Lunch Break (2009)
By Sharon Lockhart
Sharon Lockhart's latest films depict employees at the Bath Iron Works in Bath, Maine. Lunch Break (2008), the longer of the two, is notable first for the artist's decision to set the camera in motion, something she has not done in any of her previous films. (Exit [2008], a related, forty-one-minute study of repetition and difference that depicts workers leaving the facility on five consecutive days, maintains a fixed camera position.) In a long, uninterrupted tracking shot, the camera in Lunch Break traverses at midday what appears to be the spinal cord of the shipyard-a long, uninterrupted passageway-as several dozen employees eat, read the newspaper, and talk in small groups. Most of the workers (all but one are men) do not engage with the camera, perhaps a result of the fact that, as with Pine Flat (2005), Lockhart's study of children in a small California town, the artist spent considerable time conducting quasi-ethnographic research to familiarize herself with the "community" of shipbuilders, electricians, welders, and pipefitters before capturing it on film. Though the camera moved, the footage it gathered has been slowed down dramatically: Six minutes pass before the fir…
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