Closer | Installation view | 2015| Guitar blue neon light, Embrodiary cowboy daddy |
Cowboy daddy at Arena | 2015 | Acrylic on shiny card paper |
Cowboy daddy telling the stories | 2015 | Acrylic on shiny card paper |
Elvis Presley cowboy daddy | 2015 | Acrylic on shiny card paper |
Cowboy probs | 2015 | Acrylic on shiny card paper |
Closer Film still | 2015 | 6' 17" min | Single screen |
Cowboy Daddy Outfit | 2015 |
The past is not simply there
in memory, but must be articulated to become memory. The fissure that opens up
between experiencing an event and remembering it in representation is
unavoidable. Rather than lamenting or ignoring it, this split should be
understood as a powerful stimulant for cultural and artistic creativity. The
temporal status of any act of memory is always the present […]
Andreas Huyssen, Twilight
Memories: marking time in a culture of amnesia 1995
How can we construct, and
reconstruct our own pasts? How can that creative exploration of the gap between
past and present be used to change the way we feel about it? Can we use it as a
way to heal?
Cowboy Daddy is a poignant
and moving re-staging of a past. Cinarel re-imagines and dramatises his
memories of his father in both a way of examining the gap between past and
present, and also a way of closing that gap, and a form of closure. He
re-stages the past to create a dreamy, filmic version of not how his memories
of his father were, but of how he would like them to be, as a process of
healing. Ghosts of objects theatrically haunt the space, which is a both a film
set and a stage.
Cinarel's paintings are
imagined memory fragments, storyboards of an imaginary spaghetti western, of an
imaginary past where the presence of violence and an absence of love become a
beautiful dreamlike sequence of film stills. The drama played out is a
theatrical re-narration of Cowboy Daddy, a re-performance of the past where
Cowboy Daddy and Cowboy Child have a new relationship, a new past. They go
camping, ride horses, they hug.
Cinarel re-authors his
memories, through haunted re-stagings that bring the ghost of his father
through his words and material objects into this space in the present, in order
to create a new space of archetypal love between father and son.
Jeanie Sinclair
Associate Lecturer & PhD Researcher, Falmouth University
Research Fellow, St Ives Archive
Associate Lecturer & PhD Researcher, Falmouth University
Research Fellow, St Ives Archive
Installation sound by Katri Paakkari
Film sound by S J Blackmore
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