Brontosaurus (1995)
By Sam Taylor-Wood
Informed by cinematic and documentary traditions, Taylor-Wood has been working with photography, film and video in London since the early 1990s. She presents characters in situations of isolation and self-absorption, their familiar, even mundane, surroundings and poses belying more or less hidden states of emotional crisis. The actors she uses are often presented in relation to each other using split screens or panoramic viewpoints in order to 'gather a complete series of human feelings … to explain the entire range of the emotional or existential world' (Celant, p.270). In an earlier work, Method in Madness 1994 (private collection), the artist filmed a method actor staging a nervous breakdown. This piece explores the difficult distinctions 'between reality and unreality, life and theatre', public and private, by putting the viewer in the uncomfortable position of deciding whether the action is genuine or staged. This discomfort persists with Brontosaurus, which is clearly taking place in a private space. First I filmed a man who was dancing naked in his bedroom, to the rhythm of very fast techno-jungle music. Then I took away the music and projected the film in slow motion. Wh…
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