• Mobilizing Difference – Nuit Banai

    Date posted: April 30, 2006 Author: jolanta

    Mobilizing Difference

    Nuit Banai

    Like a post-modern bricoleur, toying with concepts and conditions of possibility
    rather than gadgets and gizmos, Romeo Doron Alaeff disassembles and rebuilds
    the devices that help maintain the semblance of a unified sense of self. In practices
    that include video, film, photography and music, Alaeff pirouettes on the thin
    line between fusion and confusion, gently pulling at the seams that hold the
    fictional fabric of reality in check. For

    more than ten years, this New York based artist has explored the experience of
    inhabiting liminal zones, those architectural spaces, psychological and physical
    states in which contradictions collide. In these unlikely spaces and fleeting
    situations, dissonant perspectives, beliefs, emotions, sounds and rhythms briefly
    coexist. For Alaeff, such unsettling ‘in-between’ states, where synthesis
    and separation are only infinitesimally differentiated, contain the potential
    for both terror and beauty.

    Alaeff’s most
    sustained exploration of this subject is Still Life with You, Stories about a
    Restless American Family, a film series devoted to his idiosyncratic, exuberantly
    complicated relatives. His current project in this series is a feature film sponsored
    by the New York Foundation for the Arts documenting eight years in the life of

    Alaeff’s younger
    brother, Gabriel, as he negotiates the threshold between adolescence and adulthood.

    The saga chronicles
    the challenges of being caught between Judaism and Christianity; the two different
    belief systems that Gabriel struggles to reconcile in order to function within
    his multi-faith family. In one of the most poignant scenes from an early film,
    Believe (1996), Alaeff asks his brother “Gabe, do you believe in God?”
    The thirteen year-old responds, “Yes, but its a little bit more complicated
    than that…You see, it’s like

    there’s a DJ…and two different [music] groups…and he mixes them
    together on one mixed tape, well, that’s kind of like what my God is, a
    mixed tape, because I’m Jewish and I’m Christian (He begins rapping…and
    I’m Texan and I’m Jewish and I’m Christian).”

    It comes as no
    surprise that Gabriel uses DJ’ing as common parlance to explain his existential
    crisis to his brother nor that he adds a third term to break out of the binary
    that he is in. For Alaeff, sound plays a fundamental role in the constitution
    of the individual and is an arena of unmined possibilities that destabilizes
    binaries. In the last five years, he has transformed his fascination with the
    idea of a multiple unity into a

    signature DJ’ing style based on sequencing and blending. In the notion of
    musical sequencing and the auditory connection to pre-rational states, Alaeff
    tries to undermine the linear element of time. His sets, constructed out of a
    palette of music that has no internal logic either through genre, tempo or label
    — rely on the listener to make both retrospective and prospective connections
    at every instant. For example, a track by rapper LL Cool J may be followed by
    a track by Reggae maven Sister Nancy, followed by the electro-clash-art-spectacle
    Fischerspooner and wrapped up with a track by Berlin based Ben E. Clock. Alaeff
    leads his listener through this potentially chaotic mélange by blending
    the tracks together in relation to an overarching emotion or sensation that he
    tries to communicate throughout the set. For the listener, then, the disparate
    genres are synthesized into a fluid experience that exceeds facile dichotomies,
    through Alaeff’s guiding hand and their own creative ability to transform
    sound into memory images ofthe past and wish images for the future.

    These aural experiments
    have been showcased internationally in Berlin, Tel Aviv and New York at such
    venues as Cookie’s, Tamarz, Turntables on the Hudson, Sapphire Lounge, and
    Halcyon. In fact, it was while opening up for two years at ‘Acupuncture,’
    a weekly party sponsored by Breakbeat Science at Halcyon in Brooklyn, that Alaeff’s
    mix-up style caught the attention of legendary drum’n’bass impresario
    DB and the party known as ‘Shift’ was born.

    Since September of 2002, Alaeff and DB have been collaborating in eclectic sets
    that continue to explore the space of thresh-hold. In a single night, each DJ
    performs his own type of sequencing in thirty-minute sets that fuse electro,
    house, 80s, rock, classic hip-hop, dance hall, punk, funk, mash-ups, and nu skool
    beats. That the popularity of this party continues to grow suggests Alaeff and
    DB are able to turn a conceptually driven, experimental model of pastiche into
    a danceable event.

    Beyond DJ’ing, Alaeff continues to work with sound as a way of complicating
    the primacy that images hold in manufacturing our understanding of reality. In
    the video series, Crybaby (2002-2003), recently presented at the "Sonic
    Self" exhibition at the Chelsea Art Museum in March, 2003, Alaeff explores
    the act of crying in relation to strategies of filmmaking. The narrative is reduced
    to a bare minimum. An attractive, young brunette, wearing a simple white t-shirt,
    occupies center stage with only a black backdrop as contextual signifier. Tears
    well from her eyes, slowly at first then in abandon, and soft whimpers gradually
    turn into choked sobs. She seems introverted and absorbed in her own malaise
    her eyes averted from the Camera’s gaze except for one or two moments of direct
    eye contact. We know nothing about her or what led up to such emotional distress;
    we do not even know if it is feigned for the camera or if it is real. Yet, despite
    this

    vacuum of information, we cannot help but empathize. In fact, with each identical
    four-minute video loop, her tearful performance evokes different emotional registers.

    Pathos, anxiety,
    pity and, in our attempt to give meaning to such seemingly unmediated emotion,
    an imagined internal narrative of heartbreak at the end of summer or an accident
    on the highway. If we disengage from our emotional reaction, we realize that
    the accompanying soundtracks are the only changing variables in the identical
    image-loops and are the ingrained devices that pull at our heartstrings. Two
    of these were readymade tracks given directly to Alaeff from Moby & duke
    b, based on their personal reaction to the video while three others, by Chi2
    Strings (A string trio who has worked with the likes of Moby, Boy George, Lamb
    & Nelly Furtado), JohnTurner and Axel Belohoubek were written as original
    scores. In this collision between manufactured images and sounds and genuine
    emotion, we understand the even the most ‘natural’ and individual aspects
    of our life are multi-layered social constructs. More troubling, popular forms
    of entertainment such as filmmaking, exploit identical strategies to control
    the fabrication of our reality and our sense of self.

    To describe the
    double aspect of his work, the beauty and terror of experiencing life as perpetually
    multiple, Alaeff uses the metaphor of a spinning coin. In the same way that natural
    laws of gravity always pull a spinning coin downward, forcing it to fall on one
    of its faces, it is human inclination to choose a single lens through which to
    frame experience. Despite the difficulty or near impossibility of the project,
    Alaeff strives to keep the coin perpetually spinning so that both of its faces
    are always visible. In this dialectic, there is also the proposition for a sublime
    model of subjectivity, a way of navigating spectacle culture by continually,
    and always just, exceeding the limits of unified experience.

    For more info:
    www.figure1.com/

    NUIT BANAI is a Doctoral Candidate in the History of Art at Columbia University.

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