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Pulp-Art's New Minute Man
still
from Douglas Gordon’s One Minute Psycho
Douglas Gordon won the 1996 Turner Prize on the basis of a single work: his
famous 24 Hour Psycho. First shown at Glasgow's Tramway 13 years ago,
it was and will always remain the one work synonymous with his name. It is
Gordon's shark, his bed, his bloody head. Even if you have already seen
24 Hour Psycho, Gordon is giving us all another chance at what seemed
impossible to improve upon - as he unveils his remake of this
seminal work at the Museum of New Art (MONA) this December.
Whenever
I've watched 24 Hour Psycho, Gordon's slowed-down video presentation
of Hitchcock's thriller, I somehow manage to miss the shower scene. I always
arrive too early or too late, and have never had the patience to see it
through. Most recently I failed to catch the ominous shadow at the shower
curtain yet again, in Edinburgh's Royal Scottish Academy Building, where
24 Hour Psycho is currently installed in a major survey of Gordon's
work.
Gordon’s
reworked masterpiece One Minute Psycho, in its two versions presented
in Detroit, not only allows me this missed viewing but more, and all in the
time it takes most titles to scroll onto the screen.
Douglas
Gordon's success with 24 Hour Psycho has oddly given him the desire
to remake it. As an artist, he believes the first try was a failure on one
important level.
“24
Hour Psycho showed that you can't always appropriate,” he recently
confided. “Or you can appropriate, but it's not going to be great art simply
by association. Part of me totally believes in anonymous art. By making a
second version, I make the first anonymous and the second the
appropriation."
When the
artist announced he was remaking 24 Hour Psycho, loyalists to the
first work were baffled, puzzled, outraged, soured, and in the mood of total
rejection. Why do it? they asked. What was the idea? A host of related
questions were raised, not the least of which was: what is Gordon's idea of
a remake anyway?
He had
been toying with the idea for the last several years, and one motivation was
to renew its appeal. The original 24 Hour Psycho is filmed in
black-and-white, not a very attractive medium to the younger generation in
itself. The difficulty increased when Gordon decided to recreate the
original not in the usual fashion of remakes. The most apparent changes were
that this modern remake was shot in color, and alternately sped up to a
minute rather
than slowed down to a full day as before.
It
had been the success of the first work that has made Gordon’s second attempt seem so foolhardy and frustrating. In imitating himself,
he had to rise to a higher occasion,
but now constrained to a one minute playing time rather than the original
twenty-four
hours. All this has not only heightened the expectations of audiences, but
also increased their skepticism. Whatever the motivation, the fact remains
that a classic remade with such ambitious standards was bound to be
subjected to intense scrutiny. Comparisons are now inevitable, especially by
the unforgiving older audiences. Still, one has to be fair to Gordon and to
his honestly stated motives - to attract the youth culture, and to revive
interest in his earlier work.
In
the final analysis, Gordon’s motives do not matter. One must judge the
product by the results, based on one's perception of this work on aesthetic
grounds. And on such grounds One Minute Psycho succeeds masterfully.
The transition of black-and-white to color does seem a happy choice. Today
color in film is so dominant it seems almost unthinkable that a modern work,
even of the darkest subject, could be filmed in anything but color. Color
and color tone affect the viewer's psychological disposition and help
determine the emotions a film, and a violent film to boot, will evoke.
Also,
Gordon’s choice of fast-motion is deliberate, to mitigate the shock of blood
swirling down the drain in the shower scene, and to invest the film's gothic
subject-matter with an aura of comic gloom. Such speeded action alters the
tone of the grim tale into what seems a carefree holiday adventure in the
tradition of the Keystone Cops on acid. As now-familiar images flash by they
have become signs referring to the earlier work as well as a twisted
view of our new millennium.
Finally the success of One Minute Psycho must
be attributed to Gordon himself and to his mirrored artistic vision. Times
change, and so do people's outlooks. Today's audiences are gorged with
violent spectacle. The shower scene, though still shocking and frightening,
can no longer traumatize them to the degree that it did in the original.
One Minute Psycho is able to penetrate audience's inner fears,
irrational desires, and mad urges at the attention speed of a Play Station
gamer. This updated version references
the latest trend of shock art and horror film so prevalent now in our
culture. Gordon, above all, wants to
communicate with this audience; their pity and fear matter to him. With a
condensed expression of these mental states, the tragic drama remains here
on a level of emotional liquidation and dark indifference. A truly grand
success and approachable companion piece to his overlong Warholian original.
contributions by Laura Cumming & Adrian Searle
METRO TIMES
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