Portraits in Motion.
Created and performed by Volker Gerling. Presented by Aurora Nova. Radford Auditorium. Art Gallery of South Australia. Sat. March 4 – Sun. March 19. Adelaide Festival 2017
Reviewed by Peter Wilkins
I can remember with affection and
boundless curiosity the machines at the sideshow that would animate still
photos in a moving image of life. This early form of animation could keep me
fascinated in its intricate subtleties of facial expression and physical gesture
that were in so many ways different to the cartoons that were precursors to
Saturday matinee main features.. And so it was that I was intrigued to discover
again that magical world through Volker Gerling’s presentation of his flipbook
films, taken by his trusty Nikon while on walking travels through Europe and
chiefly his natïve Germany.
During his walks, and on a
variety of other occasions, Gerling would invite people that he met to pose for
their photo. Rather than one frame, his analogue film would shoot them for
twelve seconds during which time a variety of expressions and movements might
reveal the character and personality of his subject. During his show, Portraits in Motion, Gerling would
either introduce the person in the photo and talk about them, or in other instances
flip through his photos beneath a video camera and later reveal aspects of their
lives. The flipbooks then become items on his travelling hawker’s tray that he
shows to people along his journeys.
What is particularly remarkable
is his passion and devotion to learning about the art of flipbbok filming as
well as the sacrificial act of relying entirely on his art to survive. He takes
no money with him on his walk and relies entirely on the good will of his
subjects or their generosity in paying him money voluntarily or purchasing
their personal flipbook. He lives by modest means in a modest and cheap
apartment and spends his life meeting and photographing people from all walks
of life.
Through his flipbooks the
audience also encounters a variety of characters. There is the thirteen year
old girl who hates her freckles because they look like pimples and the same
girl at nineteen who accepts her freckles because they hide any pimples. There
is the woman at the bar who unabashedly removes her top. A group of workers
crowd around a flipbook; two men and a woman live happily in an open marriage.
A young boy is filled with pride at knowing that only he will be photographed.
A woman reveals the pain of cutting her hair after the deaths of her father and
brother and the break-up of a relationship within a short space of time. In a
street in Poland there is proof that the world wil not end because of the Millennium
Bug.
Each flipbook shifts between the
expectant and the spontaneous. True response emerges in a split second before
returning to the neutral expression. Time is variable but constant, slowed down
or sped up depending on the gaps between the flips. The Berlin tower appears
and disappears in an instant. Blades of grass move behind the still motion of a
boy on a river bank. Gerling takes us beyond the expected to expose the
unexpected and with shifting consciousness view humanity in all its surprise
and complexity.
As a child, I was also exposed to endless slide shows of people’s travels. Portraits in Motion confronts a similar dilemma. Gerling repeats the action several times to reveal the nuance, the subtlety of the shift in his subjects’ emotions and attitudes. This is complemented by the anecdote, but it risks disinterest. As the presenter of the slide show harbours the fascination of personal experience and the enthusiasm of imparting that experience to a captive audience, so does Gerling risk the wandering attention of those less captivated by someone else’s “slide show” no matter how unique it may be and there is no denying that Gerling’s presentation, his subjects and the life he leads to pursue his art are unique in an unique show. In short, the presentation is too long and could easily have greater impact in only an hour.
At the end of his show, Gerling
invites audience to flip through his books and perhaps ask him to make a
flipbook of them for a modest price, possibly on the banks of the Torrens
River. A modest fee will ensure that you can enter his thoughtful and
reflective world, discover more about yourself and also assist him to continue
his flipbook travels for many years to come.