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Gržinic/Šmid

© Gržinić/Šmid, Marina Gržinić (left) and Aina Šmid (right) 1983,  performing in the video "The ...
© Gržinić/Šmid, Marina Gržinić (left) and Aina Šmid (right) 1983, performing in the video "The Threat of Future"
© Gržinić/Šmid, Marina Gržinić (left) and Aina Šmid (right) 1983,  performing in the video "The ...
© Gržinić/Šmid, Marina Gržinić (left) and Aina Šmid (right) 1983, performing in the video "The Threat of Future"

The works of Marina Gržinić and Aina Šmid are characterized by an eclectic, discursive, distance approach to filmmaking free of fascination and empathy. Quotations overlap in a complex, many-layered, and multiply subdivided conceptual and visual framework. Stylistic effects collide, references to narrative “cinema d’auteur” join with references to poetic or theoretical texts (Chekhov, Duras, Barthes, Žižek, Weibel, Gržinić) and with references to mass media—B-movies, TV, commercials, news. Out of all this material, mixed with disnarrative polysemy and an astonishing lack of inhibition, strange

“fictions” are reconstructed—fragmentary fictions that are constantly interrupted. Phantasmatic and critical situations are devised around political figures (Mao Zedong and his wife), groups of artists (IRWIN, Neue Slowenische Kunst), and cultural artifacts. The pictures—stereotypes, masquerades, reminiscences—deploy fiction as a mask that is forever being removed, being put back in place, and changing its form. Here, disguise becomes a linguistic strategy. Godard and Fassbinder influence the interpretation of Brecht’s alienation effect. Paradoxically, amidst the rupture of any continuity, a dramatic effect is achieved. Beneath the discourse and the irony, one recognizes the disappointment and the awareness of belonging to the “unfitting other.” Political violation is transformed into physical and existential reality. Reversing Godard’s dictum “That’s not blood, it’s just red paint,” Gržinić writes: “In post-Communist society, a traumatic reality appears beneath the surface of the works. It is not just red paint, it is blood, it is the invisible, post-communist residue that is not (yet) capable of integrating itself into the immateriality of globalization and into the virtual world of the media.” M.K., K.T.

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Marina Gržinić / Aina Šmid
(collaboration since 1982)
1958, Rijeka / HR, at that time Jugoslavija; 1957, Ljubljana / SL, at that time Jugoslavija