Output details
35 - Music, Drama, Dance and Performing Arts
Aberystwyth University
Portrait of Eden
Film: 21 minutes; colour; DVD; distributed by the BFI, commissioned by Project Arts Works, and funded by The Paul Hamlyn Foundation with East Sussex County Council ; public screenings. Research questions: ‘Eden’ is a 21 minute film portrait of Eden Kötting. Kötting has a rare genetic disorder called Joubert Syndrome and is making a difficult transition from a world of childhood care to finding support from adult social services. John Berger writes in an essay on Portraiture (1969): 'It seems to me unlikely that any important portraits will ever be painted again... I can imagine multi-medium memento-sets devoted to the character of particular individuals. But these will have nothing to do with the works now in the National Portrait Gallery.' This research project asks whether it is possible to develop a new kind of portrait of a group or community - one which reflects the complexity of modern individuals, giving them the possibility of expressing what they want the world to know about them, their aims, ambitions and desires? Significant features of process, and reflection: The project was discussed at a conference – ‘A New Kind of Portraiture’ - held at The National Portrait Gallery in 2009. This portrait of Kötting is eclectic in its references but is particularly influenced by ‘A Portrait of Ga’ (1955) and ‘A Portrait of Hugh MacDiarmid’ (1964) made by the avant garde film maker Margaret Tait, juxtaposed the observational idiom of the ‘Direct Cinema’ of Wiseman. This continues Koppel’s research interests in the blurred boundaries between art and documentary, following Bill Nichols’s argument in ‘Documentary Film and the Modernist Avant-Garde’ (2001): 'The established story of documentary's beginnings continues to perpetuate a false division between the avant-garde and documentary that obscures their necessary proximity'.