Discipline & the Moving Image
Presented by Zoe Beloff
June 11th, 2010 @ 6:30 PM
Birkbeck Cinema
43 Gordon Square
London WC1H 0PD
Obedience, Stanley Milgram, 16mm, 1962, 45 mins
Folie à Deux, National Film Board of Canada, 16mm, 1952, 15 mins
Motion Studies Application, 16mm, ca. 1950, 15 mins
Obedience documents the infamous “Milgram experiment”
conducted at Yale University in 1962, created to evaluate an everyday
person’s deference to authority within institutional structures.
Psychologist Stanley Milgram designed a scenario in which individuals
were made to think they were administering electric shocks to an unseen
subject, with a researcher asking them to increase the voltage levels
despite the loud cries of pain that seemed to come from the other room.
Milgram saw his test, conducted mere months after Adolf
Eichmann’s trial in Jerusalem, as a way to understand the
environments that made genocide possible.
Tonight, artist Zoe Beloff pairs Obedience with two earlier works
dealing with psycho-social control: Folie à Deux and Motion
Studies Application. The former, one of a series of films on various
psychological maladies produced by the National Film Board of Canada in
the 1950s, presents an interview with a young woman and her immigrant
mother afflicted by shared delusions that manifest when the two are
together. The latter is an industrial film purporting to present ways
to increase efficiency in the workplace: explaining, for instance, a
means to fold cardboard boxes more quickly. In stark contrast to the
nostalgic whimsy typically associated with old educational films, Folie
à Deux and Motion Studies Application play as infernal dreams of
systemic power and sources of surprising, unintended pathos.
The concept of ‘motion studies’ is central to cinema
itself. Without the desire to analyze human motion, there would be no
cinematic apparatus. But the history of motion studies is freighted
with ideology. Its inventor Étienne-Jules Marey was paid by the
French Government to figure out the most efficient method for soldiers
to march, while his protégé Albert Londe analyzed the
gait of hysterical patients. From the beginning, the productive body
promoted by Taylorism was always shadowed by its double, the body riven
by psychic breakdown. We see this in Motion Studies Application and
especially Folie à Deux, where unproductive patients, confined
to the asylum, understand with paranoid lucidity that the institution
is everywhere, monitoring them always. Obedience stands as a conscious
critique of these earlier industrial films, co-opting their form only
to subvert them and reveal their fascist underpinnings.
Bio: Zoe Beloff is an artist
who is particularly fascinated by attempts to graphically manifest the
unconscious processes of the mind. She is particularly adept at
dreaming her way into the past. Zoe’s work has been exhibited
internationally. Venues include: The Whitney Museum, MoMA, The Freud
Dream Museum (St Petersburg), Pacific Film Archives and the Pompidou
Center