The Hours that Hold the Form (A Couple of Days in Portbou)
Timmarna som rymmer formen (The Hours That Hold the Form) is an installation with a video on a projection screen and a reel-to-reel tape recorder, loudspeakers and some chairs. The film, which is in black and white, shows motives from the Spanish-French border town of Portbou, where the philosopher Walter Benjamin took his own life the night between the 27th and the 28th of September 1940. The border had closed the day before he arrived and was opened again the day after his death.
The images, both moving and stills, are accompanied by a voice that tells from different stories of refugee-hood: fragments, details, thoughts. Both the video and the sound are looped, but of different duration, this brings about a multitude of relations between word and image which both exposes and bridges the distance between them. A continuously shift of perspective that show that a comprehensive narrative is never possible. Eventually, the images are perhaps more related to the voice than to the stories, or the story, it tells.
The title, The Hours That Hold the Form, is a quotation from One-Way Street by Walter Benjamin, and the text continues: have passed in the house of dreams. The images from Portbou, where I spent ten days in the summer of 2005, witness to such hours, they are documentations of simple things: a restaurant, the old Custom House, the railway station, tracks, trains, the Benjamin museum... At the same time they are form, ordered by a more or less open system of significance, the film itself and the varying relations to the stories. In one way, the images of the film are simple containers of any form, in another way they are precisely the form they become. It is a border which is explored both documentarily and abstractly in the meeting between history and present, between meaning and silence.
text, video and video stills by Lina Selander, Stockholm, Sweden, 2007
Timmarna som rymmer formen (ett par dagar i Portbou), 2007
The Hours That Hold the Form
Video and sound installation
Digital video and analog tape
Description: 1 projection screen, reel -to reel 2 loudspeakers, 10 chairs
Video: 15 min loop, colour, sound
Sound: 14 min sound loop on reel-to-reel recorder
dimensions variable
MEDIA
→ The Hours that Hold the Form, video 15min
RELATED WEB SITE
→ artist’s web-site
[ CITRACIT ]
[ I am home ]
[ Narrations of Flights ]
[ Oblique ]
[ Palestinian Dictionary ]
[ Pilgrimages ]
[ Post Mortem ]
[ Sound Tracking ]
• The Hours that Hold the Form (A Couple of Days in Portbou) •
[ The Tongued Tongues ]
FEATURED THEME ON CITY SHARING
by ASUNCION MOLINOS GORDO
-
This project is an instrument for common critical analysis to help understand the reasons behind Egyptians’ diminishing …
by INAS HALABI
-
The project Letters to Fritz and Paul focuses on the expeditions of the Swiss cousins, lovers and scientists, Fritz and …
by SARAH BURGER
-
The planned modern city of Brasilia attracted me since a long time. Her defined shape, location and function proceded he …
by ADRIEN GUILLET
-
Youri Telliug talks with the artist Adrien Guillet about his project Citracit
Youri Telliug - What is Citracit …
by NIGIST GOYTOM
-
In 2013 more than 45 million people have been forced to leave their homes. This amounts to the biggest number of refugees …
by SULAFA HIJAZI
-
The on going debate on Arab identity and its (cultural) representation is strongly shaped by Edward Saidʼs formative …
by ASUNCION MOLINOS GORDO
-
WAM is a site-specific work that uses the historical trope of the cabinet of curiosities to explore the introduction of …
MORE CONTRIBUTIONS BY THE FOLLOWING