Event 3 Blog: Even Pricks by Ed Atkins
For my third event, I viewed Ed Atkins' Even Pricks as part of the This is the End Exhibition at the Hammer Museum in Westwood. This exhibition runs through June 7 and actually featured three different films over its entire run at the Hammer. Atkins' contribution to the exhibition was interesting as it took seemingly random clips created by the artist and also pulled from pop culture to get his vision across. The meaning I took away from the piece was one of shattered romantic relationships and the sadness that comes along with them. The official Hammer Museum information on Even Pricks states that: "Atkins’s Even Pricks (2013) comprises a series of hyperpolished digitally rendered vignettes that relate the idea of depression—both physical and psychological—to the immaterial surfaces of images." (Hammer Museum, 2015)Even Pricks does take some thought in order to analyze as there is no clear storyline and random clips are pieced together. But by following what recurs, an idea of the meaning of the piece can be found. multiple times throughout the film, a bed is pictured for a few seconds before a hole full of flame appears in the middle of it. There is also repeated image of a thumb rotating between being up and down, but usually settling in the down position, giving off the idea that things are not right and someone is unhappy. I'm sure I could have watched Even Pricks all day and had a different interpretation of what was happening with every viewing.
Figure 1: The recurring thumb presented
in the fixed down position
Figure 2: The thumb in the up position
but rotating
Figure 3: The thumb in the down position
but rotating
Figure 4: The recurring bed with a hole
in the middle of it
Figure 5: A hole much like the one that
appears in the bed
I enjoyed the artist's use of pop
culture throughout the film that tied the piece to the real world instead of
being completely surreal. At several points, the artist inserted classic pieces
of music including "Sultans of Swing" by Dire Straits at one point.
One of the clips used was even from "Man of Steel," a Superman movie
released in 2013.
Figure 6: Screenshot of "Man of
Steel" clip
I think Even Pricks ties into this class's course material mainly through
its use of modern video editing and animation technology to create surreal
images that cannot be acted out in the real world. No one would have been able
to showcase their ideas in the way Atkins' film did without modern computing
power and animation capabilities.
Figure 7: Proof of my attendance at the
event
Works Cited
Atkins,
Ed. "Even Pricks as part of This is the End" Exhibition. Hammer
Museum, Los Angeles. 6 June 2015. Exhibition.
"Hammer
Projects: This Is the End." The Hammer Museum. Web. 6 June 2015.
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