Thursday, September 24, 2009

Sketchbook Prompt Eight






Prompt: After viewing the presented series by Christian Houge, read the following commentary by Erling Bugge. After digesting the work, go in depth on what you believe the meaning, connotation and significance of the work is.


Okurimono
photographs by
Christian Houge
text by
Erling Bugge

Christian Houge guides us into a mystery. It resides between the ritualized shapes of the traditional and withdrawn Zen garden in Kyoto and the equally ritualized spaces of futuristic, urban Tokyo. For a westerner, Japan might look familiar, since what is held up for us looks like a futuristic spectacle somehow grounded in a western imagination. This judgment, however, is too easy. In Houge’s photographs, the sense of sameness withdraws and a very different feeling of strangeness creeps up on us. In fact, what this series registers is a remarkable place of alterity in today’s global order, a radical difference bang in the middle of the familiar.

This is pushed to the limit in the technological and virtual wonderland of Akihabara in Tokyo, where shop after shop trades in electronic products and computer games, while a weird costume play, “cosplay”, is being performed in the streets. A similar kind of simulation is being acted out in the district of Harajuku, where Houge found some of his motifs. There is no authenticity here, no western “essence” or “reality”; instead, the virtual conquers the carnal body in a purified play of surface, image and the hyperreal. This is exotic. All the while as we are conscious of these notions as pinnacle points in a western idea of the post-modern. But in this sense Japan has always been “post-modern”. It has always integrated the most refined culture and technology from the outside while somehow retained an identity for itself. So, what would this identity be? Houge takes the view of ritual and play. Indeed, Japanese culture seems to be grounded solely on ritual, in business and in sex, in its relation to nature and in religion.

This play transcends the notion of authenticity altogether, unlike the West which is haunted by the “ghost” of origin and beginnings. In Japan, “now” would mean just that; it is a “no looking back”, but rather a flow of intensities integrated in the play and ritual of the ever-present, okurimono. There is no threat of being eaten up by western culture and technology here, for, like in Zen practice, the ritual oversees everything and has no historical drag. Japan becomes weightless, shot into orbit outside the material of earth itself.

Is acting out the role as Lewis Caroll’s Victorian girl driven by a sense of nostalgia? I think not. It is a striving for a moment of perfected presence, in dialogue with Houge’s optical machine. It is the moment of Now. The girl, the Zen garden and the image shares in a perfection modified by small uncertainties, coincidental imperfections that become somewhat oblique points of entry for us - a discarded handkerchief or seemingly unremarkable shapes and reflections in the prismatic play of surfaces.

There is a ghostly, otherworldly quality in these images, even in the fleeting blossoming cherry tree and the play of shadows across a concrete minimalism. The doubly exposed or reflected light on the lens reminds us of the uncertain beginnings in photography’s history, with its widespread belief that the camera was able to perceive more than the naked eye, like spirits and ghosts. In Houge’s images there are different specters, skeletal, natural shapes on the one hand, the machine and the virtual on the other. Here, like some scene from the film Blade Runner, there is an uncanny confusion and mix between the human and non human.

Maybe the search for a perfect moment in the perpetual flow of things is a romantic or melancholic longing for transcendent wholeness, a drive that is harnessed in a rigorous attention to visual detail. This compulsive discipline might seem absurd to any western observer, while longing itself forms a common ground and will ultimately be the basis in our meeting.

— Erling Bugge

5 comments:

Stephanie said...

First of all I would like to state that I think his work is brilliant in the way that is strikes up so many different feelings just by looking at a piece. I think that this work is all about standing out in a strange and unique way. It is creepy, artistic, original, funny, and compelling. I do think that many viewers do think of the work to be nostalgic, even though the commentary below says it is not. The work shows a lot of talent based on my opinion. I absolutely love the forest shots, but the busy subway shot was amazing as well. The overall meaning, to me, is to be able to stand out in any way, and be proud of it.
Latendresse
5-6
period 5

Jon Ramirez said...

When i looked at these pictures, i thought thet were very humorous.
I think the concept is also very cool. A human size rabbit living the life of a normal human being.
I really like the image of the rabbit in the subway. Its cool how the rabbit is clear, but everything else is blurry. Im not really sure on the meaning of the art work.

Anonymous said...

Eli Groves

I am welcomed with an overwhelming sense of nostalgia for Alice in Wonderland. I long for it. I am dizzy from falling down the rabbit hole. I am frightened of the things around me that I do not recognize. You know what they say; people fear what they don’t know.

This is so bazaar that it is frightening.

Based on my knowledge of Japan and what was aforementioned in the commentary, Japan is known for integrating traditions and tools from outside its own culture and somehow “remixing” it to make it its own. So how can Japan be seen as a leader or an individual when defining its uniqueness? I see solid evidence of that definition in this series. No other culture, no other society, no other community could pull this off.

Ana Romero said...

The first two images on this series were realy creepy it made me feel weird inside.But overall the series is intresting. The last image is very odd but enjoyable. The way that the person with the rabbit head is like in the middle of the aisle and everyone to the side gives it an uncommon feel.

Ryan said...

I like this guy. I'm really fond of the work he did with the funny costumes. The way he uses comical characters to real life is interesting and different. My favorite picture is the second one, because it looks like the characters are in a dark forest, and it shows romance, with some kind of spirits surrounding them. I'm not exactly sure how, but when I look at the pictures, that is the first thing that pops into my head. Another thing I love from this artist is the way that he makes the spirit-looking figures stick out, when there really aren't any in there. Something about him, whether it's the blur he puts into his images, or just the subject matter in general, makes me look at these images over and over. I like them.

Ryan Hamlin
Period 5