Presència de la fotografia i reflexió sobre la imatge en el cinema d’Agnès Varda = The presence of both photography Andrés musings about the image in Agnes Varda’s cinema
Full Text
Share
The filmmaker Agnès Varda (Brussels, 1928)
began creating images as a photographer in
the 1950s. Despite abandoning the profession,
photography has often been present in
her cinema as a reference point and inspiration,
but also to reflect on the image itself
and consider its testimonial value, its autonomy,
its capacity to evoke, and the subjectivity
with which an image is created and seen.
With regards to her new film, ‘Visages, Villages’
(2017), which she made in conjunction
with photographer JR, particular attention is
awarded to two films by Varda, ‘Une chante,
l’autre pas’ (1976) and ‘Ulysse’ (1982), in
which photography plays both a dramatic
and meta-linguistic role. In the former, a fulllength
fictional film, there is a confrontation
between two subjectivities: that of a photographer
and that of his occasional model. In
the latter, a short documentary film, a photograph
taken by Varda twenty-eight years
earlier is observed by the same filmmaker
and by the two people she portrayed on a stony beach in Normandy: with the passage
of time, what is remembered or wished to be
remembered about the moment that photograph
was taken? What is suggested aside
from its real point of reference? Is an image
only simply an image? Also referenced is a
television project by Varda, ‘Une minute pour
une image’ (1982), in which she granted a
variety of people one minute to comment on
a photograph