Remembering History, Reconstructing Memory
This article coincides with the first visit to the United States by French filmmaker Jean-Gabriel Périot. His trip begins at the Museum of Modern Art, as part of Modern Mondays, organized for the Museum by Sally Berger, Assistant Curator, The Department of Film, MoMA. Following will be the North American tour, "We Are Winning, Don’t Forget," organized by Amélie Garin-Davet and Steve Holmgren, and is presented with support from UnionDocs, The Cultural Services of the French Embassy, Cine2000/French American Cultural Exchange and the Museum of Modern Art. For the full schedule please visit: http://periotour.wordpress.com
Over the course of the past fifteen years, artist Jean-Gabriel Périot has
created a series of meticulously constructed and finely tuned found footage
movies that are at once both disturbingly provocative and deeply moving. His films unflinchingly confront a wide range
of crisis moments from civilization’s recent past, including issues related to
war and peace, global economic policy
and human rights, as well as the very survival of mankind. More precisely, 200,000 Phantoms confronts the effect
of the dropping of the atomic bomb on Hiroshima and Even if She Had Been A Criminal… on the public humiliation of
French citizens who slept with their German occupiers during WWII. The
Barbarians takes a caustic view of the Heads of State attending the G8
Summit, whereas #67 makes a humorous,
yet biting commentary on the genetic engineering of tomatoes throughout the
European community. The Devil looks
at the assertiveness of the Black Liberation Movement set against White
Supremacy; Before I Was Sad, at the
irony of Gay Marriage Equality; and We
Are Winning, Don’t Forget at the struggle of workers confronting political
authority and police brutality.
We Are Winning, Don't Forget
Périot’s movies are constructed from documentary film footage and vintage
photographs, classic songs and audio recordings, as well as cutout animation
and other graphic elements. From these found materials, Périot reconstructs
memory of past events from a perspective that condemns violence of man against
man in all forms; each film engages the viewer in artful fashion to remember
history from a deeply humanist perspective. The filmmaker frequently contrasts, in
skillful fashion, poignant images of individual human faces within the larger
fabric of collective action. Structurally, he employs fast motion techniques to
compress cause-and-effect relationships across the horrors of history past (Even if She Had Been a Criminal…), and reverse motion (Undo) to suggest the possibility of
altering the course of civilization’s future. Percussive montage, screen wipes,
superimpositions, haunting music scores, poetic recitations, and a myriad of
other dynamic compositional strategies and editing techniques augment a sense
of immediacy to Périot’s global concerns.
Périot’s unyielding focus on reconstructing emotionally painful moments
embedded in history’s recent past places him squarely in the cinematic
tradition of fellow countrymen Chris Marker and Alain Resnais. The themes of individual suffering and
collective responsibility, war and peace, and love and death in such films by
Marker and Resnais as Night and Fog (1955), Hiroshima, Mon Amour (1959), La Jetée (1962), and Le Joli Mai (1963) are structured
through the prisms of time and memory. Périot stylistically reconfigures these
concerns to haunting and sublime effect in two of his signature films, 200,000 Phantoms and Even If She Had Been a Criminal… .
Much like Chris Marker’s La Jetée, Périot’s
200,000 Phantoms is constructed from
a montage of hundreds of still photographs. Both films traverse, in spatial and temporal
fashion, cataclysmic moments of nuclear destruction; for Marker, it is Paris of
an imaginary World War III; for Périot, the actual, horrible reality of the
obliteration of Hiroshima during World War II. Enhanced by haunting music
tracks and poetic voiceover narration, both filmmakers evoke tales of loves
gained and lost. Whereas Marker focuses on the reconstruction of memory
from the point of view of his time-traveling male protagonist, Périot conveys the
act of remembering through the motif of architectural construction. In 200,000
Phantoms, his photographic collage concentrates on the Genbaku Dome in
Hiroshima—comprising its completion in 1914, its obliteration on August 6,
1945, and the building’s gradual postwar reconstruction over the ensuing
decades. Although Marker’s film plays with time travel—cutting back and forth
between past, present, and future—Périot’s chronologically-structured narrative
goes a conceptual step beyond Marker’s film, in suggesting that by resisting
the erasure of memory on a grand societal scale, the filmmaker can help alter
the future course of human history.
Extracts from documentary film footage from World War II serve as the
underpinnings of both Alain Renais’s Night
and Fog and Jean-Gabriel Périot’s Even
If She Had Been a Criminal… Completed a decade after the end of World War
II, Night and Fog resurrects the
horrors perpetrated by the Nazi regime of the recent past. The filmmaker contrasts bucolic scenes in
color of long-abandoned concentration camps with horrifying black-and-white
stock footage and still images of helpless victims who were cruelly annihilated
in gas chambers. The effective, dispassionate voiceover narration reminds us
spectators to never forget this genocide, which remains buried just below the
surface of mankind’s collective memory.
Even If She Had Been a Criminal...
Jean-Gabriel Périot’s Even If She Had
Been a Criminal… revisits another painful, but lesser-known chapter of
man’s inhumanity to man during this global conflict, that of the public
humiliation of female French citizens who were accused of sleeping with Nazi
soldiers during the German occupation. Constructed entirely from found footage
material, Périot opens this film on the promise of peace with scenes from the
Treaty of Versailles; then, in rapid montage fashion, he chronicles the rise of
the Nazi regime and the entire subsequent course of the Second World War. Following
celebratory victory parades, the filmmaker optically morphs the found footage
into a slow-motion meditation on the public humiliation of the female
citizenry. Périot ironically contrasts patriotism—underscored by the song “La
Marseillaise “on the sound track—with the shaving of the female collaborators’
hair by their fellow male compatriots. These signature, extended scenes of the
public shearing of women’s hair graphically and thematically links Périot’s
film to the endless chain of human hair displayed to such similarly moving
effect in Resnais’s Night and Fog.
With Between Dogs and Wolves, Périot ventured
into the genre of live-action narrative filmmaking. In this film, he furthers his commentary on
the unjust effect of the global economy on the working class. An underemployed
young man moonlights as a pizza delivery boy while seeking an office job during
the day. An unexpected meeting provokes the protagonist to violent action, as
he recognizes that his quest for professional advancement is suddenly slipping
through his hands.
Whether working in the genres of found footage, cutout animation, or live-action
filmmaking, the entire body of Jean-Gabriel Périot’s work is inextricably tied
to exploring the power relationships embedded in the sexual, social, economic,
and political fabric of society. In his filmmaking practice, Périot integrates
sudden explosions of violence, trenchant humor, and sublime poetry to great
effect.
Films in the exhibition by Jean-Gabriel Périot:
Before I Was Sad (2002), 4 min.
We Are Winning, Don’t Forget (2004),
7 min.
Undo (2005), 10 min.
Even If She Had Been a Criminal… (2006), 10 min.
Nijuman no borei / 200000 Phantoms… (2007), 10 min.
Between Dogs and Wolves (2008), 28
min.
The Barbarians (2010), 5 min.
The Devil (2012), 7 min.
#67 (2012), 2 min.
Full tour schedule
4.8 New York City | MoMA
4.10 Philadelphia | International House
4.13 Atlanta | {Poem 88} w/ FILM LOVE
4.14 Oberlin | Oberlin College
4.15 New Orleans | Antenna Gallery (Press Street) w/New Orleans Film Society
4.17 Austin | Austin Film Society Screening Room
4.18 Los Angeles | Echo Park Film Center
4.19 San Francisco | Artists’ Television Access
4.21 Seattle | Northwest Film Forum
4.22&23;Portland | Yale Union w/ Cinema Project
4.24 Chicago | Columbia College w/ Chicago Filmmakers
4.25 Montréal | PHI Centre
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KEYWORDS
Jean-Gabriel Périot | 200 | 000 Phantoms | Even if She Had Been A Criminal... | The Barbarians | We Are Winning | Don’t Forget | documentary filmTHE AUTHOR
Jon Gartenberg has been actively engaged for decades in the preservation, distribution, and programming of experimental films. Over the course of his professional career, he has initiated the restoration of the films of Andy Warhol and Warren Sonbert. His company, Gartenberg Media Enterprises, currently distributes experimental films on DVD to the university market in North America. Since 2003, Gartenberg has programmed experimental films for the Tribeca Film Festival. He can be contacted at: jon@gartenbergmedia.com (www.gartenbergmedia.com)
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