By Fred Camper
In the last decade Brakhage has usually painted by hand on the film surface one frame at a time. He's also been using an optical printer to repeat many of the painted frames two or three times or more: patterns almost invisible at one-24th of a second can be seen, if only as a flash, in a 12th or an 8th. The four short hand-painted films on this program (In Jesus Name, The Baby Jesus, Jesus Wept, and Christ on Cross), grouped together as the 17-minute Jesus Trilogy and Coda (2001, made with the assistance of Mary Beth Reed), are almost entirely abstract, but bursts of red suggest blood, brown a desert landscape, and curved lines human flesh.
The Jesus Trilogy and Coda is driven by tensions between
movement and stillness, depth and flatness. Many images are visible just
long enough to seem stills but also contribute to the film's rhythmic
flow, as patterns transform or collide with others. Skeins of lines and
splashes of color create depth effects that suddenly yield to flatness.
These oppositions, perceived as irresolvable paradoxes, prevent the
imagery from becoming decorative or static, locating it as much in the
viewer's mind as on the screen.
Colors glow with an inner light as if alive and at times seem
translucent, with others shining through them; then, suddenly, they become
more solid, like a relief map. These transitions, experienced as a
vibration between solidity and transparence, lie within a long tradition
of depicting Christ as both deity and human, spirit and flesh; Brakhage's
is one of the most lucid articulations of the idea ever.
In the last of the four, Christ on Cross, Brakhage's multiple
lines unexpectedly converge into a vertical pattern, then a horizontal
one, several times. Soon there are fleeting glimpses of a cross, standing
as a kind of essence behind all the patterns we've seen — a moment that
will doubtless disturb those who admire Brakhage's efforts to free
cinema's imaginative potential yet refuse to accept his films' spiritual,
even devotional aspects. The Jesus Trilogy and Coda recalled for me
the huge, spectacular Tintoretto Crucifixion in the Scuola Grande di San Rocco in Venice: a glowing Christ in the top center is a surprisingly
tentative presence, powerful only by contrast to the chaos around and
below him. The remaining 50 minutes of the Chicago Filmmakers program consists of
one of Brakhage's few photographed films of the last decade, The God of Day Had Gone Down Upon Him (2000). This is the third in a group
informally called the "Vancouver Island films," all photographed; Brakhage is considering a
hand-painted fourth, Panels for the Walls of Heaven. The Vancouver Island films were inspired by Brakhage's second wife,
Marilyn. During his 29-year first marriage, in which he and his wife Jane
raised five children, Brakhage filmed every aspect of their lives
together: lovemaking, their children's births, Jane's plants and animals,
their children through adolescence, and a skein of sometimes troubled
family relationships. But he told me he understood early on in his
courtship of Marilyn that "she hated being photographed. When she first
stated it, I had to really think hard — and maybe 30 seconds after, I had
an immense sense of relief. I wasn't obligated to photograph
autobiographically anymore." The Vancouver Island films represent Brakhage's imaginary biography of
Marilyn: "I wished that Marilyn and I could have grown up next door to
each other and began a family. I missed her whole childhood and
adolescence, so I'm trying to give my sense of such a thing." Filmed in
and around Victoria, British Columbia, where Marilyn grew up, they include
snippets of her childhood home and garden and lots of footage of the sea
— which Brakhage, who was raised in Kansas, didn't see until his early
20s. The first two films (never shown here) envision Marilyn's early
childhood (A Child's Garden and the Serious Sea) and teen years
(The Mammals of Victoria). The God of Day Had Gone Down Upon Him is "her mid-aged
crisis" as Brakhage imagines it.
The title comes from a phrase in David Copperfield: "the God of
day had now gone down upon him" is Mr. Micawber's characterization of his
arrest for debts. Brakhage cites as a visual influence the late Mark
Rothko paintings in the Rothko Chapel in Houston; Brakhage says of both
the paintings and his film, "There is a weight of darkness." And indeed
The God of Day is a real contrast to the bright, glistening A
Child's Garden and the Serious Sea: here darkness — which has rarely
seemed more dynamic or alive in a film — is the fundamental ground,
appearing between shots and sequences as if brighter things were all
momentary apparitions.
The sea appears in almost infinite variety in The God of Day:
light and dark, in and out of focus, from just above and from afar, even
in underwater shots that suggest the mind's eye journeying beneath the
surface. But it's always seen from the shore, from the perspective of a
less than omnipotent observer of time's passing. Many images show the
waves crashing and receding at once while others concentrate on the gentle
back-and-forth motion of small waves, often made more visible by bobbing
plants on the water's surface. As in John Keats's ode To Autumn," the
acceptance of natural processes can be seen as an acceptance of death;
here the repeated movements of the sea convey a feeling of inevitability,
even of resignation.
Artists have often connected the sea with death, and water with life's
journey; in four allegorical paintings by Thomas Cole, The Voyage of Life, childhood is represented by a baby playing in an Edenic
pool while old age is an elderly man in a small boat on the sea. In much
of Brakhage's earlier work, and to some extent in the earlier portions of
The God of Day, images and sequences break off at high-energy
midpoints, suggesting an offscreen continuation. But what he does in most
of The God of Day is sustain individual images or short sequences
until they reach a natural conclusion, producing a series of endings. A
wonderful pan along patterned ridges in the sand moves in several
directions before ending when the camera tilts up and the view grows more
distant. A fountain of water erupts, but its phallic power is diluted when
we see only the foam, shot out of focus.
Brakhage's photographed work consistently conflates external objects
and the inner life. And the ocean here is a metaphor not merely for life's
course but for the filmmaker's consciousness. (Marilyn thinks the films
are wonderful, Brakhage says, but "not what she actually went through.")
Careful framing and subtle motions of his camera reflect the movement of
his body and eyes, making the camera and water almost indistinguishable.
Indeed, Brakhage seems to dance with the undulating surface, breaking
waves, and tiny patches of foam, the camera's small jiggles sometimes
seeming in perfect sync with these natural phenomena.
Brakhage's cinema of individual consciousness is often taken as
egocentrism — but as often as not his films are about the artist's
failure to achieve mastery over the world. Here the very fact of remaining
onshore (in the 1979 Creation, Brakhage filmed from a kayak)
represents human limitation. A very shallow focus in one image of the
ocean makes only a few waves in midground truly sharp. And at one point in
a long pan along distant ridges, their gray forms completely fill the
frame — still another variety of "dark" in a film that's filled with
darkness. Brakhage's theme here is not only seeing but the limits of
seeing, not only the glories of light but also its loss. For Brakhage, midlife entails the growing realization of one's
mortality. In one late, key image, a patch of brilliantly colored flowers
(in a note on the film, Brakhage connected them with a funeral) is covered
by the filmmaker's advancing shadow. Self-consciousness, the film seems to
say, involves a recognition of the way self-consciousness obscures vision,
forecasting its own impending end.
Other Links:
Chronology of the Scuola Grance di San Rocco
Chicago Reader Links:
Reader Homepage |
On Film Main Screen |
Archive of Long Reviews |
Archive of Brief Reviews |
Critic's Choices |
Showtimes |
Stan Brakhage's films are available for rental
from the Film-Makers' Cooperative, Canyon Cinema, and other distributors.
Links on this page:
Brakhage's notes on The God of Day Had Gone Down Upon Him.
Stan Brakhage Links Page
Capsule Review of this program
Chicago Filmmakers
Chicago Reader version of this review
Thomas Cole
The Voyage of Life, by Thomas Cole
John Keats's To Autumn
Crucifixion, by Tintoretto
David Copperfield
Museum of Modern Art retrospective of recent Brakhage films
Mark Rothko
Rothk Chapel paintings
Rothko Chapel
The School of the Art Institute of Chicago
Scuola Grance di San Rocco
Scuola Grance di San Rocco, Venice
Tintoretto
Tintoretto's paintings in the Scuola Grance di San Rocco