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City Vision (3):

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... and self-creation of an artist outside the institution (gallery, police, society) ... and I remember sitting at the top, dangling my legs, just loving it. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: City Vision (3):


1
City Vision (3)
  • 2. Flâneurial Look in
  • Patricia Rozemas
  • Ive Heard the Mermaids Singing

2
Outline
  • General Introduction Toronto New Wave, Patricia
    Rozema and the Film
  • Ive Heard the Mermaids Singing
  • Female Artists in a City
  • Individual vs. Institution the Intertextual
    References
  • Growth of an Artist Reality vs. Fantasies
  • Pollys vision of Toronto
  • Patricia Rozema Her visions of a city
  • Conclusion

3
Ontario/Toronto New Wave

Left to Right David Cronenberg, Don McKellar
(writer/actor/director), Patricia Rozema, John
Greyson, Ron Mann, Bruce McDonald, Atom Egoyan
4
Ontario/Toronto New Wave
  • From Art-House to popular theatre
  • Young Toronto-based filmmakers starting in
    1980s,
  • Rejected both Hollywood films and their
    tax-shelter predecessors.
  • urban, intimate, underdog, migrant. Educated
    and art-fueled. Not political. Not commercial.
    (Cameron 10)
  • Two major breakthroughs Mermaid (1987)
    Exotica (1994)

5
Patricia Rozema
  • Born to a Dutch immigrant family in a Calvinist
    town, Sarnia, southern Ontario
  • B.A. with double major in philosophy English
    literature.

Patricia Rozema on the set of Desperanto source
(image source)
6
Rozema Filmography
  • Mansfield Park (1999)
  • "Yo-Yo Ma Inspired by Bach" (1997) Bach Cello
    Suite 6 Six Gestures (1997)
  • When Night Is Falling (1995)
  • Montréal vu par... (1991) (segment "Desperanto")
  • White Room (1990)
  • I've Heard the Mermaids Singing (1987) Prix de la
    Jeunesse from Cannes 17 awards
  • Passion A Letter in 16mm (1985)
  • Artist as a focus (interview)

7
Rozema Themes Styles
  • Canadian feminist Issues of institutional
    control vs. fantasy, lesbian/sexual identity
  • gender inequality vs. sexual pluralism
  • self-reflexiveness
  • Filmic (use of frames, subtitles, cameras)
  • Textual fairy-tale other intertext
  • Artistic-- of artists and critics
  • Flâneuse -- Interest in architectures, city
    scenes and female artists position in a city.

8
Rozema Ive Heard the Mermaids Singing
  • Polly Vandersma Sheila McCarthy
  • Gabrielle St-Peres Paule Baillargeon
  • Mary Joseph Ann-Marie McDonald
  • ? Their namessaints or nobodys
  • Canadian feminist Polly (position in Toronto,
    identity, gaze, institution)
  • self-reflexiveness Polly talking to us the use
    of many intertexts (Bible, fairy tales and poem).
  • Flâneuse Pollys photography.

9
Ive Heard the Mermaids Singing Starting
Questions
  • Canadian Artists
  • How is Polly characterized? And opposed to
    Gabrielle? Does she fit into the institution she
    works for?
  • Does Polly learn and grow in the film? What does
    she learn and how?
  • What do you think about her fantasies? Are they
    just a matter of self-indulgence?
  • How about the other two artists, Mary and
    Gabrielle? What is the story about?
  • Self-Reflectivity
  • Why does Polly speak to us?
  • City Vision
  • What is the role of Toronto in this film? What
    are the major signs of the city?

10
Ive Heard the Mermaids Singing Outline
  • Female Artists in a City
  • Individual vs. Social Institution the
    Intertextual References ? the film as a video
    confession (of one who is not Prufrock)
  • Growth of an Artist Reality vs. Fantasies
  • Pollys Vision of Toronto

11
I. Female Artists in the City
  • A. Polly
  • Social Position---clumsy and a misfit
  • Organizationally Impaired Typing
  • Lack of social manners e.g. the Japanese
    Restaurant the birthday Party
  • Language
  • Doesnt speak French, a sign of elegance
  • G Acute awareness ?P a cute face
  • G Im dying. ? birthday
  • G I dont want to die in my body ? Then whose
    body?

12
Polly a female artist on the margin of society
(2)
  • . . . tiny hovel almost lost in the
    industrial section of Toronto (before it got
    groovy) under the enchanting shadow of a giant
    Kentucky Fried Chicken barrel with the CN tower
    in the BG (Rozema)

13
Polly a female artist on the margin of society
(2)
  • a private space with multiple functions (clip 6
    DVD 3)
  • Restroom (like a womb space)for fantasy, art work
  • Open to endless possibilities

14
I. Female Artists in the City (2) Pollys Sexual
and Artist Identities
  • Identity in formation sexual Interests
  • Discovering (homo-)sexuality
  • Peeping at the love-making couple
  • Posing in front of the mirrors in public (clips
    8, 9 DVD 8)
  • I think I love the curator. (not to kiss her)

15
I. Female Artists in the City Pollys Sexual and
Artist Identities (2)
  • Artist Identity her personal approach as a
    photographer
  • Interaction with the photographed objects
  • Curious and affirmative.
  • Generosity as an artist accept the fact that
    you cant do it. (clip 16 DVD 16)

16
Polly Loving and Actually Self-Sufficient (more
later)

17
I. Female Artists in the City (2) Gabrielle the
Curator
  • B. Gabrielle her social position
  • With good social manners and elegant dressing
    styles good at talking and art dealings (clip
    10 DVD 9 )

elegant and stylish large ear-rings Big words
oblique pragmatism, whimsical sociological
references contextual destruction
internal/external transformation)
18
I. Female Artists in the City (2) Gabrielle the
Curator
  • B. Her Artistic Career
  • Supported by chocolate business
  • Her taste and judgment abstraction Pollys is
    trite made flesh for her

19
I. Female Artists in the City (2) Gabrielle the
Curator
  • C. Her Aspiration
  • Fear of mortality want universal respect,
    eternal youth, etc.
  • Frustration
  • gets kicked out of an art lesson
  • to want one thing that she never has talent or
    one painting beautiful undeniably,
    unequivocally, universally.
  • Is she wrong in using Marys painting?
  • In what ways is she wrong in using Marys
    painting?

20
I. Female Artists in the City (2) Mary Joseph
  • C. Mary Joseph
  • artistic judgment like it or not like it
  • Another misfit hidden behind Gabrielle I paint,
    you talk.
  • Why is her work glowing but without shapes?

21
II. Individual vs. Institution The Intertextual
References
  • A. Mermaid
  • 1. T. S. Eliot, The Love Song of J. Alfred
    Prufrock a poem about people in the upper class
    who measure out their life in coffee spoons, and
    Prufrock who grows old but lacks the strength to
    force the moment (of marriage proposal) to its
    crisis.
  • In the room, the ladies come and go, talking of
    Michelangelo.
  • ? Polly about Gabrielle Talking and laughing
    and interfacing, like a ping-pong game.
  • "'I have heard the mermaids singing, each to
    each. I do not think that they will sing to me'"
  • ? Polly hears the mermaids in one of her
    fantasies, and later she has Gabrielle and Mary
    listen to her.
  • ? Process of growth and self-assertion of a
    female artist.

22
II. Mermaids Individual vs. Institution the
Intertextual References
  • A. Mermaid
  • 1. artist
  • 2. Fairy tales---In between two worlds
  • 3. Lesbian association

23
II. Mermaids Individual vs. Institution the
Intertextual References
  • B. The meaning of names ? plurality vs.
    institutional limitations
  • Polly poly
  • Gabrielle arch angel
  • Mary Joseph bisexual
  • Church Gallery representing an art institution
  • C. Theme Song ? individual spaces
  • Lakme ??? The Flower Duet (lyrics)
  • D. Shooting Style ? confession and self-creation
    of an artist outside the institution (gallery,
    police, society)
  • Film camera Video Camera (monitor ?
    confession) (clip 15 DVD 14) communicate with
    the artists and with us audience

24
III. Pollys Growth Reality vs. Fantasies (1)
  • (After getting her job at Church Gallery)
  • A. Flying in the air
  • Climbs and overcomes power structure
  • Flyingsurpass social constraints (Canadian
    flag) (DVD 3)

25
IV. Pollys Fantasies (2)
  • (After the discussion of painting)
  • B. Walking on the water (clip 11 DVD 10)
  • Religious symbol
  • Desire
  • social manners elegant, big words (relativism
    is complex politically, aesthetically,
    religiously and even in terms relationship)
  • her ideas relativism polymorphous perversity

26
IV. Pollys Fantasies (3, 4)
  • (While choosing the photo work to send to G)
  • C. Tour on the bus (clip 13 DVD 13)meaning?
  • smooth transition from the City to Nature, and
    back to the city.
  • hears the mermaid.

D. Being a conductor of symphony ) (clip 18 DVD
18)meaning? Differences from the other
fantasies -- Fantasy merged with reality -- in
the church gallery -- active conducts the
orchestra -- success both in conduction and
stealing the video camera.
27
Ending
  • (clip 19) meanings?
  • The photos are miraculously back
  • artists/ lesbians moving beyond the institutional
    and social limits
  • also beyond the limits of the film to a world
    not known or gazed at by us.
  • introduction and endingthe whole film is
    Pollys creation and self-creation.

28
Pollys vision of Toronto
  • (clip 3)
  • Admiration bottom up at the architecture from
    without (outside the power structure).
  • Imagines having an overview.
  • Pollys vision of Toronto

29
Pollys vision of Toronto (2)
  1. individuals
  2. fragmentary views which are implicitly
    deconstructive of power.

30
Rozema on the City (1) love of architecture and
height
  • SettingToronto, frequently its architecture and
    its bird-eye views?????????
  • ("I adore height. My father built apartment
    buildings and I remember sitting at the top,
    dangling my legs, just loving it. I'm attracted
    to all forms of danger." Johnson 1995)
  • Johnson, Brian D. Sex and the Sacred Girl Film
    Director Patricia Rozema. Maclean's 108
    (05-08-1995) 93-96.
  • ( Flight as a major motif in her work.)

31
Rozema on the City (2) its multiple lives
  • As much as I try to give importance to "place" in
    this article, it is the deeds that make a temple
    sacred or not. The halls, the streets, the
    condos and the palaces will always be filled with
    women, men, and children and their miseries,
    rebirths, half-dreams and dreams,shared love,
    wasted love, echoes and footsteps of the dead and
    half-dead, and sometimes brief, unbearably sweet
    smiles. It is all our pathetic little attempts
    at generosity, heroism and holiness that define
    us. In our fictions, as in our lives, it is the
    concrete steps towards or away from our ideals
    that say who and what we are. (A Place in the
    Sun )

32
Rozema on the City (3) her flaneurial observation
  • Flâneur
  • strolling, anonymously, on the street, in the
    crowd and observing fast-changing scene around
    him.
  • Visual organization and/or physical embodiment of
    urban modernism from artistic observation to
    commodified existence (e.g. painter of modern
    life, or window-shopper).
  • Artist-Flâneuse the very boundary-lessness of
    the metropolis gives her. . . an impulse to see
    beyond the limits of the self, to occupy
    imaginative positions other than her own.
    Introduction Women Writing the City. Heron,
    Liz, ed. City Women.

33
Rozema on the City (3) her flaneurial observation
  • Rozema 1. Multiple, De-centering
  • 2?Re-creation of the architecture from without
  • The system of architecture from within is
    characterized by an idealistic logic that can
    assume neither contradiction nor negation and
    therefore its based upon the suppression of
    either one of two opposite terms. This is best
    represented by the consistent repression of
    women. Woman is excluded. . . .
  • It is in that outside that she stands. It
    is from that outside that she can project better
    than anyone the critical look. (Diane Agrest
    366)

34
Rozemas City Vision e.g. White Room image of
the city as a commercial system
  • White Room????????? architecture as social
    institution

35
White Room dangerous for women ????????????
  • 1. 3.
  • 2.
  • 4. ???????????

36
Six GesturesMultiple perspective on Bach
  • ????
  • ?????

37
Six Gesturesmultiple perspectives of the truck
drivers and graffiti
  • Some artists complete an era some artists begin
    the next
  • The six suite was the first work thats ever
    written for the cello.
  • Ya, but you know theres no record of this cello
    suites ever having been performed.

38
Six Gestures Re-Creation of architecture from
without ???????
  • 1?(Bach in Cöthen,
  • serving his patron,
  • Prince Leopold)
  • ?????????
  • (????,????)

39
Six Gesture ????? ??
  • ????? (our little polite and dutiful dances)

40
Rozema???)???????????????3)
  • ?/???????? ??????)

41
V. Conclusion (I) City Vision
  1. A city is a space with multiple texts and
    multiple possibilities of viewing/writing and
    being gazed at/written.
  2. A flâneur--as one wanders leisurely on the
    street-- can be a shopper or an Internet surfer.
  3. But an artist/an intellectual as a flâneur
    organizes and make sense of the fragmentary
    images s/he gets from walking and looking at a
    city.

42
V. Conclusion (II) the Film
  • A. Reality V.S. Fantasy (The latter, though
    imaginary, can help empower the weak to bring
    changes to reality.)
  • B. Process of self-assertion (real changes in
    reality)
  • C. Are the images of the lesbian positive or
    not? e.g. Gs use of Mary Pollys peeping
    desire

43
Reference
  • A Place in the Sun http//www.patriciarozema.com/
    a_place_in_the_sun.htm
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