|
 |
I started the image bank
for “iraqi eye” in late 2003 and the beginning of 2004,
at the time of the Seige of Fallujah. “Shock and awe” was
already a year old, with no end in sight. No one could really see
what was going on there. We were blind and mute. This made me think
about the aphasic fugue-- a perseverant mental state typical of
traumatized persons. In aphasia you can only speak partially, or
in repetitive rounds, stuttering. And about eyes--bleeding eyes
and mouths of the civilian casualities, especially the children.
I made a fragmented collage text lifted from the New York Times
report series, “The Struggle for Iraq”, written during
the Seige. For images images of the eyes of wounded children in
Iraq, I found the source images on aljazeera.net in 2003. I got
the idea that the images of the bleeding eyes of the children were
something that we don’t want to see, while the children cannot
see easily through the blood. The protective eye against ‘evil’--
or the eye of God-- perhaps these eyes were also those things. In
cascading repeats they might resemble a curtain of blood, or something
like wallpaper. Wallpaper is something in the background of your
life, something you don’t really look at: you may not even
notice it. As I developed the ‘repeat’, just past the
bleeding eyes, I found my attention migrating from the closed bleeding
eyes into openings or apertures. Within these I started to layer
in HD video stills from ‘recipe
(evacuee cake), a film (2008)
using text by the poet Molly McPhee, who recounts a recipe for consumption
of refugees ‘put into pies.’ The video stills were from
a series of traumatic inventories: video clips and voiceovers, as
if to list the ingredients for a recipe to consume and discard excess
humans and animals, AKA persons 'nobody' wants-- migrants, prisoners,
persons without identification papers, refugees, children without
a place to thrive. I also used clips of my performance videos from
the naxsmash project, stills of face and lips are drowning in waves
of forgetting, in the ocean surf-- mouth open to gasp for air, 90
degrees upturned, slit-eyes. Clips of activists protesting Guantanamo,
wearing orange prisoners garb-- I placed in apertures opened by
the bleeding eyes. It was important to store these stills of activists
protesting the Guantanamo prisoners' indefinite disappearance in
orange hell. The prisoner-performance clips wanted to move in alternating
currents against a mechanical graphic of stars, to punctuate a cartography
of the disappeared. In counterpoint, I scattered fragments of photographs
depicting flag-draped caskets, saved from the internet back in 2003,
when the bodies of American soldiers first started to come into
Dover, Delaware. Like the Iraqi wounded children images, these disappeared
quickly from the mainstream media in the US.
“Iraqi Eye (Wallpaper)” iterates elements from several
participatory art projects from 2003 onwards, including contributions
to the Banner
Art Collective ,
Velvet-Strike
Machinima project,
and Iraqi
Memorial. My new short
animated film, “Recipe (evacuee cake)” (2008) from which
the stills of Guantanamo protestors are drawn, will premiere in installation
for the exhibition “In Transition” at the Municipal Museum
for Fine Arts, Ekaterinburg and the National Centre for Contemporary
Arts, Moscow, in the autumn of 2008. Image fragments appearing in
the video stills are culled from open source photographs on Flickr
(accessed March 2008) by takomabibelot, ayahthetiger, kcivey, lewishamdreamer
and arimoore.
“iraqi eye’ will be part of the exhibition, "
War as a Way of Life” , curated by Clayton Campbell, at the 18th
Street Art Center, Santa Monica, California, September 27 to December
19, 2008 |
|
 |
 |
 |
|
 |
 |
 |
DATE: 2008
60 x 81 inches
152 x 206 cm
Medium photomontage C print
Edition of 3
|
 |
|