Saturday, September 1, 2007

The Producer(s)- Making Patty Chang's dream come true while Gorged on incompetency and indecisivness at the 3 Gorges


In a minute there is time
For decisions and revisions which a minute will reverse
-TS Eliot

One of my multiple hats is that of an artist but I must say:
Working for artists is like a bullet in the head
I would feel bad for gallerists if most of them weren't such slimebullies themselves ... Or maybe it's working for artists that makes them that way in the first place... Or maybe vice versa, who knows
Either way wishy washiness reached tremendous heights during the last 3 weeks and my producing skills gained new momentum- somebody mentioned changing course and becoming a diplomat...
having said that artists and gallerists are alright
Intuition itself is to blame!

I just spent the last 3 weeks in YiChang, Hubei along the Yangtze river, known here as ChangJiang, producing a film for the American artist duo of Patty Chang and David Kelley. The film was a fantastical, very broken narrative about man and his futile attempts to control nature... I think. Fused into this general theme was the story of a submarine that crashed into a mountain and the Three Gorges Dam project which is one mutherload of engineering that is an attempt by man to control nature. And then there were scenes loosely based on the pyscho-drama technique of acting out one another's dreams as a a form of healing. These employed a bunch of out of work Beijing Opera actors and their hitherto untapped dreams.
When you're in the position of producer all the theoretical narrative twists and overriding concepts are pushed aside and you're left concentrating on nuts and bolts. So I'm not sure what the film is really about. Truthfully I don't think the authors do either. That's the majic of art.
"We need a submarine for the next scene" you don't ask why? you think how to get a sub in this pinko little town? what color do you want the sub? You ask questions that will eliminate future misunderstandings and OT
Let's just say that artist's, by nature of relying on intuition rather than careful planning, tend to make things a lot more complicated and time consuming than most other professionals. For instance we were to be shooting in an altogether city just 2 weeks before production which needless to say, made things very frantic. A lot of reliance was put in the direction of a bunch of unsuspecting drivers, baritones, laid off state workers and museum tour guides all of which performed exceptionally well in their new found roles as casting agents, line producers and prop stylists.
In the end Patty and David were delivered what they wanted and everybody was happy. In between - a lot of chaos and sleepless nights.
The truth is there couldn't have been any other way to make the piece. Sometimes you just have to toss all the ideas and practice into the breeze and chase it around till you have the piece you want.
The work was commissioned for an Italian art space in Turin. It will be a hit for sure. Stay tuned.
PS. a very special thanks to Liu Peng- my right hand man- met while on set with (and recommended by) Yang Fudong- Liu Peng and his friends have a little art production brigade and criss/cross between working on films, TV and sappy esoteric artshit

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

They will say:
“But how his arms and legs are thin!”

(Hope you're enjoying the peaches, MatHue...sh/pdx)