Norm Laich
Interplanetary Sign, 2015
Sign paint on panel
Norm Laich
Killture, 2004
Sign paint on panel
Johnnie JungleGuts
Untitled, 2015
performance
It used to be that the material (the actual acetate film reel) determined the duration of Benning’s films and many other structuralist film-makers for that matter. Now, with the shift in medium, a greater challenge is posed due to the potential infinitude of digital. Presumably there is a limit as it would relate to some mathematical progression, however irrational it may be. This seems to make certain sense as Benning explores natural history via the structure of Pi, the first 27 digits, at least. How is not so readily clear, though thoughts about the expansiveness of time percolate while contemplating this question in relation to subject matter that involves specimens of larger spans of history in terms of both place and time. It’s also worth noting that pi is a number essential to understanding areas/volumes of circles, non-linear surfaces to be sure. So, much about this films’s (video’s?) stillness reflects our perception of time itself, a rhythm that flows at the pace of evolution. Since evolve implies change, change is indicated by either movement within a single shot (when one suddenly is reminded that this is a moving image despite the stillness of subjects most of the time) or when the shot changes to the next subject, the next scene, if you will. In some rare instances within Natural History, a single frame is but a blip in terms of its short duration. I became curious about these, because they seemed so out of character with respect the longer durations we have come to know with Benning’s looking and filming.
As with all Benning’s films, a meditation on what is within each frame is possible by its significant duration. Here the subject matter becomes slightly more unsettling as we are taken through an interior labyrinth as opposed to the typical, solitary landscapes we have come to associate with Benning’s films. Time is oddly revealed now also in terms of metaphorl such as with the preservation of biological artifacts. Peculiar is the staring contest with a mounted zebra, for example. So, the passage of time is one thing with respect to the duration of each shot, another thing with respect to the overall "film" and yet another as the subjects reveal their own relationship to time be it butterfly, worn columns, taxidermy mounts or formaldehyde specimens. The stillness speaks to permanence as well as the silence of death. Not a morbid tale but one that synthesizes various rates in the unending passage(s) of time.