"In the mid-1990s in Britain there is no independent film and video culture. None - at least none of the kind so clearly identifiable 15 years ago, and none with any significant presence. No independent film avant-garde , no independent video art production.....this is a state which we might - cautiously - celebrate."
John Wyver -Producer with Illuminations the company responsible for the
TV compilations of independent film and video : Ghosts In The Machine and
White Noise.
From 'What You See Is What You Get : Catalogue Essay for the 3rd ICA Biennial
of Independent Film and Video 1995'.
'Unlike traditional funders, however, the LFVDA undertakes activity itself
.it could be argued that this approach is setting the LFVDA in competition
with the independent sector it is there to fund. The problem with this argument
is that it assumes there is still such a thing as a coherent 'independent
sector', with its own agenda and plans . There isn't . Perhaps there never
was."
Steve McIntyre -Chief Executive of the London Film and Video Development
Agency.
From 'The Very Model Of A Modern Funding Agency' Vertigo 1996
above are recent articles by two of the leading administrators of 'Independent'
media and together they articulate a stunning ideological manoeuvre.
In 'What You See Is What You Get' John Wyver argues that there is
no longer an 'Independent' film/video culture because 'Independent' production
has become totally dependent upon and entwined with the television industry.
There is no longer an 'Independent' sector, all that remains is an 'Independent
tradition' which now exists within the structures and screens of TV. But..."Maybe, however,
in the interstices of the Internet will flourish a new independent image
culture."
In 'The Very Model Of A Modern Funding Agency' Steve McIntyre considers
the function of the LFVDA as London's advisory body on National Lottery
film and video funding and argues that since Lottery funding can only go
to individual applications and since there is no longer a coherent 'Independent'
Sector "....the notion of Independence can only be saved by rigorously
attaching it to work and not to institutions."
And so, two respected professionals pronounce the death of their own profession
but temper their grief with the hope of it's imminent transformation and
rebirth.
But what is it that has died and what do these alchemists want to replace
it with ?
Well, to understand the sheer nerve of this manoeuvre you've got to get
to grips with the implicit meaning of the term 'Independent ' in this context,
they're not talking about a sector that is free from all outside authority,
a sector that is not financially dependent on an executive agency, both
Wyver and McIntyre use the term 'Independent" to refer to the specific
cultural industry which evolved out of London in the mid '60's and developed
and expanded throughout the '70's and early eighties.
Wyver and McIntyre define the sector even as they negate it.
Firstly they suggest that the now defunct "Independent " project
was once, in some vague way, politically radical and subversive , that there
was once a media strategy for social change but that this radicalism is
no longer possible in the new realism and technology of the '90's. As McIntyre
says ...
" Much has been lost but much has been gained. The point now is to
find ways (the plural is crucial) of making sense of and exploiting new
opportunities. Of developing an approach which might be designated 'principled
opportunism'."
The second crucial definition that both writers share is that the 'Independent
Sector' defined itself as a network of state funded organisations and state
funded film/video makers. This would include the funding agencies themselves
(eg. the British Film Institute, the Arts Council ,the Regional Arts Boards
), distribution agencies (eg. London Film and Video Umbrella ) , workshops
and production organisations (eg. the London Film Makers Co-Op and London
Electronic Arts ) , cinemas and art centres (eg. the ICA and the Regional
Film Theatres ) festivals (eg. the ICA Biennial and Viva 8 ) and journals
(eg. Vertigo and Coil).
It is this model of an "Independent" sector that Wyver and McIntyre
believe to be dead, and I agree with them, but what is remarkable is that
they've only just realised because, to no budget underground film/video
makers, it was obvious five years ago.
the EXPLODING CINEMA and the other groups in the English NO WAVE
have been staging shows in pubs, clubs, cafes, squats, old schools, disused
factories and any other room with walls and electricity,
this rapid and widespread evolution of no budget exhibition is the most
dynamic development in alternative media since the underground film movement
of the '60's and yet it has been completely and deliberately ignored by
the established so-called 'Independent' sector, there has been no acknowledgement
in any of it's journals, there has been no encouragement from any of it's
agencies and no attempt has been made to represent the no wave in any of
it's festivals : for instance at the Pandemonium London Festival Of Moving
Images held at the ICA, at the Co-Op Viva 8 festival in East London and
at the '95 ICA Biennial curated by Wyver, where out of the 26 works shown
only 2 were not directly funded by a state agency or TV channel.
Now I'm not saying this is a bad thing, an influx of professional media
scouts hellbent on appropriation and recoupment would probably be the kiss
of death for the no wave cinema scene, what I am saying is that something
weird is going on.
By any semantic definition of the term 'Independent' the no wave scene and
it's hundreds of film/video makers, represents a new totally independent
industry, financially self sufficient with a rapidly expanding audience.
And gradually networks and circuits are developing amongst the various groups
involved.
But Wyver and McIntyre seem oblivious to this and have chosen this moment
of unprecedented revival to read the last rites on the "Independent"
sector.
Now, it could be argued that the no wave has no core politic or shared aesthetic
and so does not constitute a 'sector' or a 'project' but such an argument
would betray a basic misunderstanding of the nature and history of independent
film and video. Which brings me to the question : What was the original
usage of the term 'Independent' ? And how did it get wrenched so far from
it's true meaning that it began to denote it's exact opposite ?
Essentially 'Independent' rose to dominance in the early seventies as an
aggregate term to describe a diversity of politically radical movements,
organisations, practises and projects that had emerged out of the '60's
counter culture , including avant garde/experimental film centred around
the LFMC (1966) and the agit-prop documentary groups such as the Berwick
Street Collective (1972) ,the London Womens Film Group (1972), Four Corners
Films (1973) and the Newsreel Collective (1974).
The LFMC originally subscribed to the term 'Underground Film' and initially
functioned as a cinema which screened imported American work, as their membership
expanded and they began to produce their own work the term Underground was
dropped and replaced by 'avant-garde'.
In those early days the term 'independent' was used to mean separate from,
and in opposition to, mainstream commercial TV and Cinema which was viewed
as nothing more than an enervating drug, a bourgeois image factory that
maintained the hegemony of the ruling class. The original Independent project
was to construct an alternative media with organisations, practises and
techniques capable of subverting and dismantling the mainstream at every
level. The trouble with this naive conception of popular culture was that
it failed to confront the vital problem of exhibition and distribution......
publicity, box office success, and popular entertainment were considered
to be bourgeois concerns and this together with a preoccupation on artisanal
process and production led to an ever increasing reliance on state funding
as the only means of finance. So it was that when the Independent Film-makers
Association formed in 1974 to represent the diverse strands of the sector
it's prime function was to lobby the state funding organisations for broader
and more comprehensive funding schemes including the provision of wages
in allocated production funding and in the early '80's to the appointment
of a Commissioning Editor for Independent Film and Video at Channel 4.
me back to the theoretical manipulations of Wyver and McIntyre.
Essentially the 'Independent' sector conspired in it's own dissolution,
what began as a diverse autonomous movement gradually devolved into a homogenised
professional state institution, and when the industrial and structural stage
of this liquidation was complete all that remained was to dismantle and
discredit the theoretical base. Up until now of course this wasn't necessary,
the funded sector had it's career structure of mutual justification, it
had it's canon of visionary 'cutting edge' film/video makers and it's TV
co-productions, it could dismiss criticism as the sour grapes of an embittered
maker who didn't make the shortlist or as a lobbying tactic by a desperate
workshop. And it was desirable to have 'Independence' as an ideological
concept with it's nostalgic overtones of opposition and alternativity.
But with the advent of the no wave cinema scene and increasing hostility
from independent pressure groups like the London Film and Video Forum it
must have became ever more tempting to declare the 'Independent' sector
dead and gone.
The beauty of this manoeuvre is that it places all opposition to it's veracity
in a semantic limbo. You can't challenge the end of 'Independent Film Culture'
by insisting that there are still hundreds of independent film/video makers
or that there is a thriving independent no budget cinema scene because Wyver
and McIntyre don't mean independent , they mean "INDEPENDENT" :
the state funded sector of which they are two key representatives. You cannot
demand representation in a sector that no longer exists and you cannot demand
accountability from a sector that does not acknowledge that you exist .
They have removed the word 'independence' from debate and sealed the doors
with mirrors, now when we seek access to the halls of the institution we
shall be met with our own reflections.
And it's very liberating for Wyver and McIntyre, because if 'Independence'
no longer exists then there's no longer any political or cultural obligation
to seek out collectives, Co-Ops or film/video makers who function outside
of the established media industry and work can be subjectively judged purely
on content or on whether or not it lies within the "Independent tradition"...
whatever that is.
In fact it seems from McIntyre's article that the LFVDA is dispensing with
funding application procedure altogether and is now simply functioning as
a state financed production company.
What is most disturbing however is McIntyre's description of how the LFVDA
and the other funding bodies will serve a "gatekeeping function"
for applications for over
£70 million of National Lottery film finance from now to the year
2000. Applications for low budget, non-mainstream and short film will go
to an advisory panel of regional funding administrators and TV executives
convened by the LFVDA.
So, having appropriated the independent project, having reduced it's radical
social aspirations to product styling, having failed to develop a means
of exhibition/distribution for short film, having excluded all but a privileged
elite from it's institutions and finally having declared itself non-existent,
the unelected unaccountable professional administrators of the 'Independent'
non sector are now going to get a cash injection of £70 million from
a spectacular scam that feeds on the desperation of the poor and the disenfranchised.
This is presumably what McIntyre means by "principled opportunism".
As for the vision of a new age of a digital Internet 'Independence' , this
is nothing more than a cynical escape clause allowing the funded sector
to abandon the failure and chaos of the present for a bright cyber future.
To this end recent funding initiatives and conferences have abandoned the
old rhetoric of ' Representation and Identity' for a new jargon of 'Innovation
, Interaction and the Cutting Edge'.
This digital 'Independence' is not a reformation of the funded sector, it
is the funded sector in the process of compounding it's mechanisms of elitism,
nepotism and unaccountability with a technology led vanguard which legitimates
itself simply on the sophistication and modernity of it's production. Since
'state of the art' technology is institutionally inaccessible, financially
prohibitive and requires a high degree of technical knowledge this vanguard
will exclude all unfunded makers who cannot afford the time and money to
invest in the new technology, and all those who choose to work with the
diversity of "older" technologies, from Super 8 to video camcorder.
the Tory / Labour state has destroyed the trade union movement, crushed
student activism, introduced the Criminal Justice Bill, the most oppressive
infringement on civil liberty this century and they are in the process of
introducing 'workfare' to force those who will not or cannot find waged
employment into low paid drudgery. The 'Independent' sector should have
been at the forefront of resistance and opposition to these assaults but
at best it merely documented them and at worst the sector was used as a
safe enclave where radical media could be contained and diffused.
If I sound angry it's because I am, it's time we got angry. For years now
makers have been discussing the erosion and appropriation of the independent
media and their usual conclusion was ..."If you know how the system
works then use it, network, get yourself known, talk to the right people....we
all know the system's corrupt but it is still possible to get funding for
radical oppositional projects and if you rock the boat you'll never get
funded."
We should have braced our feet against the hull and rocked the boat stupid.
But what goes around comes around. In the last five years a new underground
counter culture has emerged from the ashes of the '60's :.... DIY culture,
Anarchy, the Anti-Road Movement, the squatters movement, the rave scene,
the small press, the Animal Rights movement, the situationist revival, the
free festivals, Eco tribalism. And this counter culture has studied the
mistakes of it's predecessors. The no wave cinema scene is part of this
culture and also a direct descendent of the first wave of underground filmmakers.
The term 'Independence' has been rendered meaningless, but it's only a term,
like 'Underground', 'Counter Cinema', 'Alternative' 'Parallel' or 'Oppositional'.
And the technology doesn't matter either, Super 8, VHS, 16mm, CD Rom it
doesn't matter. What matters is the project which found it's potential in
the cine clubs of the 30's and '40's, which began with the LFMC in the back
room of a bookshop on Charring Cross Road, which returned with the Exploding
Cinema and the no wave cinema scene.
And this project mutates, expands and retracts but always continues in some
obscure pocket in spite of the cynicism of professionals and the disenchantment
of it's activists : The project is the total liberation and democratisation
of the media....