MEDIA AND THE ARCHIVE: Motions and Transformations

The Power of Remixing an Archive

Remixing media, from still images to moving ones, demonstrates the power of the editor. Through a series of creative choices, the artist tells the viewer what to see. Though specific interpretation will vary from person to person, the choices a content creator makes are all in service of guiding the viewer through an experience. There is intention behind the decisions of an artist. The ability to remix media reveals the power to subvert the content and completely altar the original message. Though the purposes may vary, remixing media is a clever way to alter the manner in which art is interpreted.

My understanding of remixing the archive is taking someone's else's work and adding something of your own to it in order to completely revolutionize the viewer's perception of it. This is a collage I found posted below, created by Eugenia Loli. It is composed of all found images, but she has taken them out of context to create something entirely new, something creative and magical and surreal that is most likely very far from the purpose of what the pieces of the original message served to convey. Though we may not know the origin or the context of the original images, we should not care what they were before. The point is that they now serve a new creative purpose: to provide the viewer a new stimulating work of art.


The art of remixing can also be used to turn the original piece of work completely on its head by changing the way it is arranged. Many people have posted film trailers to youtube where they completely altered the genre by changing the order of shots and the music a film is set to. Thus, editors have the power to influence how the general population perceives a series of shots because everything is set in a specific order for a specific reason. To rearrange that order can be quite simple, but it entirely changes the final product. Below are a few remixed trailers.



However, not all remixing is limited to digital or visual images. Though Kuhn's article focuses on the remixing of visuals, can't literature be remixed as well? Aren't turning Shakespeare plays into films, such as Clueless from Emma, and The 10 Things I Hate About You from The Taming of the Shrew completely new imaginings in that their settings and target audiences have completely been changed? Not to mention the way literary works can inspire other and new creations.

In the "Remixing the Archive" class I took, we studied how influential Lewis Carroll's Alice novels were to other content creators. From novels to illustrations to paintings to films to puzzles and to video games, so many things have manifested from Carroll's original stories. Are those creations not remixes as well? In the stop motion animation short film I created, I remixed Carroll's notion of sending Alice through a looking glass by sending a barbie doll through a camera lens back in time to a younger version of herself, drawing upon themes of Carroll's wistful obsession of preserving the youth of children through photography.



In the simplest terms, I understand a remix as taking something old and changing it just enough to make something new. It's about asking what one can do to make something one's own, to make people see something different that they may not have previously considered. There are numerous ways to do that and varying degrees to which it can be done, but anyone can be the one to do it. Sometimes, as with the trailers, you don't even need to change that much in order to turn something on its head. But context is everything, and controlling that context is what gives a person the power to remix art.

Language is power, 

But perception is everything (Kuhn 5.2).

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