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Frieze - June 2001
By Polly Staple
Not many art works make me want to cry. I can think of plenty of Hollywood
films that have had that effect, but art is rarely so blatant. Artists who
work with film often strip away the more novelistic concerns of conventional
movie making, employing a Minimalist logic to explore the formal properties
of the medium and so clear a space for both cerebral contemplation and analytical
thought. Salla Tykkä's three-minute video projection Lasso (2000) is
meticulously structured investigation of the mechanics of cinematic production
and performance. What is striking about the video, however, is its successful
collision of "high" art concerns with a more elliptical, romantic
impulse.
Lasso opens with the shot of a teenage girl jogging
through an affluent Helsinki suburb. She turns into the driveway of a
Modernist house, Goes up to the door and rings the bell. No answer. Full
of purpose and seemingly on familiar territory, she walks around the side
of the house and peers through a large plate glass window. A haunting,
eerie soundtrack starts up Ennio Morricone's score from Once
Upon a Time in The West (1969). The music builds. Cut to a shot through
the window of a bare chested, young man frenetically twirling a lasso.
The camera moves inside the house to record the man's performance
in slow motion. He leaps in and out of the spinning lasso, working it
faster and faster, his face contorted by manic energy. The camera circles
around him: he is framed by the edge of a piano, paintings, a plush white
armchair, an ornate dining table and chairs. Like the girl outside, pressed
against the window, you become transfixed by the vigour and dexterity
of his performance, seduced by his will and absorption in the act itself.
The tension is emphasized by the schmaltzy music which reaches a hysterical
crescendo as he suddenly whacks the lasso onto the ground with a terrible
crack back into real time. Cutting to the girl's startled face you
see her breath on the window pane: tears or sweat runs down her face.
She steps away from the window and the camera pans out to focus on a patch
of thawing ice.
Diminutive epic possesses a deceptively simple narrative
and utilises a restrained cinematography which is at odds with the overblown
soundtrack, the magic of the spectacular lasso performance and the erotic
charge of the voyeurism. The film's score, like the man's display,
is faintly ridiculous and entirely seductive. You oscillate between being
carried away by the visual pleasure generated by the spectacle to coolly
observing the details of the bourgeois interior: from pondering the sociological
and psychological implications of an uncanny display in the familial living
room, to the detached consideration of his performance as a theatrical
sculptural presence in a Modernist enclosure. You wonder at the reflection
of the girl in the window outside, her engagement with the scene, her
relationship to the man, your connection with the image: or the subtle
shifts of drama and suspense, the lingering shots, the swift edits, slow
motion, "real" time, filmic time, dream time. Occasionally the
music is so sweeping and intense that it dominates the gallery space.
The man's display of skill, speed and control is contrasted with
the passive role of the female observer; he signals wildness yet appears
as a dream-like vision, sealed inside the house like an alluring object
for the more active gaze of the girl in the "natural" environment.
I'm still left wondering about what it was that made
me want to cry. In all the best tears jerkers you might think you identify
with the hero or heroine but you're only ever really crying about yourself.
There's a terrible politics at play here and it is difficult to unpack
the many layers that Tykkä builds into her film. Suffice to say the
shots you remember are of the man twirling the lasso and the woman's eyes
watching his performance. I like the way that, although, melancholy, the
film also manages to induce a weird feeling of euphoria. Tykkä conflates
Modernism and kitsch, the epic and the everyday, in a film which could
be described a perfect academic Pop but which still conjures a space of
wonder and delight.
The Guardian Guide - 3 March 2001
By Jessica Lack
This is an incredibly well considered and beautifully
crafted film installation by the young Finnish artist Salla Tykkä.
Set in the suburban back streets of Helsinki, the three minute film
follows a female jogger's journey to a house in which a man is performing
extraordinary feats of skill with a lasso. As the performer leaps and
spirals through the rope, the girl watches intently through the window.
Both remain trapped in their own worlds, he in his glass house and she
outside in the landscape. There is a definite feeling of the epic about
the piece, which is enhanced by Tykkä's choice of soundtrack, Ennio
Morricone's Once Upon A Time In The West. Seductive, and almost dreamlike
in parts, the film highlights the divisions between the exterior, natural
world and that of the closed and single-minded world of the dancing cowboy.
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