Backstory and Cinema Museum
Toronto International Film Festival Program Book
2009
Backstory
Mark Lewis
Germany/United Kingdom/France/Canada
39 minutes
35mm and 4K transferred to 2K
Production Company: Marklewissstudio
Producer: Michael White
Editor: Anne Monnehay
Co-Production Partners: Van Abbemuseum (Eindhoven), the Channel 4 British Documentary Foundation (London), Westdeutscher Rundfunk (Germany), Galerie Serge le Borgne (Paris), Monte Clark Gallery (Vancouver), Clark & Faria (Toronto), Le Grand Café (Saint Nazaire)
Cinema Museum
Mark Lewis
Canada/United Kingdom, 2008
English
36 minutes
Super 16mm
Production Company: Marklewissstudio
Producer: Mark Lewis
Editor: Mark Lewis
These two short documentaries are more than an amplification of Mark Lewis’s lauded artwork, although they directly relate to the film installations that took this year’s Venice Biennale by storm. They fuse his curiosity toward historical filmmaking techniques with a carefully aestheticized approach to cinema as both a fan-based and industrialized cultural phenomenon.
Backstory introduces us to the remaining stars of rear projection, a technique prevalent in cinema until the development of the green screen, and used most famously by Alfred Hitchcock in films like North by Northwest and Saboteur. A second-unit crew films a scene’s actual location, such as an Alpine slope, then projects the footage in the studio as a backdrop to the actors’ performances. The result has the odd quality of being both narratively effective and obviously artificial, ideal fodder for an artist intrigued by modernism’s contradictions. Lewis interviews the rugged, techie makers of these “plates” with some of the finest work from their archives as backdrops. The effect is uniquely beautiful; the faded, soundless images from a Hollywood past create a Zen-like elegy for the aging figures as they recall the key moments of their profession and unsung art form.
One cannot overstate the importance of rear projection in Lewis’s art. His most famous projected works (like Algonquin Park, currently on display at the Art Gallery of Ontario) are, like rear projections, silent representations of controlled landscapes, carefully framed and just referential enough ewiss to serve as playpens for our narrative imaginings. He recently began explicitly recreating the technique with 2006’s Rear Projection: Molly Parker, a seemingly disjointed pairing of rural background with a well-known Canadian actress; only after sustained viewing do we see Lewis’s intent, his argument that rear projection is squarely within the tradition of the foregrounded subject, central to art history from the experiments of Van Eyck and Bellini onward. One of his major new works from Venice complicates the matter further, by making the images move: a swirling rear projection of Nathan Phillips Square pairs with a couple deliriously skating for their lives.
Cinema Museum may indicate another path, or perhaps just a fascinating detour, for Lewis’s cinema experiments. His camera follows, in a Kubrick-like tracking shot, the eccentric owner of a private museum of cinema ephemera in south London. As the deliberate camera finds labels and objects of interest (“Gulag Guns,” for example), it pauses, reflects, seemingly digests information for future use and moves on. One can feel the fertile mind of Lewis at work, mining cinema’s history for nuggets to include in contemporary art’s newest masterworks.
—Noah Cowan