We Are Young. Francis Thompson and Alexander Hammid, 1967.
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