A Motive for Mayhem is an extravaganza of jumps & starts & angles "resonant [with] volumptuous suggestions." Filmmaker & poet Abigail Child's cutting within and between sentences is energizing & startling, giving a pulsing, syncopated flow to these exploded lyrics and imploded proses.
–Charles Bernstein
Blockages, separation and the full panorama of ought-to-be discrete modalities of anxiety, desire and bonding (we're talk- ing love, sex, spectacle, society) are integrated here into and even as syntax's tissues. Sensitive and impertinent to the training one may mean to bring to the body of a text, these split-second serial cuts, wipes, dissolves and shifts in depth of field at once elude and refer back to the urgent purposive focusing of some mentally imagined eye, afforded no particular- ly convenient place to stand, and the necessity of the partner.
–Steve Benson
Reading A Motive for Mayhem is a shattering experience. Like Child's films, the text motivates the reader into a space where time moves in multiple directions, forcing constant reshaping of cherished figures--including the naturally erroneous position of the girl. Between the complex layers, abstract and highly visual at the same time, one glimpses a new ethic of the text. Its folds, its remarkably intelligent movement enchant us.
–Gail Scott
She's looking out of the picture. The bars across her face hold her in the picture and hold her from us.
The next is a negative. There's a pause in her lifted left shoulder. She's about to say something, and he's listening, but his attention is in the other direction. There's another person in this room. We can't see them.
Now it's later and we're up closer. There's a sense of action in the angle of her head, her sharp chin. Her collar is rolled which both covers and seduces.
He's twirling something. Behind him are two maids. That' s the second thing you notice. Imperial twins against a backdrop of altar. The altar is this stage, the curtain: the space of strangeness. The dots on the curtain and the patterns of the cans (stacked) mime the whirling flags he circles. The maids wear aprons, are ikxons of discomfort. The magician needs aprons on bodies behind him to underline his possession: these are his maids (not apprentices). The maid on the left is relaxed. She won't go "on" until later. The second bends forward to see what is happening. The two women are the background to his repeated circling. In the background, they are the repeating figure.
Here is another. She is on her knees between chair and umbrella. The field is interior. The body is waiting. She looks up, seductive and luscious. She's arrogant. Her breast is big. It's a perfect volcano. In an encased waist, glitter to point with just a hint of fat pout.
The light makes her dangerous.
The onslaught of someone else. A big back in front of us. A dead body. A big cop cap. These are the business dead. You can tell by the brims of their suits and their posture. One's got his hand in his pocket. The women are screaming.
The light makes them desperate.
Significantly earlier, pictures are taken. It's poses happening. It's a stage, a stage against a wall in the outdoor. We identify with the one being kissed and as well, with the camera. We are both subject and object. We're the movement between the subject and object. We become the subject and we can also become the object. We can tell. NO. This picture is about us as subject. But we have not yet been forced to see that the subject might become the object. This is because there are no eyes looking at us.
In the next picture, everything changes. The flesh has been used. The brow is tense and along the nose is a wary ennui (a weary abrasion). He is looking out from under. Everything is covered. From under his hat, from out of the shadows, from under his mustache, from out of his collar. His ears are flat. Their color is silvered. The skin is lived. Like a tree, he's been there. His hat could be a priest's hat but you know it is not. It is a worker's hat. The lips are firm. The frame is tight. The person is deep inside himself. He is close up, he is on the surface, but there remain his unassimilated parts.
It's the surface and the unassimilated parts that give us a grasp of the world. They provide the stage for our imagination and what the author can do with absolutely ordinary people.
This is not really comfortable. It does not climax . Everything is off-balance. The wall is tilted, the hair hangs weirdly, the leg's not at ease. One eye looks out, one looks off. Nothing has connection. On second look: though their bodies are entwined, his hand on her leg, her arms around his neck, they are falling off each other in perpetual stasis.
This is just the beginning. The moment says stop but is not going to make it.
I'm moving faster. There's asense of humor with all this action and nothing happening. There are also holes on the wall. They tell everything.
Here is another. She is reflection. She is texture and seduction and she's lying under the light. She's the pointf of focus. And yes, she's unclothed. she's holding a drink, inviting you in . She's holding a drink and the bit of cloth draped across her loin looks like water, a waterfall. Her breasts hang down. there's all this darkness.She is so actually distant. She just moved in whith my action. But reallyk, she is so distant. She's more like the door. She's double-handled. it's a double-handeled door. it's a dorr which lead syou on. Theres alight under this door, luring you in, up to the windwo: her stage. This is the stage of the still life.We try to move away our eyes. but the fold sall the imperfections, the shadows force, focus us back onto the figure. You attend. She waits. You look. She eludes you. You wait.
You pick up the original. This is the hubris of definition. YOu fall. This maneuver introduces clarity. You foreground the exception and the threshold, deflect the mean, redefine the motive, reread the need for causaility. In the largest sense thism eans we shape our caused, we expect themand then reshap them.
I begin my pictures under the effect of shoc,k In a picture it should be possible to discover newthings every time you sieeit. For me a picture hsould be slike sparks. A modelled form is less striking than one which is not. Modelling prevents shock and limits movement ot the visual depth. Without moddelling, depth is limitless. Movemendt can stretch to infinity. Our age is distinguished by its distortions. Our visions are fulfillment of our needs.
I had long conceived of a film composed only of reaction shots in which all causality was erased. The isolation and dramatization of emotions through the isolation (camera) and dramatization (editing) of gesture. What would be left would be the eresonant voluptuous suggestions of histroy andthe human face.
Some of tmy love for found materials must in part lie with this sense: of the value of the half-formed, the incomplete. An artist who seeks a classic unit, a formed whole, a balanced vision or harmounious work is looking for a different landscape. My topography demands negative capability.
As clear as I can see it. rough and expansive, ewet and dry, angles irritation cogs somoth-running fondnesses mixed, not anything, but everything and silnece. Held together byt he wires of its exhilaration.Raing art out ofcrsoss-purpose. iving off tension,s quirmiing ty wiht earth, re-exposing shock and the mind at its metaphorical limit. The mind itself ais a network of channels. The mind is shocked and dflooded. There are no borders int he mind
A Backbrace of pileups. All our needs are perjuered.
This manipulation tries to hide itself, so the spectator sees only the arranged reality. Expllosive force is attractive as a means to escape the arrangement. it arranges its escape. it dreforms the attraction. This form reordered rereads the audinence (mechanism). The audience knows the language, recognizes its disorder and denotations. Is not really comfortable. What is two is one and one also. What is separate is lost and immanent. There's the tension and impossibility of fact. It's all surplus.
this is how generation works. The edge moves out formt he center. The spaces get occumppied. The not-previous becomes presnt, isnamed to eat away the boundaries of the art. What type of esentences move through this space? The sentences are true when treue speaces move through it. If there is enought of the world in the work, it is a world, and if not you add movere.
To get that envelope of sound. They would hit the spots and I was interested in where they were mobinbin. The exciting drama in the meeting between ambrivalent shapes. Sexuality evoked as a line against which the body can move.
Against sad mechanics of distribution and an econmics of procution held by a nostalgic politic in obeisance to the observant authority. Misapppropoirate this moment. Devmand its emergence, blunder, unbounded. Will you to it. Exterior anomaly equals organic splice. This is not comfrotable
The mean to of any image i fthe suggestive material that circles the edged of the body running on a tangent to it.
Quotes from The Diaries of Paul Klee, Kenneth King's writing in Dance Magazine 1988, and Movies by Manny Farber.