32. Film: The Absent Image

Michel Chion writes:

"concrete music, in its conscious refusal of the visual, carries with it visions that are more beautiful than images could ever be."

In 1928 German cinematographer and filmmaker Walter Ruttmann was commissioned by the Berlin Radio Hour to produce an innovative collage of recorded voices and ambient sounds depicting the activity of Berlin life over one weekend.

Weekend [1930'] dir. Walter Ruttmann - score extract

Recorded and edited using the Tri-Ergon sound-on-film optical film sound technology, Ruttmann described the 12-minute radiophonic work as:

“a study in sound montage. I used the film strip to record the sound exclusively, yielding what amounts to a blind film.”

In both its conceptual artistry and technical achievement, Weekend would become an important landmark work in the rapidly developing field of radiophonic art and later musique concrète tape composition. Walter Ruttmann was an important abstract filmmaker who in the early 1920s worked alongside Hans Richter and Oskar Fischinger in producing a number of innovative animation films. In 1927 he directed what became his most well-known work, the city symphony feature film Berlin: Symphony of a Metropolis. He went on to direct the Nazi propaganda film Triumph of the Will (1935), before later being replaced by Leni Riefenstahl. He died in 1941.

Since Ruttmann’s time a number of moving image artists and filmmakers have explored the possibilities of an image-less film. During the 1960s, several artists affiliated with the interdisciplinary art community Fluxus produced films that explored perceptual change over time. These suggested something close to a sound film ‘absent’ of image. Perhaps of note from this period is the short Entrance to Exit (1965) by George Brecht as well as the Cagian film work Zen for Film (1964) by Nam June Paik.

The pioneering flicker films of Peter Kubelka (Arnulf Rainer, 1960) and Tony Conrad (The Flicker, 1965) offer a structuralist exploration of the film medium itself. These works demonstrate a granular inter-cutting technique, combining black and white frames of image and light, sound and silence, to a produce an intensely rhythmic audiovisual sensory experience. Paul Sharits’ own 1968 flicker film T,O,U,C,H,I,N,G, further expanded these ideas, exploring what Sharits believed was the medium’s unique ability to reorientate perception in ways classical narrative film could not achieve.

Blue [1933] dir. Derek Jarman

In the UK artist Derek Jarman’s final film Blue (1993) was a radical experiment in light and sound. At the time Jarman was suffering from partial blindness due to AIDs-related complications; apparently only able to see shades of blue. Visually, the 80-minute film consists of a single, static shot of saturated blue. In contrast the soundtrack is made up of a complex tapestry of composed music, borrowed score and sound effects. These elements weave around a reflective narration performed by Jarman himself together with a number of his longtime collaborators. In addition to its theatrical release, the film was presented as a simultaneous collaboration between BBC Radio 3 (broadcasting a stereo version of the soundtrack) and UK Television’s Channel 4 (broadcasting the static blue image).

Examples of sound used in the offscreen sound space of narrative filmmaking offers another perspective on sound and the absent image. Following Robert Bresson’s suggestion that “the ear goes more towards the within”, Michael Haneke in his 1992 film Benny’s Video deploys offscreen sound to activate the imagination and implicate the spectator in the act of violence.  Commenting on this strategy, Haneke remarks:

“with sound, just like words, you incite the imagination. And that’s why for me it's always more efficient, if I want to touch someone emotionally, to use sound rather than image.”

More recently, Ernst Karel and Veronika Kusumaryati have explored a unique sonic ethnography in their feature film Expedition Content (2020). Comprised almost entirely of audio recordings made by Michael Rockefeller and sourced from the 1961 Harvard Peabody Expedition to Netherlands New Guinea, the film explores encounters with the local Hubula people and reflects on the field practices of ethnography in the context of anthropological studies and post-colonialism.

In the context of film, absent, distorted or reimagined imagery undoubtedly opens up new sonic terrain, renewed auditory possibilities for both filmmakers and audiences.

Film Selection

Answering the Sun [2022] dir. Rainer Kohlberger
Expedition Content
[2020] dir. Ernst Karel, Veronika Kusumaryati
Blue [1993] - Derek Jarman
Benny’s Video [1992] dir. Michale Haneke
Entrance to Exit
[1965] dir. George Brecht
Report [1963-67] dir. Bruce Conner
Arnulf Rainer [1960] dir. Peter Kubelka
Weekend [1929] dir. Walter Ruttmann

28. Film: The Still Image

The spectacle of twenty four animated images a second suggests a familiar sensorial experience of everyday reality. This establishes the suspension of disbelief, the fundamental condition for attentional immersion in the flow of images. What the film re-presents appears to be happening in the present. 

La Jetée [196]) dir. Chris Marker

The photograph often has the feeling of depicting something that happened in the past. Frozen in time, photography suggests a thing that “is already dead” (Barthes).

Filmmaker Peter Kubelka describes time as “a measuring system for a change in position of material objects.” Sound is an articulation of time. In and out of synchronous allignment, from jack-hammer to synesthetic rupture, the temporal unfolding of the soundtrack re-imagines what we see through rhythm and meter.

The contrapuntal use of sound infuses a series of still images with a unifying atmosphere and emotional tone. Elsewhere it performs the intellectual montage. Discrete sonic events direct attention to visual details, while unfolding sound, located both within and beyond the frame, spatially and temporally expand each image. This summons all the movement and activity attributed to familiar reality. 

Film Selection:

GUO4 [2019] dir. Peter Strickland
Nostalgia [1971] dir. Hollis Frampton
Viet Flakes [1965] dir. Carolee Schneemann
Ishi no Uta
[1963] dir. Toshio Matsumoto
Salut les Cubains [1963] dir. Agnes Varda
La Jetée [1962] dir. Chris Marker

18. Spectatorship: The Invisible Cinema

In December 1970, the first Invisible Cinema opened in New York at the original Anthology Film Archives. It ran till 1974. It was designed by Austrian filmmaker Peter Kubelka as a distraction-free, total cinematic environment.

The Invisible Cinema was envisaged as an architectural space that would be completely focused on the image and sound of the film.

"All the elements of the cinema are black: the rugs, the seats, the walls, the ceiling. Seat hoods and the elevation of the rows protect one's view of the screen from interception by the heads of viewers in front. Blinders eliminate the possibility of distractions from the side. We call it The Invisible Cinema." (Manifesto quoted from Karsten Witte's collection Theorie des Kinos). 

Later in 1989 after a modified version of the original idea was set up in the film auditorium of the Albertina in Vienna, author and critic Harry Tomicek wrote:

“The conversion of the auditorium makes the 'Invisible Cinema' the only cinema in the world to remain shadowed to the point of invisibility and utterly removed from our perception while we see films. Similarly, in remaining invisible, this architectural space grants us a maximum of concentration and pleasurable immersion in what becomes visible and audible within it: a suggested world made of image and sound known as film." (Neue Zürcher Zeitung)

In the article Invisible Cinema, A Movie Viewing Machine, author Gamze Yesildag writes how Peter Kubelka envisioned the cinema:

“He calls the space he designed a ‘movie-viewing machine’: This revolutionary and controversial design is based on the idea of ​​cameras, movie processing machines, film editing machines and projectors to which the film is attached. The room where the movie is watched must be a machine designed for watching movies.”

Image Source: Invisible Cinema, A Movie Viewing Machine