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Neal Brown
Frieze
Psi Girls (1999) is a Video installation comprising
five floor to ceiling projections and a loud soundtrack made by an uncredited
percussive gospel choir, whose rhythmic handclapping is central to the
work. There is a great pleasure to be had in a warm, dark, empty space,
listening to beautiful music. But it can also be disturbing: the use of
other people's music may go beyond legitimate appropriation and sometimes
threatens to contribute disproportionately to the artist's work.
Hiller trained as an anthropologist, and her art practice often involves
the appropriation of 'cultural artifacts'. The fact that she
is an anthropologist may be something about which it is doubtful she could
boast Psi Girls in some ways is like a good pop promo, but one
in which the name of the band remains unknown.
The work comprises edits from five feature films, screened simultaneously,
each of which lasts two minutes. They hop sideways on completion, giving
a dynamic motion to the space in a syncopated, angry dance of giant moving
images. Each monochrome image is tinted a retro colour sick disco
green or naff Perspex pink a sort of groovy disco hell of sub-genre
Hollywood imagery. The movies reach a crescendo with the driving rhythm
of the unnamed musicians; a raising of the pulse that peaks excitedly
and effectively but which is then wiped out in a searing blast of cruel
white noise, only to start again. Overall, the effect is powerful: strong,
young and rock and roll.
The orderings and reorderings in the work are appropriate as a reflection
of Hiller's interest in collecting, a subject she has made work about
before. Psi Girls is itself a collection of thematically classified images,
arranged and randomly rearranged in an exercise of power and ownership.
Collecting is, of course, as much about the empowerment of the collector
over the external world as it is about pleasure in the intrinsic worth
of the collected subject. A great deal of the subject of Psi Girls then,
is the schemata of the work juxtaposed with its ostensible subject: parapsychology.
Psi phenomena are those aspects of the mind claimed by parapsychology
to be beyond normal perceptual processes, such as telepathy and clairvoyance.
They function partly in this work as Hiller's metaphor for art making.
The five film edits are of young females who employ telekinetic skills
(making objects move by use of the mind alone) to disrupt the world. A
number of pubescent schoolgirls watch as a classmate derails a moving
toy train with her mind; a glass travels the length of a table to break,
as a child rests her head on the table's surface; an attractive college
student balances a pencil on its point, prior to its crashing; a child,
wired up by authoritarian 'mad scientists', ignites remote objects
to the alarm of the now panicking, foolish males; and another child commands
physical objects from the adult world to move at her remote command, in
a gross disorder of the possible.
All share a similar conclusion at the end of their two minutes: disorder
or damage effected by the young females to the physical world, in contradistinction
to their usual dis-empowered status. Hiller's protagonists defy certain
fearful aspects of power relations, such as those between the physical
and mental worlds; adult and childhood sexualities; male and female; old
and young; and art, artist and viewer.
Between these categories writhe many other possible discourses, but about
which Hiller provides no real theory, making these discourses less privileged
relative to the overall work than first appear as if they vigorously
rattle the bars of their theoretical cages but can only escape into their
neighbours cage. Hiller abdicates responsibility at the point at which
her ideas threaten to become literal a strategic exit which provides
an imaginative space for the viewer, but one which could also be read
as a relieved cop out.
Although Psi Girls has panache, it is severe: the reordering of the images
and their abrupt severance effected with austere perfection and an impatient
authoritarianism. And, despite lacking authorial pronouncement, it seems
to contain a creeping, unspoken judgmentalism. While excitingly rich,
allusive and spine-tingling, it is also seethingly angry, disordering
and destructive - of itself as well - forcing unbounded energies
to collide with each other in a willful compression of anarchies.
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