Archie
Franks is drawn in by the work of Ragnar Kjartansson at the Barbican, London.
After 40 minutes of
watching band The National perform the same song over and over (Sorrow), I was engulfed in a strange mix
of emotions. On the one hand the idea of the work is so direct as to be almost
idiotic; a fashionable band perform the same song on repeat in front of an
audience for six hours, but Kjartansson uncovers something else within this
act, something quite strange and genuinely moving.
A Lot of Sorrow, 2013-14 |
Feeling sad on my own I, along
with many millions of others, have played the same song on repeat for hours on
end, to wallow in sorrow as it were. So to turn this clichéd act of melancholy
indulgence into an artwork is at once an obvious but also intriguing concept. I
guess I was able to watch it for so long partially because I like the song, but the
film of the performance and the way the band go about it are totally
engrossing. One moment, in which the camera focuses on the drummer massaging his
arms between his playing, brings home the difficult physical act of the
performance, sorrow and melancholia enacted as a gruelling, relentless
endurance test.