Ms&Mr, Xerox Missive 1977/2011, (video stills), multi-channel video installation courtesy the artists |
PHILIP K DICK, VALIS (1981)
Ms&Mr (Stephanie & Richard nova Milne) not only work collaboratively but frequently use their own relationship as their subject matter. While they also create works on paper, their practice has reached wider awareness through their ongoing project Videodromes for the Alone, in which they meld home videos of themselves as children in the late 80s and early 90s with images of their adult selves. This is not merely episodic collage, but rather sees the couple inserted into one another’s lives, inferring that their relationship existed long before they first met. There is a naivety and poetry to these works that appeals to the notion of true love and destiny. Their work also investigates the medium of video itself (Marshall McLuhan’s medium as message) challenging the idea of video as a truthful record of time and further using it as a kind of time-travelling device.
In Xerox Missive 1977/2011, recently exhibited at the Art Gallery of NSW Project Space, Ms&Mr have extended their experiments beyond their own relationship to another that seems particularly appropriate: that of science fiction writer Philip K Dick and his fifth wife Tessa B Dick. Dick, of course, was one of the 20th century’s most prolific science fiction writers, capturing public attention more than others possibly because at some point he came to believe in what he was writing—or rather, he began to write what he was believing.
The moment of significance happened in 1974, shortly after he had married Tessa. A woman appeared at his door to deliver post-operative medication for a dental procedure. A pendant around her neck caught his attention, sending out a “pink beam” and in the stream of visions/hallucinations that followed the encounter (including the revelation of a simultaneous existence in Ancient Rome, and the presence of enlightened three-eyed aliens), Dick realized that he was living in what he described as orthogonal time —that which “strikes all of linear time simultaneously. It strikes the past, the present and future simultaneously.”(SF EYE, #14, Spring 1996)
Ms&Mr, Xerox Missive 1977/2011, (video stills), multi-channel video installation courtesy the artists |
On one of the four screens of the installation, we see Tessa as she is now sitting at a desk in front of a microphone, waiting and smoking. Dick arrives and sits beside her and there’s an exchange—their heads turn in slow motion to almost see each other, a hand reaches out to make contact. Dick begins to deliver his speech while Tessa perches on the edge of the table, like a groupie or bodyguard. While these interactions are formal—they are ‘happening’ in the public space of a lecture room—there is an intimacy implied between the figures, a kind of comfort in each other’s presence that is uncanny.
On the opposite screen we see Dick and Tessa in close-up against a plain reddish background, a kind of no-space. Mainly we see the back of Tessa’s head but occasionally her aged hand reassuringly touches her husband on the shoulder. As the sequence progresses his features fragment and distort, breaking into shifting slivers like the facets of a diamond yet contained within the outline of his profile. As his image morphs, receding in and out of recognition, we imagine his presence slipping in and out of consciousness in different dimensions across the timeline.
Ms&Mr, Xerox Missive 1977/2011, (video stills), multi-channel video installation courtesy the artists |
Accompanying the video are audio snippets of both Dick and Tessa, alternating around the four speakers of the room. Dick talks of the “black haired girl” who often appeared in his novels as a messenger, and how things he wrote actually came to pass, as though he were not inventing but rather remembering a future. Tessa confirms how elements of his writing came true—she was one of these girls. The pronouncements are sparse and slightly muffled, folding into the ominous, rhythmic under-rumble of the soundtrack, but adding just the right amount of context and provocation, particularly for those not well versed in Dickian mythology.
The contemporary footage has been matched to the soft-focus and graininess of the original 1977 video, but there are elements that expose the artifice of composition—a cat’s face smudged, a slightly misaligned gaze—effectively reminding us of the manipulation and time-slippage. The warm tones and haze of the footage, similar to Super-8 flicker and specks, connotes nostalgia and memory so rather than seeming like a meeting of past and present, Tessa and Philip appear caught in a memory that has become, as Tessa says, “unstuck” from the timeline. This visual quality is also evocative of the retro-futurist flavour so strong in many of Philip K Dick’s books, where the future cannot help but be permeated by the era in which it is written: McLuhan’s future seen backwards through a rearview mirror.
In Xerox Missive Ms&Mr have reached a new stage in the development of their oeuvre. As in their earlier work, the strength lies in the interplay of form and content, but in this case the extension beyond themselves as subjects to a couple with well publicised philosophies on the elusiveness of time, creates an even tighter amalgamation. However above and beyond the philosophical explorations, Xerox Missive is powerful because, like the Videodromes series, it tangibly evokes, via technical intervention, a sense of love and lasting connection between the onscreen protagonists. Tessa and Philip K Dick have been separated for over 30 years and exist (arguably) in different dimensions, yet in Xerox Missive their relationship lives on, captured outside of time.
Ms&Mr, Xerox Missive 1977/2011, Project Space, Art Gallery of NSW, Dec 8 – Feb 5; www.artgallery.nsw.gov.au; www.msandmr.net
RealTime issue #107 Feb-March 2012 pg. 46
© Gail Priest; for permission to reproduce apply to [email protected]