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Harun Farocki, Parallel I - IV

Bar Laika

March 7 – 21, 2019

Harun Farocki, Parallel II (still), 2014

BAR LAIKA PRESENTS: HARUN FAROCKI, PARALLEL I - IV

 

PARALLEL I AND II:
THURSDAY, MARCH 7, 2019
9PM

 

PARALLEL III AND IV: 
THURSDAY, MARCH 21, 2019
9PM

 

Bar Laika is very pleased to present Harun Farocki's Parallel, screening parts I and II on Thursday, March 7, 9pm and parts III and IV on Thursday, March 21, 9pm.

Farocki's four-part cycle Parallel deals with the image genre of computer animation. The series focuses on the construction, visual landscape, and inherent rules of computer-animated worlds.

“Computer animations are currently becoming a general model, surpassing film. In films, there is the wind that blows and the wind that is produced by a wind machine. Computer images do not have two kinds of wind."

—Harun Farocki

Parallel I (15:53 minutes, 2012) opens up a history of styles in computer graphics. The first games of the 1980s consisted of only horizontal and vertical lines. This abstraction was seen as a failing, and today representations are oriented towards photo‐realism.

“For over one hundred years photography and film were the leading media. From the start, they served not only to inform and entertain, but were also media of scientific research and documentation. That’s also why these reproduction techniques were associated with notions of objectivity and contemporaneity—whereas images created by drawing and painting indicated subjectivity and the transrational.

Apparently today computer animation is taking the lead. Our subject is the development and creation of digital animation. If, for example, a forest has to be covered in foliage, the basic genetic growth program will be applied, so that “trees with fresh foliage,” “a forest in which some trees bear four-week-old foliage, others six-week-old foliage” can be created. The more generative algorithms are used, the more the image detaches itself from the appearance as found and becomes an ideal-typical.

Using the example of trees and bushes, water, fire, and clouds we compare the development of surfaces and colorings over the past thirty years in computer animation images. We want to document reality-effects such as reflections, clouds, and smoke in their evolutionary history.”

—Harun Farocki

 

Parallel II (8:38 minutes, 2014) explores the borders and boundaries of game worlds. The work follows characters’ attempts to escape the edges of their animated world by any means, and seeks to reveal what lies outside of these defined spaces and digital borders.

Parallel III (7:21 minutes, 2014) seeks out the backdrops of game worlds and the nature of their digital objects. It reveals digital worlds which take the form of discs floating in the universe—reminiscent of pre-Hellenistic conceptions of the universe. The animated worlds appear as one-sided theater stages, flat backdrops revealed only by the movements of an omniscient camera. The objects in the worlds often do not react to “natural forces.” Each of their properties must be separately constructed and assigned to them.

Parallel IV (11:20 minutes, 2014) explores the actions of the heroes and protagonists of the video game world. These heroes have no parents or teachers; they must test their relationships with others and determine, of their own accord, the rules to follow. Farocki notes these characters are “homunculi, anthropomorphist beings, created by humans. Whoever plays with them has a share in the creator's pride.”

Image: Harun Farocki, Parallel II (still), 2014

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