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"I rely on the world for aid" |
by Otso Kantokorpi |
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| Veli Granö has become known for documenting, studying and even speaking up for a different social reality. He has documented, among other groups, folk artists, collectors and scale-model enthusiasts - people following their own paths and building their own worlds. For Granö, this long project has meant not only a presence in the institutional structures of the art world. It has also produced documents of broader exposure, such as books and televised documentaries and video works. Onnela (A Trip to Paradise), an exhibition of photographs documenting folk artists, toured Finland in 1986 and came out in book form in 1989. Granö returned to this theme together with other photographers in Itse tehty elämä - ITE / DIY Lives (2000) an illustrated book published in connection with an exhibition of folk art that toured the country. Onnela and the ITE/DIY project finally launched research into folk art in Finland, and a museum related to this theme has been established at Kaustinen. Of the individual artists, Matias Keskinen (1922-1997) came forth as a subject of interest. Known for his massive sculptures, among other works, Keskinen collaborated with Granö in preparing the documentary film Matias Keskisen kuviteltu elämä (The Imaginary life of Matias Keskinen, 1991) which has been presented on television in Finland and at international festivals. There was no shortage of material, because Keskinen - as if in anticipation of many strategies of contemporary art - had been documenting himself in various roles, creating for example the imaginary film company Ajan Filmi , whose premises in Helsinki, however, mainly served as a shelter for homeless people. The most recent works in which Granö has broken down the linear narrative by using film and video collages and installations of various kinds are, Ihmeellinen viesti toiselta tähdeltä (A Strange Message from Another Star, 1998-2002), Tähteläinen (Star Dweller, 2000-2001), Kirsti (2002) and Meet You in Finland, Angel (2003). These works carry on a similar thematic of a certain alienation and the different worldviews that if produces, albeit with a highly different focus. In his earlier works, Granö can be said to have focused on everyday life and the micro-level, on the world of objects and goods through which people create or reinforce both identity and worldview and assign meanings to them. It is a world lived in and experienced, a presence that can be approached both historically and phenomenologically. Artworks and objects are tangible physical items that can be arranged as well as historical evidence, narratives in which idiosyncratic biography and the psychology of the individual are crystallized through the history of the community, nation and world into clusters of different forces. It is by no means far-fetched to call the bear sculpture of a folk artist a totem, or the treasure of a collection a talisman. |
In these contexts Granö outlined the lived and experienced world in which the artist himself and the rest of us live in various ways - in relation to the icons of modernism as in the installation The Solar Eclipse . At issue here are the complex coordinates of history and present and speech and silence within which meaning should be found for life. A more important problem, however, is the relationship of the document to the original theme. "Dealing with an interview made by oneself and editing a film that one has shot, the relationship with the original reality is quite loose. When I made the video A Strange Message from Another Star I felt quite guilty. How to recount life? I made a story out of it, with a certain logic, structure and culminations." Granö has addressed the presentation situation and its various possibilities with an installation of the name. How are tales told and how can they be told? "Might there be some other way to tell the same story, yet not so fixed. I wanted to include authorship; the installation includes materials that I used when filming, such as my sleeping bag and camera." This means that the result contains not only the actual material but also the presence of the person who is the subject and the author. This use of the documentary meta-level is at once alienating and a rhetorically direct statement: this is what happened; these are real people. |
As said earlier, in all of his work Veli Granö has been interested in intermediate terrain between the presence and absence, in the layers of time and place in human experience. In his recent large-scale, site specific installation Islands (2004) Veli Granö, by using a train and a railway as a metaphor, goes further and explores the vulnerable space of human memory, which continuously combines and separates, starts and comes back. A number of elderly people from Pori, a small town on the Western cost of Finland, tell their personal reminiscences. These pre-recorded remeberings are combined with real-time black and white video material of a surrounding space. But who are these people and what are the lives to which Granö is drawn? And why does he do so? Is it just a freak show in which the artist makes use of a group of strange people? Granö neither preaches nor makes propaganda. He does not tell us that there are different kinds of people, asking us to understand them. In fact, he has sought the company of his peers. "I've always looked for people who are like me in a certain way... collectors and folk artists. I've learned much more from them than I've ever learned from art or art exhibitions. They have discussed and thought about these things. Their artistry is based on much more than a social calling or demand. They are committed. That thing inside them is always true and strong. I rely on the world for aid." We must not forget, however, that Granö is an artist instead of a preacher and although he seeks a broader interface through books and television, his audience is primarily an art audience. Granö does not make compromises to achieve popularity or success. Art is his field, although the heroic state of artistry is alien to him. He does not believe in innovation or in creating new things: "This conception is based on experience." But even as a social artist, Granö is nonetheless an individual, in whom the public and the private are crystallized like in a piece in a collection. Life as lived but also the endlessly complex strands of history. It is useless to pretend that Granö does not also reflect upon himself, his own traumas and dreams: "Art is some kind of blooming of a narcissistic disorder. Of course it has a personal link. I use the document like someone else would make paintings." Documentary, however, ensures that art will not remain narcissistic introspection alone. And it is in the document that Granö sees the future of art. The writer is Chief Editor of Taide (Art), a Finnish art magazine based in Helsinki. |
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