offline
312 online

     
 
publications

The following is from 312 No. 13, May 11 - June 30, 2006 [Download Publication in .PDF format]:

still from Carola Cintrón-Moscoso’s Un minuto de Silencio (A Minute of Silence)

a still from Alejandro Quinteros’s My political opinion during the time of American abundance

SILENCE PART ONE
(A SURFACE EXCAVATION)

Recently, I watched a BBC presentation of John Cage’s 4’33”. The conductor took his place, raised his baton and waited. The musicians remained quiet while television cameras cut back and forth—here a violinist staring ahead, there a timer counting down the seconds. The composition was presented in three movements to allow everyone to make noise. Despite this, a few errant coughs broke through during the performance. Cage would have been pleased, being the man who wrote, “Until I die there will be sounds. And they will continue following my death.” (Silence, Hanover, N.H.: Wesleyan University Press, 1961. See: http://www.cis.vt.edu/modernworld/d/Cage.html). What, then, is silence when it is not the absence of sound? Alina Kwiatkowska describes silence as a figure-ground relationship: “A visual figure tends to be more complete and coherent, better-defined than the ground against which it is seen, which is perceived as less distinct, is less attended to and more easily forgotten. … It stands out from its ground—which we usually call silence” (“Silence across modalities,” Silence: Interdisciplinary Perspectives, edited by Adam Jaworski. Berlin: Mouton de Gruyer, 1997). I have found both Cage and Kwiatkowska helpful in exploring silence in the videos presented in this series.

In Carola Cintrón-Moscoso’s Un minuto de Silencio (A Minute of Silence), individuals of all ages are presented, each holding a personal minute of silence for someone no longer living. A minute of silence suggests reflection, but for the observer it can only be inferred by the participant’s quiet restraint. Life goes on unaware in Kwiatkowska’s ‘ground’ with cars passing, people walking and talking—but for the internal world of the participant, there is silence. Some participants appear lost in reflection—a middle-aged woman clasps her hands firmly, appearing strong and resilient despite her quiet tears; another woman holds her palms together in prayer beneath her chin, gazing thoughtfully at the ground. Other participants seem less reflective, smiling unsurely, as for an impromptu portrait, or fidgeting about nervously. The silence in Un minuto de Silencio (A Minute of Silence) is personal, consisting of a decision to limit socializing noise. Some participants extend this to include stillness of the body, kinetic silence, but for most it is a respite from sound in recognition of someone no longer speaking.

Alejandro Quinteros’s My political opinion during the time of American abundance focuses on a different silence—one of complicity. In Quinteros’s video, the necks of young people are shown close-up, two at a time. Each neck is onscreen just long enough for the viewer to see the person swallow. By lacking sound, the video makes me intensely aware of my own swallowing, an internal crackling that usually snaps in my ears unnoticed and unheard, a part of my mundane ‘ground.’ By focusing on swallowing, Quinteros wants to highlight the unnerving and tacit complicity of remaining silent when abundance could allow change. Quinteros implies that the decision is to not break the silence—the reluctance to act by ‘swallowing’ the tongue. He describes the video as a critique of the political apathy of young Americans, of their silence during war in the face of great material wealth. As in Cintrón-Moscoso’s video, silence is linked to a decision.

312’s two-part series on silence will continue August 1, 2006 with Alla Girik & Oksana Shatalova.
Mark Prier.

 

 

 
     

312 © Mark Prier. Design by Mark Prier. All images of artwork are © their creators.