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Ulrike Ottinger came to filmmaking in the early seventies via a
career in the visual arts (painting, works on paper, photography,
performance). But she took her first photograph at the age of nine,
on a canal boat in Amsterdam (two Indian gentlemen, one in a trench
coat, the other one wearing a turban with a well-tailored suit,
smile for the camera).
Afterwards would come thousands of images (photographs of course,
but also collections of postcards, cut-outs, illustrations and various
iconographic documents), constituting the open archive of a life
and an oeuvre based on a principle of the "collage" of
images and events.
Each image "refers to something beyond itself: to the reality
that precedes it; to countless images from the repositories of the
arts, of everyday culture and of myth; and to the visual cosmos
of her own increasingly dense oeuvre. These photographs are encounters
between things found and things invented. They are arenas in which
reality and fiction, past and future, wish and fulfillment, transform
each other." (Anm.1)
The exhibition in Witte de With invites you on an accompanied stroll
among a selection of images introducing the complex relations that
the work of Ulrike Ottinger maintains with the world, with history
and culture. A long, beautiful voyage, at once grave and enchanted,
which from nearest to furthest, from the urban landscapes of Berlin
to the steppes of Mongolia, from yesterday's tales to today's decors,
has nothing exotic or egotist about it. Rather it involves a concern
for the other and an "aesthetics of diversity," (Anm.
2) worthy of another age.
This allegorical, Benjaminian aspect of her work is what Eva Meyer
has so marvelously underscored: "Her films are ethnographic
films, even on her own turf. But without the claim to represent
another or even one's own culture. Ottinger knows very well that
that's just not possible. What fascinates her she ritualizes in
ephemera, without symbolic value, an artifact in other words, one
that can be as confusing as it is precise. With this distinction
we are where the experience of the other becomes visible, where
it can appear. In a film that is about the fundamental impossibility
of appropriating this experience as the subject's self-realization.
The balancing act between Ottinger's despair and enthusiasm is prompted
by this impossibility and realizes the artifact
That's what
I keep on talking about, this allegorical moment of distinction,
which can be neither Romantically felt out nor replaced through
a critical intention, but which can be seen in the films of Ulrike
Ottinger." (Anm. 3)
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1 Katharina Sykora, "Stills and Sessions,"
in Ulrike Ottinger (Berlin: Contemporary Fine Arts, 2001).
2 Victor Segalen, Essay on Exoticism: An Aesthetics of Diversity,
transl. Yaël Rachel Schlick (Durham, NC: Duke University Press,
2002).
3 Eva Meyer, "Ottinger's Artifact," in Ulrike Ottinger:
Texte und Dokumente, Kinemathek 86, 32 (Berlin, October 1995).
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