Lisa Bloom,
"Polar Fantasies and Aesthetics in the Work of Isaac Julien and Connie Samaras"
(page 3 of 6)
Renarrativizing the Arctic: Isaac Julien's True
North
Figure 2 Isaac Julien
Untitled from True North Series, 2004
digital print on Epson Premium Photo Glossy paper
39.37 x 39.37 inches, 100 x 100 cm
Courtesy of the Artist and Metro Pictures
Isaac Julien's film True North is a strong
example of a fascinating new departure in the artistic and scholarly
discourse on polar expedition narratives.[7]
Drawing in part from
Gender on Ice, as well as the problematics of earlier Arctic
representations such as Robert Flaherty's Nanook of the North,
and the 1999 documentary Nanook Revisited, made by a Canadian
Collective, Julien responds to a larger visual culture of the Arctic by
focusing on the relation between aesthetics and politics, as well as the
Peary expedition's complex politics of exclusion. Emphasizing the
significant role of Matthew Henson, Julien is attracted to the rawness
and violence of the relationship between Henson and his employer, Peary,
in the inhospitable male space of the Arctic, a testing-ground in which
isolation and physical danger combine with overwhelming beauty.
Significantly, in Julien's film, we don't see Peary or Cook, or evidence
of the bitter controversy that ensued between the two men. Instead of
the driving anxiety and competition in these white male narratives, in
Julien's film, the sheer physical, natural attraction of the North Pole
is foregrounded (see Figure 2). Matthew Henson and the Inuits who
accompanied Peary to the Pole serve as witnesses in Julien's film and
substitute for Peary (see Figure 3). By underscoring Henson and the Inuits
as subjects, Julien's film actually draws out what Peary and Henson
share through an unusually audacious strategy of over-the-top
post-colonial mimicry, which challenges the viewer's relationship to
these older arctic narratives and to the Arctic itself.
Figure 3 Isaac Julien
Untitled from True North Series, 2005
digital print on Epson Premium Photo Glossy paper
Courtesy of the Artist and lightbox.metroonline.co.uk
In Julien's attempt to rethink the relationship between cinema,
aesthetics and racism endemic to earlier well-known representations of
the Arctic, he does not only emphasize the imperial ambitions of that
period but also highlights the aesthetic drive—something that was
critical to early exploration narratives. However, Julien's use of the
aesthetic provides a very different approach that challenges some of the
foundational assumptions of the sublime as overwhelming and humbling. He
does not offer us an unmediated vision of the Arctic, but one that is
highly technologized and artificial, as evidenced by his use of three
screens rather than one and his lush production values (see Figure 4). This
technological beauty is compelling in the way it is used to draw out our
fascinations with the North Pole and how the drive to possess it was not
simply about ownership or nationalism. His film emphasizes the fact that
the representation of polar exploration exceeds both purposeful activity
as well as the instrumentality of the earlier colonial narrative of
exploration, science, and discovery. However, he does not give up
politics to focus on beauty. They are presented together as inextricably
entangled.
Figure 4 Isaac Julien
Untitled from True North Series, 2005
digital print on Epson Premium Photo Glossy paper
Courtesy of the Artist and lightbox.metroonline.co.uk
The film provocatively rewrites the narrative of a subservient
Henson, concocted by Peary in a visual register far different than one
would expect from an account of a moment in history in which Blacks were
excluded from the official historical script. In this way, Julien's film
insists that North Pole heroism exists both in spite of and against
Peary. Julien reformulates the narrative with a different aesthetic, one
that is modern, ironic, artificial and detached that is deliberately
unsettling. For example, Peary sanctioned Inuit mistresses on his
expedition to protect against what was seen as the potential, but more
dangerous, carnal relations between white men.[8] Julien's film
subversively plays up the homosocial and racial relations between Peary
and Henson, though in unexpected ways. This comes through in Julien's
focus on a black female fashion model, Vanessa Myrie, dressed in
couture, who impersonates Matthew Henson. His use of the commercial
aesthetics of fashion photography makes the Arctic appear almost as a
runway (see Figure 5). This brazen strategy queers a discourse that
otherwise inscribes and validates a highly simplified and formulaic
narrative of white, masculinist, heterosexual agency prevailing over a
feminized space (see Figure 6).
The incongruous presence of Vanessa Myrie
shown washing her hands and fondling the ice turns this dangerous
landscape into simply ice, not life or death. However, it is the
contrast between the stunningly spectacular landscape and Myrie's banal
gesture that underscores Julien's ambition to remind us of how
fetishized the ice and the black female model remain. Her presence is
part of an extended joke to remind us that nobody belongs there. Julien
emphasizes this visually, as there is nothing more incongruous than a
black fashion model on ice wearing the darkest of clothing to
aesthetically mark her off from the landscape and further highlight its
sublimity.
Figure 5 Isaac Julien
Untitled from True North Series, 2005
digital print on Epson Premium Photo Glossy paper
Courtesy of the Artist and lightbox.metroonline.co.uk
Figure 6 Isaac Julien
Untitled from True North Series, 2005
digital print on Epson Premium Photo Glossy paper
Courtesy of the Artist and lightbox.metroonline.co.uk
In a sense both Peary and Julien are processing the North Pole
technologically, but producing very different products. Both are open to
the beauty of the landscape, and Julien acknowledges common ground with
Peary and other white explorers by highlighting and creating irony in
the aesthetic side of exploration. This gets us away from a simple or
straightforward critique. Julien reminds us that scientific exploratory
projects have an aesthetic dimension that may not be apparent in
official accounts. His highly artificial and more ironical relationship
to beauty is also a response to Peary's older colonialist discourse of
technology which minimizes the significance of Henson and the Inuit work
force by representing them not as exploited workers but as "cogs" that
are instrumental in the workings of what Peary termed his smooth and
well-managed "traveling machine."
Julien by contrast is interested in foregrounding Henson's
subjectivity and using the figure of Henson/Myrie to bring back the
beauty of the Arctic. However strongly he is affirming a recovery of
black subjectivity, he does it in a mockingly counter-heroic way and the
heroism he maintains is deliberately exaggerated and could be understood
as a form of postcolonial mimicry, to use Homi Bhabha's well-known
term.[9]
As in the process of mimicry more generally, Julien's film highlights
the fashioned and performed nature of the original authoritative
discourse of exploration narratives and spotlights what happens when the
colonialist enterprise is threatened by the displacing gaze of its
double—in this case Matthew Henson/Myrie. Julien not only takes us
back to these original heroic polar exploration narratives but to a
whole discourse of earlier colonialist artistic and cinematic
representations of the Arctic to restage, and in some sense disrupt and
mock, the aesthetics and politics from which those original
representations draw.
Thus, his aesthetics of the Pole cannot be simply folded back into a
discussion of the sublime, science, whiteness, fashion, or politics.
Instead he's attending to it in a way that critically engages and
impacts an entire tradition of photographic, cinematic, and art
representations of non-white people, not only by inserting Henson and
the Inuits into a central role, but by creating an entirely new parodic
counter-discourse enabled by a different deployment of new technologies
that underscores the nature of the human relations he represents. Julien
is not only retrieving the North Pole as an arena of black male, queer
and Inuit experience, but he also reminds us forcefully of the complex
political, colonial, scientific, sexual and aesthetic dimensions of
polar exploration.
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