Wandering Gazes on the Screen
Wandering Gazes on the Screen
The American Material Environment in James Benning's Films
Author(s): Péter HorányiSubject(s): History of Art
Published by: Moholy-Nagy Művészeti Egyetem
Keywords: material environments; American Midwest; long takes; structural film; experimental documentary
Summary/Abstract: The experimental filmmaker James Benning has a unique way of approaching American life through a radical film language. My paper addresses the question of how American material culture and design appear in Benning’s early work. A recurring feature is his preference for the depiction of landscapes, buildings, objects, and vehicles over human characters that support viewer identification in mainstream documentaries. In the first half of the paper, I present the main stylistic features of Benning’s body of work within the context of structural film and documentary filmmaking. Then I provide a detailed analysis of three of his early films: 11 × 14 (1977), American Dreams: Lost and Found (1984) and Landscape Suicide (1986). I show how Benning was able to create a film language with structural experimentations, long takes, and wide shots that offers a perceptual experience that goes against mainstream narrative film and documentary traditions. Overall, the aim of this study is to present how Benning’s art provides an epistemological insight into American design and material culture of the 1970s and 1980s.
Journal: Disegno – a designkultúra folyóirata
- Issue Year: VI/2022
- Issue No: 1
- Page Range: 54-68
- Page Count: 15
- Language: English