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Observations & 

Robin Deacon

White Balance

Misperceptions 

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White Balance

Robin Deacon was interviewed by Mark Waugh, about White Balance a performance lecture on accessible technologies such as a portapak VO 8300 in the development of documentation, video art and of film making.

 

These technologies have transformed how we view the world, especially through recording. and documentation, an example is the evolution of home movies from super 8, VHS  to the ubiquitous mobile phone. Graining grey images of distant relatives, contrast with the high definition of the a contemporary event, consequently has a place for imaginative recollection been replaced, making the act of remembering obsolete?

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Robin Deacon

The title White Balance refers to the process by which a camera is adjusted to account for differences in light, changing the relative strengths of colors to reach a truer sense of what is being seen. Echoing my recent extensive research of performance and video archives of New York artists such a Stuart Sherman, this performance uses a series of outmoded vintage video cameras to explore how our ways of seeing and ways of remembering may be informed by the medium used to capture the event – the artists document, the family gathering or news broadcast.

 

This work is part of a continuing series of works that create fictional narratives and explore their potential relationship with real life and autobiographical experience. An early, work in progress iteration of this piece was presented at the New Performance Festival in Turku, Finland during the summer of 2013, and was further to be developed with the assistance of a Franklin Furnace Inc. Artists Award, leading up to a showing of the piece in a nine hour version presented over three days at the Emily Harvey Foundation Gallery in New York in October 2013. Although emerging from similar themes and concerns to that of my Stuart Sherman research and related performance pieces,

 

White Balance represents a point of departure from these projects that has allowed for a broader and more expansive view of the archive relative to my previous focus on a singular artist. Also, points of reference have expanded out from the video document as merely a concern of the performance artist to record their work. The history and use of the video camera in the setting of the gallery or the studio has now widened to encompass an exploration of its employment in domestic settings to give a broadened visual palette to work from in terms of imagery and content. In my explorations of numerous video formats, the focus of these explorations is what the tone of the given image might suggest. For example, the association of a particular kind of warmth, sharpness or softness associated with a particular video format popular at a specific point in time.

 

The performance speculated on the possibility of using video to ‘tell the time’ so to speak. The thesis is that our memories look like the things they were recorded with. That the sense of another time or place is not dictated by the content of footage - temporal pointers such as a location that has not been visited in recent memory, or a clear visual evidence of ones own ageing. Beyond the understanding of a particular space and a particular time is a third dimension: a particular format. The vessel that carries the signal now seems the primary point of reference.” - robindeacon.com/white_balance.htm

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