Friday, 23 December 2011

The Other Side - Ian Breakwell

Just about to finish in the new year is a showing of Ian Breakwell's (2002) short video projection The Other Side at the Millennium Gallery, Sheffield. During his residency at The De La Warr Pavilion in Bexhill-on-Sea in 2000, Breakwell was apparently struck by the Pavilion's community, and particularly the tea dances held on the terrace. It is upon this dancing that Breakwell's film focuses.

According to the exhibition material, Breakwell wrote of the Pavilion tea dances: "There was this whole atmostphere with the setting sun, calm sea, cheesy music and old people gracefully dancing. It was almost kitsch but at the same time there was something almost magical about it." Watching Breakwell's film certainly evokes such kitsch magic.

In the film we see the terrace as the sun goes down, the camera moving back and forth while the old couples dance outside on the terrace. All of this is set to music from Schubert and features occasional close-ups of the couples in silhouette.
The movement of the camera, classical music, graceful slow movements of the dances and the soft colours of the setting sun make watching The Other Side a mesmerising experience. It lulls the viewer into a state of serene reflection.
When the film ends, the image fades to black and the music dies, replaced instead by the sound of the sea and gulls. In itself, such sound would not be unsettling; it might be calming perhaps. However, because the preceding film offers a hypnotic lullaby, the ocean sounds are disruptive. They puncture the tranquility and evoke a melancholic contemplation on our mortality and the paths of our human lives...

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