The idea of absence comes up repeatedly in your work.
Either I’m aware of an absence, or it’s some kind of pregnant void that I’m drawn to. With Tooley, A Tragedy for instance, the five DVDs contained dash-cam footage from the five police cars that rushed to the library. The video shows the view through their windscreens, and there are multiple layers of audio: the cops’ voices, the police radios, the car stereos. They converge on the scene, and then the cops run inside the library. The video stays put because it’s a dash-cam, but the audio travels inside. So you never see the shooter, the suicide, or the body. You never see the police find him. You just hear all of the activity surrounding what you don’t see.
The idea of absence comes up repeatedly in your work.Either I’m aware of an absence, or it’s some kind of pregnant void that I’m drawn to. With Tooley, A Tragedy for instance, the five DVDs contained dash-cam footage from the five police cars that rushed to the library. The video shows the view through their windscreens, and there are multiple layers of audio: the cops’ voices, the police radios, the car stereos. They converge on the scene, and then the cops run inside the library. The video stays put because it’s a dash-cam, but the audio travels inside. So you never see the shooter, the suicide, or the body. You never see the police find him. You just hear all of the activity surrounding what you don’t see.
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