Alfonso Cuarón’s film Roma (2018), named after the eponymous neighbourhood of Mexico
City, is framed through the experience of a middle class family’s maid Cleo
(played by Yalitza
Aparicio Martínez). The film evokes an
intense sense of time and place from the early 1970s inspired by Cuarón’s childhood
memories. The set design encompasses
specific details such as tile patterns along with the use of black and white
photography and rich soundscapes to lend the film an especially poignant
atmosphere. The narrative weaves together
the emotional turbulence of the main protagonists with wider events such as the
Corpus Christi massacre of university students of June 1971. Roma
provides a subtle exploration of the intersections between place, politics, and
memory, incorporating the claustrophobic drama of a family in crisis, as well
as the stark social divisions that underpin modern Mexico. Cuaron’s Roma
reminds us why cinema can be both aesthetically and politically compelling.
Tuesday, 8 January 2019
Truth is out there: Forensic Architecture
Forensic Architecture at 2018 Turner Prize. Photo: Matthew Gandy |
Still from Forensic Architecture documentary to accompany Turner Prize entry. |
“In my understanding,” argues the founder of Forensic
Architecture Eyal Weizman, “truth is something that is like a common
resource”. “The truth is just like air
or water,” continues Weizman, “something that we all need in order to
understand, that provides evidence for civil society groups that are
confronting state crimes and human rights violations worldwide.” In this brief yet eloquent interview, that
accompanies Forensic Architecture’s short listed entry to the 2018 Turner
Prize, we gain some fascinating insights into this radical interdisciplinary
research programme that Weizman initiated at Goldsmiths over a decade ago. This remarkable body of work brings questions
of epistemology and politics into dialogue as part of an unsettling of the
human subject within architecture, art history, and related fields.
The work of Weizman and his colleagues provokes a series of
critical questions that offer an important alternative to the recent emphasis
on neo-vitalist or object-oriented ontologies:
i) An enriched reconceptualization of the
human subject can transcend the limitations of humanism as well as the
flattening and undifferentiated dimensions to some post-humanist perspectives.
ii) The
conceptualization of buildings and also plants as evidentiary markers or
sentinels could surely be extended to other organisms such as insects because
of their extremely precise responses to environmental change. There is in this sense an interesting
parallel with the emergence of “forensic entomology” and the use of biological
data in criminal investigations.
iii) The radical
use of technological tools, and the democratization of digital cartographies
and other modes of representation, opens up new possibilities for articulating technologically
enhanced forms of citizenship.
iv) The idea of
truth as a collaborative synthesis derived from multiple perspectives, whose
modes of scrutiny or validation are transparent, is a welcome foil to more cynical,
nihilistic, or post-truth formulations. There is an emphasis on the accountability of
science rather than its degree of fallibility or infallibility.
Labels:
nature and science,
places and spaces,
politics,
reviews
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