False Moves, Light Marks
It is odd how some artworks can threaten our vision, hamper the relative
ease with which we usually observe time and place.
In Hannu Karjalainen's Man In A Blue Shirt (2006) one sees a composed
elderly man, eyes closed, face to face. Aged skin always implies a lived
past while the man's resolute expression anticipates the events still to
come. The hidden eyes are aware of the past - which is unknown to us -
and maybe even of what will happen next. Everything else is evident and
in plain sight, until the thick liquid starts flowing over the man's
face, is imposed on him. One is placed, as in many of Karjalainen's (b.
1978) works, in between the passage of time, under its direction.
It appears that seeing entails both exposition and imposition. In
Karjalainen's works it is not only time that both freely unravels itself
and becomes forced. There also exists a tension between the indexical
traits of the image - all the residue of the camera's interaction with
the world - and the painterly gestures animating and transforming its
surface. Man In A Blue Shirt aptly demonstrates this when the weathered
skin becomes replaced by the gloss of the pouring paint.
Karjalainen's works create a suspension, often in play literally and
figuratively. This suspension (which does not extend to our disbelief)
is a matter of gravity, again: literally and figuratively. Most
evidently this happens in Woman With Blond Hair (2006), in which the
weightless hovering of the blond woman is coupled with the pensive
softness of slow motion - two anomalies becoming compossible.
Like the passage of time, also the pull of gravity marks directions in
space, which the work's own space then seems to gently dispute. Physical
attraction is left unfulfilled, but the image nevertheless becomes
pregnant with the sheer density of the undelivered moment opening on
itself.
Only the woman's blond hair seems obedient to the force of gravity, the
strands of hair hanging down, veiling her face. As if to remark on this,
almost to provide a polar opposite of a sort, Woman With Dark Hair
(2006) shows a disobedient head of hair, flowing freely in care of an
invisible wind. Turbulence and immobility cross. The woman, like Medusa,
faces the viewer, both transfixed. The woman's hair acquires an immense
weight as an element of her appearance. We may customarily think of a
person's hair as a kind of framing for a face, a parergonal element that
is kept in check by the face as a whole. Here the supplementary feature
assumes control and erodes even the very idea of appearance itself, as
well as the certainty of a clearly defined body. The corpus (of the
woman and perhaps of the work also) becomes a partly unseen entity,
extended in space, with an aura of strands - of hair and of
signification.
Many of Hannu Karjalainen's works seem to be about a certain disregard
for a selected law of nature, about creating an aberrant condition from
which to observe, where that particular force no longer holds sway. This
causes other things to happen in turn, odd and unexpected things.
The world of Girl In A Red Sweater (2006) exerts pulls in various
directions. Beams of light illuminate an eerie slope: the luster of the
wet grass, autumn leaves, no one in sight. The image prepares to carry
vision along the seductive oblique slant. It is all the more surprising,
then, to witness the body appearing, exhibiting little signs of life and
still sliding softly across the grass - the paradoxical movement of a
motionless body. In an uncanny way Karjainen's work enacts what Roland
Barthes described in photography, when he noted that the photographic
image was a "living image of a dead thing", incapable of differentiating
between the dead and the living - animating them equally, making them
equally real.1
There is something incongruous about movement in general - something
ancient figuring in our thinking that Karjalainen's videos take to task.
Zeno of Elea captured some of this uneasiness in his elegant paradoxes
that argued for and against the infinite divisibility of time and space.
Karjalainen (like Zeno) is not concerned only about the transfer of a
body from one place to another (be that movement smooth or through a set
of cinematographic stages) but also about the space that a particular
body occupies. It is not totally resolved where the limits of a body are,
nor are its points of disappearance.
Ordinary logic does not apply in these works; this world of ours is not
their frame of reference. In the videos there is often great emphasis on
things that occur beyond the literal frame, which in turn struggles to
contain the tension of the events portrayed. In Girl In A Red Sweater an
invisible force reels the woman's body off screen and back, in Man In A
Blue Shirt the paint is poured from a place outside the visible frame.
But in addition the character have turned inward or aside in various
ways, are concealed or obscured, as if within a tear in themselves.
The light of the works is purposefully artificial, the movements seem
false, the consistency of objects becomes threatened. The dreamy world
of the videos is a carefully orchestrated one; it is like a watchtower,
from which it becomes possible to observe the lure of image movement,
while being at the same time confined - by the centrality of one's own
position - to a kind of blind spot. But this concealment then opens
another want of sight, for another kind of light to mark.
Harri Laakso