WAVE AFTER WAVE AFTER WAVE: THE MULTI-CHANNEL IMMERSION OF ISAAC JULIEN'S TEN THOUSAND WAVES
Livesey traces the installation's references back to Chinese cinema and the deaths by drowning of Chinese cockle-pickers in Morecombe Bay, and usefully extends his scope to consider the challenges imposed on spectators by the monumental screens that, by their placement, de-center the audience....
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Veröffentlicht in: | Film quarterly 2014-06, Vol.67 (4), p.26 |
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Format: | Artikel |
Sprache: | eng |
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Online-Zugang: | Volltext |
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Zusammenfassung: | Livesey traces the installation's references back to Chinese cinema and the deaths by drowning of Chinese cockle-pickers in Morecombe Bay, and usefully extends his scope to consider the challenges imposed on spectators by the monumental screens that, by their placement, de-center the audience. Isaac Julien's Ten Thousand Waves recontextualizes the archival record of the Morecambe Bay disaster, placing it among more familiar, paradigmatic imagery representing China's historical emergence as a global economic force. The work is a poetic interweaving of images derived from dominant representations of twentieth- and twenty-first-century Chinese culture--an idiosyncratic and compressed visual history of China shaped by Julien's long-standing interactions with the worlds of Chinese art and cinema, and his commitment to exploring the politics of representation and, more recently, themes of globalization. |
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ISSN: | 0015-1386 1533-8630 |
DOI: | 10.1525/fq.2014.67.4.26 |