Kit’s Blog – The Other Kwai Featurette

On Saturday the 23rd I presented ‘The Other Kwai’ a film I have developed during my time at the Sura Medura Art Centre. Set within the linearity of a single day with a narrative structure reflective of ‘The Bridge on the River Kwai’ (1957), broken by images from the Hollywood film and the weaving of chair caning, ‘The Other Kwai’ takes in the echoes of the impact when fiction collided with reality, creating a new history which continues to affect and reverberate through the rainforest canyons of the Kelani River at Kitulgala.  My previous film work has consistently been intended to be exhibited within installation spaces and I have found that while the focus of the audience is the projection of moving images, the space where it is presented can act as a crucial element to the work as a whole; helping to create an immersive environment for an audience, while also referencing components or the structure of the films presented, causing the spaces to become constituent components of the installations. This has continued with the presentation of my latest work in Sri Lanka. Using the grounds of Sunbeach Hotel in Hikkaduwa I set up an outdoor cinema for the audience to sit and experience the work. Previously many of my moving image installations have been structured in a non-linear way, in part due to the particular qualities and contexts of exhibiting in gallery spaces. This piece was presented in an unconventional art environment and needed certain criteria to be put in place to create an installation space that continued to feed information involved within the work to the audience.

Installation view of 'The Other Kwai' 2013

When confronted by moving image art in the cavernous spaces of contemporary visual art galleries and museums the work has regularly been place on a continuous loop, forcing the actions to repeat once completed and without break. This is a way of making the work viewable to as many people wondering around the building throughout the day as possible but (unless the films are incredibly short or focus on repetition) can destroy the narrative structure of many of these works, leaving the audience to be more concerned with wondering where in the film they have stumbled into (Beginning middle or end) then the actual content they are viewing. This has seen a rise in artists films either being non-linear where the audience participate within an environment where they edit their own film from the images and sequences projected or by having set times for the films to start, giving that control of accessing the work in the correct linear order the artists intended it to be viewed (This curatorial decision making was heavily visible in the exhibiting dynamics of last year’s Turner Prize). The outdoor cinema area I constructed acted as a formal space for viewing cinematic work and rather than be a space that was open to the coming and going of various people, was rigidly structured in reference to conventional cinema spaces by applying a start time for the film with a single showing to reinforce the linear composition of the work.

Still from Bridge on the River Kwai

In an earlier blog post I mentioned my fascination at watching and filming a local man fixing the caning on a chair. This footage has become an important part of my film and weaves throughout its duration, creating associations with the intricate design of the bridge, transient qualities of the material and laying of new histories within the story of the Kitulgala. These chair cane seats also seem part of the very fabric of Sri Lankan society, appearing in local villager’s homes, hotels, museums, as well as during the Sri Lankan scenes of ‘The Bridge on the River Kwai’ (1957) and I thought it was crucial that seats featuring chair caning where used for the outdoor cinema space. A subtle reference that made the images on the screen tangible and helped to create an immersive viewing environment.

Still from Bridge on The River Kwai (1957)

I thought I’d end this post with a link to mini featurette on the making of ‘The Bridge on the River Kwai’ made in 1957. An interesting but brief insight into the production of the set.

The Bridge on the River Kwai Mini Featurette 1957

Enjoy!

Kit

Kit’s Blog – The Other Kwai

I’m into my final week of my residency here at the Sura Medura and wow has it gone by fast! These past few weeks particularly have been spent combing through all the footage I have recorded to produce a narrative that takes in the echo’s of the original Bridge on the River Kwai film which still resonate around Kitulagla and the whole of Sri Lanka 60 years after the film crew left.

The Other Kwai

This Saturday the 23rd of February I will be presenting my film ‘The Other Kwai’, 2013, in a purpose built outdoor cinema space at the Sunbeach Hotel in Hikkaduwa. ‘The Other Kwai’ will be presented at 9pm followed by a short Q&A discussion.

The Other Kwai Poster

 

If you happen to be in Hikkaduwa come on over!

 

Kit

Kit’s Blog – Sura Medura and the chair caning man

After a journey in a car ride through the early traffic rush of Glasgow, 2 flights, one of which flew me over Baghdad with the flames from the oil refineries in the Iraqi desert clearly visible in the darkness of night, a stop off in Dubai taking in the sheer enormousness of the world’s tallest man-made structure and a van drive through the suburbs of Colombo and coastal roads of Sri Lanka – all encompassing a total of around 19 hours – I arrived at the Sura Medura in Hikkaduwa on Wednesday the 16th of January.

The Sura Medura is a 150 years old building found off the tourist beat of the town’s beach front and nestled within the local community’s residential area. It’s a stunning space full of ornate decorative carvings above the windows and large high ceilinged rooms. It’s a very quiet location with the peace often broken by the sound of birds in the palm trees surrounding the building. I think it’s going to be a nice place to have a studio space in…

On Galle Road

So far it’s been clear blue skies since my arrival with the temperature peeking at 32 degrees and a low of 20oC. There’s a pleasant breeze that gets blown in from the sea preventing you from feeling the humidity.

I have started collecting footage that will hopefully become either short films or part of the final outcome. Yesterday an elderly gentleman came into the Sunbeach Hotel – where I was enjoying a wonderful salt and chilli prawn salad – to fix the chair caning on some of the hotel chairs. I was captivated by the methodical, but fast process of re-weaving that he was applying in a crouched position. From afar I recorded his approach of reconstructing this highly decorative pattern. Made from cane, this material leaves you with a firm drum-like-surface that is durable but not necessarily long lasting. I found it compelling the length of time put into making the chairs a functioning tool of comfort again, in the knowledge that in spite of this concentrated endeavour, the canes will over time lose their stretch, become brittle and brake again. At which point this process of renewed repetition can begin again.

Chair Caning