tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5265813806993497215.post5599961271299748372..comments2024-01-29T00:22:36.258-08:00Comments on e y e C O N T A C T: Psychedelic days; Lynchian nightsJohn Hurrellhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07411877334096071312noreply@blogger.comBlogger1125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5265813806993497215.post-46424612564758779512008-09-04T15:36:00.000-07:002008-09-04T15:36:00.000-07:00Hi John, I'm glad you've written about this becaus...Hi John, I'm glad you've written about this because I really liked the show but it's one that could easily have gone unnoticed. Given the nature of much 'multi-media', these works are pleasingly subtle in their presentation. A year or two ago in a Vavasour Godkin group show there was an earlier prototype, which used a projector to overlay fireflies onto the image. The integration of a screen within the work is a much tidier and more effective solution. The fact that the fireflies, if that's what they are and not some more mysterious force, only come out when you attend to them and hide when you attend too closely, could help avoid the effect tiring, but only spending a lot of time with one of these would prove that.<BR/><BR/>Like much of Lynch's films, these are based on saccharine scenarios, but it is the dark undercurrents of suburban torment behind the picket fence facade that contributes the unsettling after-taste to the chocolate box imagery. Each of the works are named after a Twin Peaks character - mostly sweet high school girls who turn out to have sordid extra-curricular lives - and the mysterious psychiatrist, Dr Jacobey. These could be sites of misadventure, earlier scenes of more innocent times (Lynch's repeated use of Laura Palmer's prom queen photo has this effect), or some sort of psychological landscape, much like Lynch's other-worldly red room. I like your observation of the deceptively perverse garishness of these autumnal park scenes. And that these are potential sites of after-dark violence - a landscape's alter-ego. Perhaps Lynch should visit Christchurch. I often think of the Twin Peaks pines when driving south to Taupo. <BR/><BR/>Did you notice the red velvet curtain draped over the window near the office?<BR/><BR/>For the record, Twin Peaks exists as a movie (a summary of the first series), a pilot (feature length first episode), the tv series and, much later, there was the prequel, Fire Walk With Me, which was extraordinary to see on the big screen having inhabited Twin Peaks for so long through the television.<BR/><BR/>Andrew Cliffordartfromspacehttps://www.blogger.com/profile/07641175844723908039noreply@blogger.com