Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Introduction
- Image In(ter)ventions
- Filming as Writing, Writing as Filming, Staking One's Life
- Between Wars, Between Images
- Documenting the Life of Ideas? – Farocki and the 'Essay Film'
- Images of the World and the Inscription of War
- Film: Media: Work: Archive
- From the Surveillance Society to the Control Society
- Acknowledgement
- Farocki: A Filmography
- Notes on Contributors
- Index of Names
- Index of Film Titles / Subjects
- Film Culture in Transition General Editor: Thomas Elsaesser
- Plate Section
Painting Pavements
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 26 January 2021
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Introduction
- Image In(ter)ventions
- Filming as Writing, Writing as Filming, Staking One's Life
- Between Wars, Between Images
- Documenting the Life of Ideas? – Farocki and the 'Essay Film'
- Images of the World and the Inscription of War
- Film: Media: Work: Archive
- From the Surveillance Society to the Control Society
- Acknowledgement
- Farocki: A Filmography
- Notes on Contributors
- Index of Names
- Index of Film Titles / Subjects
- Film Culture in Transition General Editor: Thomas Elsaesser
- Plate Section
Summary
A popular specimen of the copyist is the pavement painter, still occasionally seen today in the pedestrian zones of our cities. As a young man, Harun Farocki started out as a pavement painter. Along with a friend, he copied in chalk onto German pavements the works from the usual repertoire of these true folk artists. Street painting is sustained in equal measure by the public's fascination with icons and the artist's self-effacement. Street painters have to keep to a limited canon of motifs (they may only copy easily recognisable images so that their ability as skilful copyists can be appreciated by the crowd), while they are condemned, in the face of the infinite possibilities of conceivable images, to reproduce what is always already familiar. Nonetheless, Farocki and his companion unwittingly outwitted this tradition. The more often they reproduced a set piece, which after a while they did from memory, the less it resembled the original. The reproductions actually ended up taking on a character of their own. Yet such a show of individual style made them suspect both in the eyes of their peers and the public. The suspicion was that they were not masters of their trade (see ill. 22).
Many years later this young man can once again be found making copies of pictures – though in the meantime, he has changed his medium to filmmaking. Quite apart fromthe fact that no one would consider copying film images to be a skill, he still does not seem to be able to comply with the reigning visual conventions. Is he the eternal dilettante, and doomed to remain one, or has he made some kind of progress after all?
Precipitation
In ETWAS WIRD SICHTBAR (BEFORE YOUR EYES – VIETNAM, 1980-1982), the street pavement painting returns as a filmic motif: it is being washed away by the rain. A precise metaphor for the transience of images (see ill. 7). Both pavement painting and cinema, by their very existence, stage their own death. The transience of the pavement picture is obvious – it is only painted ‘for the moment’. In the case of cinema, the image is not only (mechanically) always in the process of escaping the eye of the beholder, while the film material itself is in a perpetual state of chemical disintegration.
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- Harun FarockiWorking on the Sightlines, pp. 43 - 54Publisher: Amsterdam University PressPrint publication year: 2004
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