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| Ghostly self portrait disappearing into the depth of the Square. |
27/01/2022
16/12/2021
Nathaniel Dorsky describes the "post-film experience" in his Devotional Cinema as something that either disturbs you or uplifts you. It changes the way you interact with the world and can defamiliarise the everyday. For me, Apichatpong's films allow the viewer to tap into an uplifting 'devotion'; to easily enter a dream-like mental space during, but also particularly after the film.
Memoria was made in collaboration with Tilda Swinton, and captures her in a foreign city in a state of inarticulacy and isolation. This physical and psychological isolation is caused in part by a loud bang that is only audible to her and difficult to explain to others. I connected with this sense of being isolated by having something inside your head that you cannot truly communicate. It's a metaphor for making art and film; trying to articulate personal ideas and share them with others in the hope that there will be someone else in the world who connects with it too. Looking for shared experiences, by way of tuning into the sounds around you, in a society that one feels alienated by, where one hasn't found their tribe. In Memoria, the bang is also used as a metaphor for the ongoing trauma of state violence in Colombia. The most touching moment of the film is when this connection finally occurs between Swinton and another bereaved man. An intensely powerful soundscape replaces dialogue. The connection is inarticulate and deeply empathic.
In what is a typical Apichatpong trope, all of these layers are juxtaposed with images of natural beauty. The sublime countryside of Bogota, Colombia is implicated by the collective trauma of its society. The landscape is a receptacle for feeling, and its memory can be drawn out to great emotional affect.
I found that this quote from Robert Bresson's Notes on the Cinematograph spoke quite directly to Apichatpong's work: 'Your film should have the beauty, or the sadness, or what have you, that one finds in a town, in a countryside, in a house, and not the beauty, sadness, etc. that one finds in the photograph of a town, countryside, or house.' Robert BRESSON
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| Image from the book on the making of the film, Memoria, by Apichatpong Weerasethakul. Fireflies Press, 2021. |
15/12/2021
27/10/2021
25/10/2021
20/10/2021
18/10/2021
12/10/2021
Condensing space
I love making architectural models. I feel like the only way I can think logically, but also imaginatively, about space and atmosphere, is to condense it on a smaller scale.
I'd love to make model reconstructions of all of the memorable spaces I've inhabited, as I imagine them in my head: my bedroom, childhood house, the classrooms where I'd have philosophy and art classes in high school, bookshops, cinemas, the inside of an airplane going to London. Enclosed spaces of solitude and daydream... where I've dreamt of the external world and where I've been most creative. I like the thought that the models would condense and contain all of the feelings and thoughts experienced within these dream spaces.
This a W.I.P model for a current design project: a continuous undulating roof and opaque curved walls form a corridor and guide linear movement out into the landscape. It's a space that's intended to act as a corridor to access inspiration and connection for those living within the oppressive and capital-driven confines of a suburban housing development.
05/10/2021
02/10/2021
24/09/2021
08/09/2021
17/08/2021
Passionate purple flowers are subjected to gradual alterations of light as I work at my desk and try to make sense of things. There are changes in colour and perception, as the desk lamp moves, and as I try to overcome difficult emotions, thoughts and tasks.
And then finally there is relief as things do in fact come together, deadlines are met, etc.












































