LIAM
GILLICK AND PHILIPPE PARRENO
Briannnnnn & Ferryyyyyy
14.
9. 2005 - 22. 10. 2005
vamiali’s
is proud to present the animation film titled Briannnnnn & Ferryyyyyy,
a collaboration project by Liam Gillick and Philippe Parreno.
Briannnnnn
& Ferryyyyyy, is a cartoon animation in ten episodes, duration 27min.
The
relationship between law and creativity attempt to critique Liam Gillick
and Philippe Parreno in this project. The scenario has as a starting point
the old story of the cat and the mouse chasing as it is presented in the
cartoons films.
The
artists refer to their work: “Our scenario details the attempted
overkill of a potential victim, who offers violent yet always inconclusive
retaliation. Our take on the story begins with the realization that the
cat has finally killed the mouse, leaving us in a gap akin to that between
the Second World War and the Cold War, or between the Cold War and the
so-called War on Terror...
The series is a de-abstraction of relationships. The values of the genre
have been rejected by modern culture in favour of less violent cartoons.
Yet they are still shown every day on cable TV. Cartoons tend to simplify
notions of cause and effect, crime and punishment, the vigilante and the
victim, the notion of the pre-emptive strike and what it feels like to
have your guts pulled out of your mouth...
It would seem as if there were a number of potential complications in
the production of the work. The drunken condition under which the initial
script was written, the parasitical relationship to a film company, the
use of the font designed for a specific use being reused and the potential
complications of the various music clips. However, none of these aspects
of the project are straightforward or didactic. The final effect is an
excess of questions, quotation and potentialities rather than a clear-cut
display of legalistic dilemmas. The whole project is rooted in overstatement
and subtlety at the same time which echoes the complexities of our time.
It both avoids and sidesteps the meta-discourse of the conference project,
while exposing new potential pitfalls at every step."
|