OPINION - 11 MAY 2016 Artists TV BY MAEVE CONNOLLY

Similar documents
BBC Trust Changes to HD channels Assessment of significance

The new BBC Scotland Channel: Proposed variation to Ofcom s Operating Licence for the BBC s public services. BBC Response

British Council Presents British Experimental Films in ARKIPEL 2015

Development of Digital TV in Europe

in partnership with Scenario

FILM, TV & GAMES CONFERENCE 2015

In accordance with the Trust s Syndication Policy for BBC on-demand content. 2

BBC Three. Part l: Key characteristics of the service

BFI Measures of success

FUTURE OF FILM ARCHIVES SECURED. James Purnell announces 25 million for national and regional film archives

PLASTIK are thrilled to launch the programme for the second edition of the Festival.

House of Lords Select Committee on Communications

Conversion of Analogue Television Networks to Digital Television Networks

Delivering Quality First consultation. Submission to BBC Trust from BBC Audience Council for Scotland. December 2011

Suggested Publication Categories for a Research Publications Database. Introduction

Broadcasting Ordinance (Chapter 562)

BBC Big Screen Submission Information 2006

Call for Embedded Opportunity: The British Library Sound Archive

WALES. National Library of Wales

Broadcasting Authority of Ireland Guidelines in Respect of Coverage of Referenda

Development of Digital TV in Europe 2000 Report

Updated June 2007 ARTISTIC EVALUATION. Taigh Chearsabhagh. Date of Visit: Monday 30th July 2007

Broadcasting Authority of Ireland Rule 27 Guidelines General Election Coverage

Working with BBC Radio 4 Extra 2017/18

Scanning our entrepreneurial experiences. John Harris. Chief Executive and Artistic co-director of Red Note Ensemble (Scotland), And composer.

LOW-BUDGET INDEPENDENT FEATURE FILM ASSISTANCE PROGRAM GUIDELINES FOR

DEVELOPMENT AND PRODUCTION CREATIVE EUROPE. Support for the audiovisual sector. #creativeeurope

Thank you for your request to the BBC of 27th May seeking the following information under the Freedom of Information Act 2000:

TV Subscriptions and Licence Fees

Digital Terrestrial Television in the Czech Republic

Accreditation Guidelines. How to acknowledge support from Creative Scotland and the National Lottery.

USING LIVE PRODUCTION SERVERS TO ENHANCE TV ENTERTAINMENT

Leeds Inspired Light Night Commission 2014

Lucas Collection Litigation Files

700 MHz clearance programme timescale review. Review of progress, risks and readiness

Feasibility Study: Telecare in Scotland Analogue to Digital Transition

Media and Data Converging Media and Content

Operating licence for the BBC s UK Public Services

Northern Ireland: setting the scene

ARTISTIC EVALUATION MUSIC. International Contemporary Music Festival

5 Phase Plan. one second at a time. a non-profit collaboration bringing the world together,

National Broadcasting Council of Poland Transition to digital terrestrial television in Poland

FAQ. How does the Big Screen operate? What do you show?

introducing the region s first Baselight colour grading system

When Sir Andrew Motion (UK Poet Laureate ) and the recording producer Richard Carrington met in a recording studio in 1999, they talked

Arrangements for: National Certificate in Music. at SCQF level 5. Group Award Code: GF8A 45. Validation date: June 2012

August 7, Legal Memorandum

GUIDELINES FOR APPLICANTS 2016 SUBMISSION DEADLINE

Online Control System Migration of Industrial Centrifuge Project Description

How to Cure World Blindness: An Interview with Joel Ross and Jason Creps June 23rd, 2013 CAROLINE KOEBEL

Australian Broadcasting Corporation. submission to. National Cultural Policy Consultation

Scene-Driver: An Interactive Narrative Environment using Content from an Animated Children s Television Series

Oral history for library history

May 26 th, Lynelle Briggs AO Chair Planning and Assessment Commission

A GUIDE TO COMMISSIONED PROGRAMMES

FROM: CITY MANAGER DEPARTMENT: ADMINISTRATIVE SERVICES SUBJECT: COST ANALYSIS AND TIMING FOR INTERNET BROADCASTING OF COUNCIL MEETINGS

Film & Media. encouraged, supported and developed, and artists and filmmakers should be empowered to take risks.

CHANNEL 4 ANNUAL REPORT 2016 MAKING AN IMPACT

Job Pack: Film Programme Coordinator

Wales. BBC in the nations

Bristol marries new technology and creativity with its industrial heritage Watershed reflects the city s reputation as a media capital.

Digital Television Regulation from a European Perspective

EUROPEAN COMMISSION Directorate-General for Communications Networks, Content and Technology

Inventory. Acc Cencrastus

Off-Air Recording of Broadcast Programming for Educational Purposes

Digital Television Transition in US

Submission to: A Future for Public Service Television: Content and Platforms in a Digital World - A Public Inquiry: Chaired by Lord Puttnam

A Finding Aid to the Carrig-Rohane Shop Records, , in the Archives of American Art

TEN TRANSFERABLE LESSONS FROM THE UK S DIGITAL TV SWITCHOVER PROGRAMME

Considerations in Updating Broadcast Regulations for the Digital Era

MAKING AN IMPACT METRICS CONTINUED

Channel 4 submission to the BBC Trust s review of BBC services for younger audiences

Preserving Digital Memory at the National Archives and Records Administration of the U.S.

Case study Poland (see annex)

db Broadcast reflect on their role in the largest broadcasting engineering project ever undertaken in the UK Digital Switchover

Contribution to Artforum series : The Museum Revisited

DOWNLOAD OR READ : TV GUIDE LISTINGS ONTARIO PDF EBOOK EPUB MOBI

At Work: Sara Cwynar May 31 st, 2013

Code of Practice on Changes to Existing Transmission and Reception Arrangements

Context The broadcast landscape

S4C Clips and Rushes Policy. July 2016

DATED day of (1) THE BRITISH BROADCASTING CORPORATION

SQA Advanced Unit specification. General information for centres. Unit title: Philosophical Aesthetics: An Introduction. Unit code: HT4J 48

KANZ BROADBAND SUMMIT DIGITAL MEDIA OPPORTUNITIES DIGITAL CONTENT INITIATIVES Kim Dalton Director of Television ABC 3 November 2009

PLEASE LET US KNOW IF YOU WOULD LIKE THIS DOCUMENT IN A DIFFERENT FORMAT. Call for Embedded Opportunity: BCMG Apprentice Composer in Residence

Open access. Open Access at Aarhus University. Make your publications visible and accessible on the web

The social and cultural purposes of television today.

BBC Trust. End of Charter Report. March March

A guide for. DTT schedule providers

Brief for: Commercial Communications in Commercial Programming

Legal Memorandum. In this issue, link to information about. Developments: FCC Proposes New Video Description Rules. April 29, 2016

Healthy Heritage: MK Underground

In the early days of television, many people believed that the new technology

July 31, 2013 * * * * * * * * * * * * * * TABLE OF CONTENTS * * * * * * * * * * * * * *

Media and Data Converging Media and Content

PLATFORM. halsey burgund : scapes

AN OVERVIEW OF THE REAL SCALE TESTS IN THE FIPEC PROJECT (FIRE PERFORMANCE OF ELECTRICAL CABLES)

Institutes of Technology: Frequently Asked Questions

How the European Broadcasting Union supports its members in rolling out Access Services. Edgar Wilson European Broadcasting Union

Preservation Programmes at the National Library Board, Singapore (Paper to be presented at the CDNL-AO Meeting in Bali, 8 May 07)

Transcription:

OPINION - 11 MAY 2016 Artists TV BY MAEVE CONNOLLY What's motivating broadcasters to collaborate with artists? At the recent launch of the UK s new Channel 4 series, Grayson Perry: All Man, Commissioning Editor for Arts John Hay announced an increased emphasis on collaboration with artists, envisaged as authors rather than subjects of arts programmes. Specific initiatives cited included a super-charged Random Acts series (consisting of a three-year partnership with Arts Council England to fund 200 creative short films per year for TV, web and social media) and a commission from artist John Gerrard, titled Western Flag, for transmission sometime in spring 2017. Gerrard is known for the production of detailed realtime computer generated simulations of various sites, often located in the US, such as a solar energy plant in Nevada, a Google server farm in Oklahoma and automated pig fattening units in the US Midwest. Western Flag has similarly been conceived as a portrait of a place, responding to the current context of energy production but also referencing an earlier historical moment. This new work consists of a computer generated flag made from perpetually-renewing black smoke, located in a CGI replica of Spindletop, Texas, commonly identified as the birthplace of the modern oil industry because of the massive oil gusher struck there on 10 January 1901. The Lucas Gusher blowing out oil January 10, 1901 on Spindletop hill in Beaumont, Texas. Courtesy: Getty Images; photograph: Texas Energy Museum/Newsmakers

According to the Channel 4 press release, Western Flag will run in cyberspace for a year exactly paralleling the sunrises, sunsets, lengthening shadows and changing seasons of the real Spindletop and for one day next spring will break into the Channel 4 schedule. Seasonality has been a long-standing component of broadcast time, beginning with early public service radio schedules, which both mirrored and modelled patterns of listening that were devised around structures of urban and rural family life, including feast days and harvests. Gerrard s simulations also rely upon familiar temporal formations, such as time zones, but he deploys less obviously human-centred algorithmic logics to simulate the movements of planet-generating shadows and underscore the loss of seasonal time in automated farming. David Hall, still from TV Interruptions broadcast unannounced by Scottish Television, 1971. Western Flag is not, of course, the first artwork devised as a break in the flow of broadcast time; in 1971, for example, David Hall devised seven interruptions to be broadcast unaccredited and unannounced on Scottish Television. (These works were later distributed on video as TV Interruptions (7 TV Pieces). Read more about it on the LUX website.) Perhaps because his work directly addresses televisual objecthood and consumption, Hall s interruptions have been routinely historicized in terms of critique, rather than as the outcome of a negotiated collaboration with a

broadcaster. In some respects, Western Flag signals a continuation of this collaborative tradition, but it forms part of an algorithmic turn in contemporary art, and bears little relation to the critiques of television that shaped the reception of Hall s work. It is, however, possible to identify a recent commissioning context in which artists were invited to engage with television itself, as institution, cultural form and public infrastructure. I m referring here to the project Artists and Archives: Artists Moving Image at the BBC, which took place in 2014 at BBC Scotland, with the support of LUX and Creative Scotland. Six artists Kate Davis, Kathryn Elkin, Luke Fowler, Torsten Lauschmann, Stephen Sutcliffe and Alia Syed were invited to undertake yearlong residences with 24-hour access to the archives of BBC Scotland. Each artist was required to produce a single-channel work, which would be accessible (to viewers based in the UK) on the BBC website. (All the films are available to view here.) Kathryn Elkin, Michael s Theme, 2014, film still. Courtesy: BBC The resulting works are diverse in form, treatment and subject matter, but several make use of non-broadcast fragments. In Michael s Theme (2014), for example, Kathryn Elkin uses previously un-broadcast fragments from the longrunning BBC talk show Parkinson to explore the relationship between jazz improvisation and the aesthetics of television that is recorded-as-live. Fowler s 24-minute film Depositions (2014) takes a more explicitly critical approach to the archive, incorporating material from sources other than the BBC and directly addressing the representation of ethnically marginalized groups, including Traveller communities and communities living in the Highlands and Islands. All six films merit attention on their own terms, but it seems equally important to consider the motivations of artists and broadcasters seeking to collaborate at a

moment when television s status as a dominant cultural form is very much in question. Luke Fowler, Depositions, 2014, film still. Courtesy: BBC Artists and Archives demanded an intense, year-long engagement from the six artists, and it was also technically and administratively demanding for the broadcaster, since all materials had to be legally cleared for use online. There are evident benefits to both parties, since the artists could use materials that might otherwise have been inaccessible, and BBC Scotland could publicly assert its support for art production and its partnership with LUX and Creative Scotland. At a time when income from archive sales is often essential to underresourced public broadcasters and media archives, collaborations like this can be a way for cultural institutions to meet demands for public access, and identify priorities (for archiving, digitization and preservation) that might be altogether different from those dictated by the demands of commercial clients. Fowler s film demonstrates that there was at least some scope within the Artists and Archives project for a critique of public service broadcasting, informed by an analysis of the archive and its limits.

Ben Rivers, The Two Eyes are Not Brothers, 2015, installation view, BBC Television Centre, London. An Artangel, The Whitworth, Manchester and BFI Film Fund commission. Courtesy: Artangel, London; photograph: Marcus Leith. Another recent commission albeit emanating this time from outside the BBC points to the continued fascination exerted by the BBC and its history. Two Eyes are Not Brothers (2015) by Ben Rivers was commissioned by Artangel for installation at Television Centre in White City, a site that will controversially be redeveloped for commercial purposes. Rivers s project, involving sculptural installations of moving image material primarily shot in Morocco, included scenes of old film sets abandoned in the Sahara desert. The Artangel press release emphasised possible linkages between these material leftovers and the infrastructure of television production, tempting the visitor to explore spaces once used to construct scenery and props for BBC TV drama. Two Eyes are Not Brothers promised, and delivered, a compelling journey behind the scenes of Television Centre. But a different model of commissioning might engage more directly with the future of such sites, and with the forces now impacting upon broadcasting, which increasingly require the infrastructure and cultural history of public television to be mined and mobilised for profit.