Inasmuch As It Is Always

Collected Works: Art

 
 

Inasmuch As It Is Always Already Taking Place

by Gary Hill
Video art

View an image of the artwork

Within a five-foot recess lies a fragmented human body, its parts scattered across sixteen video monitors of various sizes. The screens are connected by twisting, nerve-like wires, but there seems to be no logical ordering: a foot, an ear, and a groin lie side by side. The disconnected ends of the wiring disappear from sight into the back wall of the niche, implying that the core of the human is neither visible nor fleshy, but something rather less tangible.

The alcove in which the monitors lie is positioned below eye level, drawing our gaze downwards and prompting comparisons to a morgue, or perhaps a digital grave. If death is depicted here, though, it is through the remove of the body’s scrambled arrangement and its physical absence, stored as if within a scrapheap and recounted as if via television footage. The artist, Gary Hill, has called the collection of monitors ‘a kind of debris’, inviting us to consider these screens as the tombstones of detached, late-twentieth-century modernity.

Hill is interested, in his own words, in ‘very sculptural notions coming out of sound, the body, utterance and speaking’. For the artist, the production of language cannot be separated from the guttural and the corporeal, the vibration of the voice box and the secretion of saliva. Barely audible whispers can sporadically be heard through speakers: ‘I couldn’t say it any other way.’ One screen shows Hill’s thumb on the page of a book; another shows illegible writing.

The body parts are Hill’s own, but his features are distorted beyond recognition. Rather than a reproduction of the human whole, we are offered its constituent elements in isolation. The writing and speech both act to draw us closer to individual screens, squinting and straining, at the expense of experiencing the work in its entirety. With Inasmuch As It Is Always Already Taking Place, the self is deconstructed, the artist’s physical form torn limb from limb.

Words by John Wadsworth


More to discover

You can visit Gary Hill's official website here. Ana Beatriz Duarte has interviewed the artist for Studio International, as has Lucinda Furlong for Afterimage (reproduced on Experimental TV Center).


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