I’ve been intending to blog about Matthew De Kersaint Giraudeau http://www.dekersaint.co.uk/ for some time now, following an email exchange that had with him in June. I know he’s performing at the Royal Standard in Liverpool tonight at 7pm http://www.the-royal-standard.com/events/, so thankfully my procrastination means that the post will be ‘timely’ rather that just ‘late’.
Matthew first came to my attention via the April issue of New Art Criticism where I found his video piece “The Sadness Of Mark Speight.” It tells the tragic tale of the children’s TV presenter who took his own life in April 2008 after his girlfriend died of severe burns and a cocaine overdose. http://www.newartcriticism.co.uk/markspeight.html. What I loved about the film was its ‘youtube’ type viral video aesthetic (its made entirely from found footage), coupled with Matthew’s deadpan voiceover. Images of Mark “gurning around and generally looking enthusiastic” sit awkwardly against a disassociated commentary by the artist, that conveys minimal emotive intonation toward its subject matter. In our email conversation Matthew says:
“I’m personally interested in psychological dissociation and its implication in the possibility of a chaotic reality (the possibility that meaning and coherence are imposed on a nonsensical series of events by an incredibly powerful, fully functioning mind – the idea that normal life is a psychosis).”
There are moments of nostalgia within the narrative and an analysis of how suicide might be a difficult concept for a child to grasp, yet in essence the video unhooks tragedy from the emotive experience of grief in order to express the view of a distanced observer. In doing so it questions the usual trajectory of response and the sense of psychological order that we use to impose this, suggesting that no single mental process is more sane than the next.
The video is an outtake from a performance lecture which I have not seen, although I do believe that he is doing a performance lecture tonight at the Royal Standard. I’ll be there!
Matthew also has a series of “Psychosis Drawings” on his website which are inspired by a repetitive behavioral tendency called Stereotypy http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stereotypy, often seen in autistic patients and children with developmental difficulties. He describes the imagery used as “paranoid hallucinations inspired by mass media.” I particularly like Networking and Coverage posted here.
The Sadness Of Mark Speight by Matthew De Kersaint Giraudeau