The Secret of Happiness and Paula Dawson
Traditionally portraiture in both painting and photography has elicited and
implied the candid revelation of the subject's countenance, mediated by the
artist's gaze and medium of pictorial representation. In Luc Courchesnes's interactive
video installation for video monitor, computer, trackball, and laserdisc player,
"Portrait of Paula Dawson 1992-4", this mode of representation is
elaborated into the domain of virtual space. The visitor/viewer enters this
simulated zone of conversation to negotiate and respond to the subject's personal
pronouncements both fictional and real.
"Paula Dawson and the Secret of Happiness" is a collaborative installation
with Canadian interactive multimedia video artist Luc Courchesne, Kevin D. Murray
(biographer), Katie Pye (stylist and couturier), Fiona Hall (photographer) and
curator Merryn Gates (Assistant Director, Ian Potter Gallery). Luc Courchesne
visited Sydney as a participant at TISEA (Third International Symposium of Electronic
Art) in 1992 where his "Portrait One" 1991 - interactive video portrait
was displayed. During this visit the Paula Dawson video portrait was recorded.
The other visual focus of the exhibition is Katie Pye's lavish and baroque array
of highly stylised costumes designed for Paula Dawson (including the yellow
silk jacard and silk organza suit worn by Paula Dawson for the opening of "Please
Allow Me To Introduce Myself" presented by MIMA at the Centre for Contemporary
Photography, Melbourne in 199~). These 'romantic' costumes are augmented by
Fiona Hall's photography documenting Paula Dawson's personal history including
four views of the site of the constructed public bar used to produce the 1989
hologram, "To Absent Friends" installed as part of Jennifer Phipps'
curated exhibition, "Creators and Inventors" at the National Gallery
of Victoria.
Paula describes that event in 1988, "To Absent Friends" and Fiona
Hall's documenting of the site for the resultant hologram.
"So we built the bar inside the lab and invited sixty people over to have
a party. It was a fake New Year's Eve party, so everyone had come dressed as
though they were going to meet their friends."
Perhaps a clue to Paula Dawson's secret of happiness? Happy Happy Joy Joy indeed!
Melbourne writer and photographic art historian Kevin D. Murray has furnished
a 'fictional biography' of Paula Dawson which includes a list of chapter titles,
acknowledgements, foreword, preface, appendix, artists' statements, chapter
notes, glossary and index. It remains a work in progress; a 'prototype edition'.
The author states in his preface, "The prototype edition contains the life
of Paula Dawson in its embryonic form. This 'text-less' edition offers readers
a view of the framework on which the final life is woven. As a mere biographical
shell, the identity presented here of Paula Dawson will probably appear to most
as ghostly and fragmented. Given the current taste for forms which are broken
and incomplete, this emptiness might actually be preferable to the final version
in some readers' eyes... it offers itself as a literary equivalent of 'installation
art' which provides space for visitors to move around and appear to make sense
of the work themselves."
The interactive video portrait/virtual conversation begins with the viewer activating
the trackball captor mechanism to designate/navigate through the multiple choice
questions which Paula's persona answers on screen positing fresh options and
questions.
Paula Dawson: "do I remind you of anyone?" viewer clicks on to text
display of "Lauren Bacall".
Paula Dawson: "no one has ever said that to me before!"
Luc Courchesne's video portrait utilises the hardware and software con figuration
of a laserdisc (laservision CAV/NTSC), a television monitor and Hypercard stacks
on a MacIntosh computer. The image is rendered by the reflection of the horizontally
mounted monitor from above onto a 45 degree angled glass plate facing the viewer.
The artist's involvement with interactive video, installation and videography
dates from his work at the MIT Media Lab. His work has been exhibited at all
the major electronic art symposia (MuuMedia, Helsinki 1993, TISEA Sydney 1992,
Siggraph Las Vegas 1991 etc.). Luc Courchesne lives and works in Montreal, Quebec,
where he is a professor at the Universite de Montreal and in Marseille, France
where he is researcher in residence at the Institute de Recherche et de Creation
(IMEREC).
The experience of interfacing with a virtual and immaterial simulated persona
is as Courchesne describes a, "metaphor for conversation". Allucquere
Roseanne Stone, erstwhile recording engineer to Jimi Hendrix, transsexual and
more recently the director of the Interactive Multimedia Laboratory at the University
of Texas, recently stated; "I mean an interface is a metaphor. We used
to think of it as a physical object, a keyboard... but interfaces are metaphors,
and they stand in for absent structures and the absence is the important word
here, they're ABSENT structures. They're not where you could see them. It doesn't
mean that they are inside the machine, but they're in an elsewhere. And you
can call that cyberspace, or you can call it symbolic exchange."
"Hypermedia means a network of nodes and links. The nodes are the content,
the material of the world and the links are the freedom to move within it. A
hypermedia author creates a world of possibilities; then he/she invites people
in and gives them freedom; finally he/she characterizes the experience by developing
a metaphor for the experience. With new developments in interface design, hypermedia
is increasingly interactive and immersive; the window on the artwork is growing
to surround the 'visitor'... more than in any other medium hypermedia entails
shared authorship." - Luc Courchesne from the artist's statement page 188.
Paula Dawson has mapped out a career trajectory for the next decade and beyond.
Her current projects include, "You Are Here" (moon illuminated), a
site specific hologram displaying a 2.5 million year visual history of extinct
fauna from the immediate fossil record in situ on and around an island between
two headlands on the Great Barrier Reef - to be illuminated by moonlight for
eight minutes per month (weather permitting) for the next (gasp!) 2.5 million
years! Copies of this hologram will be mass-produced for sale to be bought by
the public and to be installed in non-site locations on windows around the world
between the tropics of Capricorn and Cancer, again being illuminated by available
moonlight. Her film "All Days are Nights" (as yet to be completed)
will be screened in conjunction with these holographic installations. She also
proposes holograms for the 1000 dollar bill (2003), a Mastercard 'Creditworthy'
commission (2002) and the first virtual hologram (2006).
Paula Dawson describes this enigma and seeming tautology thus:
"A hologram designed for the sightless. Witnesses must wear a pair of VR
gloves on which resistance is felt which is determined by a computer generate(l
sculpture." Perhaps Paula Dawson's 'secret of happiness' is derived from
her indefatigable enthusiasm and wildly inventive artistic strategies coupled
with the scientific rigour to make such experiments in hypermedia accessible
and intensely engaging, funny even for technophobes. The acronym for LASER is
illustrative of Paula Dawson's effulgent imaging techniques and apparel - Light
Amplification by Stimulated Emission of Radiation is again a reminder that these
new imaging technologies (video and holography) are the only visual media that
use emitted light from the cathode ray tube screen and/or a liquid crystal display,
both of which glow in a darkened space. All other visual means of pictorial
representation are imaged by reflected light. The serene beam and the gleaming
dream... ~
"The light that never was on sea of land - The consecration, and the poets
dream."
William Wordsworth
© Brecon Walsh, MESH #3 Autumn 1994. MESH film/video/media/art is the journal
of Experimenta Media Arts