Bahri sets up the premise of the film within the first few moments, transitioning swiftly between rapidfire conversations as the viewers settle into the experience of eavesdropping. The lack of figures and context strengthen this feeling of listening in on conversations, which serve to reveal just how much we are used to the omniscient position of the spectator. We take for granted how much we get to see and Bahri’s film foregrounds this desire by showing us much less than what we are accustomed to seeing. Bahri’s positioning of the viewers as such is further complicated by a brief moment in the film when the image goes dark, but the viewers can still hear the conversation. We quickly realize that the filmmaker is having a conversation with police officers who question him about why he is filming and as Bahri talks to them, the lens cap is placed on the camera. This second physical intervention in the making of this film, executed by Bahri as demanded by the police officers, discloses the circumstances of a filmmaker using a camera in public space to talk to the inhabitants of that public space about the very presence of that camera, which contradicts and thus exposes the surveillance mechanisms in the space. The film no longer documents surveillance, it becomes entangled in it. This moment is in contrast to another brief moment when the sheet is almost fully lifted by the wind and we get a glimpse of where Bahri is in a public square with trees, benches, and a few people. Bahri dismantles the surveillance mechanism by pointing to the absurdity of his inability to film nothing; the conversations that populate the film thus become the imageless protagonists of this film, drawing the viewers’ attention to who populates the public space and what they are actually worried about through the ruse of a camera with a sheet of paper blocking its view.
Bahri’s film creates a space that is clearly distinguished from the space of surveillance by showing next to nothing visually. He traces the boundaries of what a moving image is, denying viewers that image. Bahri’s film is an exercise in what happens when we cannot see, to discuss when we do not see or just how much we are used to seeing.
By withdrawing recognizable images and narratives from the film, Bahri points to the absurdity of what takes place in public spaces that have become increasingly limited around the world, and the inherent violence of these spaces. As viewers, we latch onto the slightest of movements in the image and the conversations that take place diegetically come into hyperfocus. Bahri’s physical presence in the public space becomes a contraption—the film is no longer about what is seen through the camera but it is about the camera’s presence. Hence, the camera itself becomes the subject of the film.
By exposing the mechanisms with which we get to see what we see, Bahri reveals the aesthetics of politics—are we ready to see how little politics are actually practiced in the public space? Bahri’s white sheet in front of the camera and everything that happens around that camera is an amalgamation of aesthetics of politics, a jarring absence.
Politics as aesthetics
Trinh Minh-ha’s Reassemblage: From the Firelight to the Screen (1982) [10], a forty-minute film that converges her footage from Senegal and a voiceover narrated in her voice, includes a myriad of strategies with which she deconstructs the relationship between her as a cultural translator, the person making and narrating the film, and her Senegalese subjects. In her fragmented voiceover, Minh-ha keeps repeating that she does not speak about Senegal, but instead speaks nearby Senegal. This repeated statement serves three purposes: The first is that the distance between the subject of speaking and the subject speaking is acknowledged and included in the statement through the adverb of nearby. The usage of nearby hints at all the distances between speakers and their subjects and whether such distances are overtaken by the speech or not—nearby necessarily includes its antonym and is thus embedded in the space between the speaker and the subject. The second is that the distinction between “speaking about” and “speaking nearby” undermines the authorities assumed in speaking about a place, a people. By making this distinction, Minh-ha separates her speech from other speeches, recognizing not only the impetus to speak about but also that the refusal to do so is possible. In this case, silence or refusal becomes an ethical position. The third and perhaps formally and conceptually most significant purpose of this statement is that by repeating this statement multiple times, Minh-ha subverts the voiceover text itself. Through repetition, the statement becomes incantatory—a self-soothing attempt to loosen the boundary between speaker and subject.The speaker and the subject occupy the same space without forming an elucidating relationship. The viewer is included in this porous narrative space; we are not spoken to or addressed—we are just there. The artist speaks and continues her speaking as she narrates, reinforcing the sense that her speech is an ongoing act. The time here is layered rather than linear—the past existing in the present as it will exist in multiple forms into the future, a touching and co-existing temporality.
Minh-ha also notes the “omnipresence” that could refer to the eye or the I. The ambiguity between the “eye” and the “I” in spoken language is precisely what Minh-ha’s assemblage allows viewers/listeners to do in this instance: the eye that we expect to speak for and present the I is left ambiguous so that the viewer can disassociate the two: where there is an I, an eye emerges to produce the eye that appears to speak for Is.