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Jane & Louise Wilson, Unfolding the Aryan Papers


Unfolding the Aryan Papers by Jane and Louise Wilson

Unfolding the Aryan Papers by British artists Jane & Louise Wilson, exploring Stanley Kubrick's unrealized project entitled Aryan Papers.

watch the film here at the animate projects website. Geoffrey Cocks argued in his book The wolf at the door: Stanley Kubrick, history & the Holocaust that Kubrick gave up work on this project because he felt that cinema couldn't accurately depict something so deeply horrible as the holocaust. Instead Cocks believes that Kubrick tried to address this issue indirectly, specifically Cocks believes The shining is Kubrick's Holocaust film. I'm not sure about the validity of this argument but its an interesting theory next time I watch The Shining I'll keep this in mind.

Jane & Louise Wilson's project is more about mood and atmosphere of Kubrick's unfinished project and the act or non-act of film making.

from the press release:

This new commission by Animate Projects and the BFI, focuses on Stanley Kubrick's unfinished project Aryan Papers, a film about the Holocaust based on Louis Begley's book Wartime Lies. Prior to telling the story of a Polish Jewish woman and her nephew, who pretend to be Catholic in order to avoid persecution during the Nazi occupation of their country, Kubrick researched the project for many years and got as far as choosing the actors and the locations, but unfortunately the film was never made.

Researching the material available, Jane & Louise Wilson have focused on wardrobe research stills as well as period stills from the pre-production phase of Aryan Papers. The Gallery installation concentrates on newly-shot footage of Johanna ter Steege, the actress featured in the photographs originally taken by Stanley Kubrick and chosen by him as the female lead of the film. In a statement on this project, they commented on the 'enigmatic quality' of having only fragments of Aryan Papers available, something which they consider 'profoundly cinematic'. It is precisely the fragmentary nature of Aryan Papers which allowed the artists to work freely with the available material, without the constraints of competing with an already existing film. Despite not having been able to appear in the film, the female figure in the Wilsons' work is granted a visibility which was denied to her by the final course of events.

Jane & Louise Wilson are considered to be among the best artists of their generation in using the moving image. They have worked collaboratively for over 20 years on projects which are frequently research-based. Whether dealing with the Bosnian-Herzegovinian refugee community of Derby, decaying World War II bunkers or the dilapidated former Stasi headquarters in Berlin, the artists' sensibility for difficult subjects is expressed by carefully presenting their photographs and technically challenging moving image installations. The controlled nature of their works and the importance of meticulous research provide an interesting link between Kubrick and the Wilsons, which makes this project particularly fascinating. The exhibition also coincides with an extensive Stanley Kubrick season at BFI Southbank, providing an entrancing new context for the artists' work.

A commission by Animate Projects and the BFI with The Stanley Kubrick Archives, University of the Arts London.

If you're in london I'm sure it would be a good show to visit:

The Gallery at BFI Southbank London, SE1

13 February-19 April 2009
Admission free
11am-8pm, Tuesday-Sunday

via e-flux and reminded of via Horses Think

Make Me a Real Man


nice clip on Current tv from by filmmaker Stuart Kershaw.
from the pod info:

What makes a man? How do we come of age in the 21st century? In a world where you can still be a boy at thirty, One young-ish filmmaker sets out on a belated quest for manhood.

With a little internet digging I noticed this history of this quote. Originally written by Wilhelm Stekel who was then quoted in J. D. Salinger's The Catcher in the Rye as saying, "The mark of the immature man is that he wants to die nobly for a cause, while the mark of the mature man is that he wants to live humbly for one" (p.188). This quote is also used in the anime Ghost in the Shell.

I also enjoy the pod's discussion of the roll of war, the warrior and how the military can act as a coming of age. As these topics relate to my final project in school and I am still working them out for myself. Holden Caulfield's musings of what the world means are not that far off from this film maker's. As society moves further away from Caulfield's era will we develop new rites of passage into maturity? Or are these very rites passe and the sequence itself flawed?