Thursday, May 30, 2019

THE IMPACT OF TELEVISION ON DEMOCRACY AND ART

Be warned , you  could end up looking like a monkey's uncle if  you  tune  your idiot box  to  Sky . Back  in   l976 , David Perry , Artist in Residence  in Film and Video  at Griffith University , Brisbane ,  presented   this  disturbing  visage  in  an  interview by  John Tranter  for   the  art and literature journal, Aspect  .

At the time , Perry was mainly working in video , most shown  on  television screens . In a political sense, he said  video  was  more  democratic, more intimate than film . Cinema was a very formal  medium , people sat in  a darkened theatre  their attention on the screen  , an enormous image  that  hypnotised  the audience .

Television was  different...there was a little box  in an ordinary room, people sat about it  talking , drinking  .

While people complained  vociferously  about the power of television , and there was justification for so saying, he felt it a  much more  friendly  medium.

People did not  feel constrained  about  talking to the television screen . Recently  he  had visited  a  house where   a group was  watching a political figure on the screen . Some disagreed with  him , and they were just yelling   at him .This would not happen in a cinema  .Television allowed you  to take what you want from it  ; what you did not want , you could  shout at , or  ignore .

Tranter asked  Perry what  he felt about  moving from Sydney  to   Brisbane to   take up the  Griffith University post. His reply : "Well...I was a bit nervous , because there's a mythology about Queensland , that it's a fascist state , that kind of thing . But I honestly don't think Brisbane or Queensland is any more fascist than  the  rest  of  Australia .  

DAVID   PERRY: Born Sydney 1933 , died 2015. Pioneering Australian experimental and underground filmmaker , founder of UBU Films  (l965) , poster artist, stringer  for  Channel 9 and  10. Involved  in more than 120 archival  interviews   with Australia's greatest  painters, sculptors , dancers , actors , writers and filmmakers .  Chief  Australian  cinematographer on Steven Spielberg's Survival of  Shoah , a visual history project that recorded more than  400  interviews   with  survivors of  the  Holocaust.