Keren Cytter
Something Happened, 2007
Something Happened, 2007
7 min, digital video, color/sound
Despite covering all corners of visual culture - from writing novels and puzzle books to the production of feature movies - the artistic production of Keren Cytter remains firmly bound to its linguistic point of departure. The majority of her work is script-based but shows an informal diversity in the means of its representation. Both poles - between 'being form' (the narrative) and 'having form' (its representation) - stay carefully separated and it is their non-compatibility that seems to determine Cytter's aesthetic playing field.
SOMETHING HAPPENED (2007), for example, is influenced by Natalia Ginzburg's novel É stato così (1947) but takes up neither the plain literary style of the book nor follows the plot accurately. Instead, Cytter's film gives way to an almost pathetic plea for empathy, comparable to the current interest within popular culture in dramatising the extremities of every day reality. The movie shows a domestic conflict between two lovers, but the main message that is conveyed is of the artificiality of their dialogue. The actors constantly have to repeat their lines and Cytter controls their behavior by being highly selective with the lines that are transmitted to the viewer and with those that remain obscure. Through a playful use of timing, editing and camera angles the narrative balances in its depiction between a Hollywood 'tearjerker' and a 'behind the scenes' documentary. Cytter leads it to a troubling climax.
SOMETHING HAPPENED (2007), for example, is influenced by Natalia Ginzburg's novel É stato così (1947) but takes up neither the plain literary style of the book nor follows the plot accurately. Instead, Cytter's film gives way to an almost pathetic plea for empathy, comparable to the current interest within popular culture in dramatising the extremities of every day reality. The movie shows a domestic conflict between two lovers, but the main message that is conveyed is of the artificiality of their dialogue. The actors constantly have to repeat their lines and Cytter controls their behavior by being highly selective with the lines that are transmitted to the viewer and with those that remain obscure. Through a playful use of timing, editing and camera angles the narrative balances in its depiction between a Hollywood 'tearjerker' and a 'behind the scenes' documentary. Cytter leads it to a troubling climax.