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Nocturne

Emily Richardson

2002 00:04:56 United KingdomEnglishColorMono4:316mm film

Description

Nocturne is a 5-minute film shot entirely at night in deserted streets of London. The film attempts to find images of the city that reveal the presence of the past, or the presence of the dead, hinting at a concealed history. The deserted streets around the east end of London and Docklands reflect an echoic city filled with shadows. Nocturne is composed of long static viewpoints, each shot slowly unfolding in time as though by looking long enough the city's secrets will be revealed. The film is shot on 16mm, using long exposures and time-lapse techniques that together give the film an intensity of color and a sense of fleeting or historical time. The drab, deserted streets are transformed as they appear in hyper-real color, devoid of traffic and human activity. The film has a neurotic, electric quality as the only signs of life are lights turning on and off in buildings, the occasional ghost image of passing cars and the pulse of overhead trains. On these forgotten streets the sounds of the night puncture the silence with more frantic, desperate outbursts until the silence itself becomes an active element. The film soundtrack recreates the teeming silence, full of the sounds we tend to filter out, such as the faint rumble of cars in the distance, planes flying overhead, the footsteps of people passing by, occasional voices and the wind blowing litter along the street. 

"Composed of a series of twilight images of empty streets, Nocturne is a mesmerizing and tonally expressive work that similarly recalls the seminal tone poem Koyaanisquatsi, with the rigorous symmetry and urban desolation of Chantal Akerman’s News From Home." 
–New York Video Festival 2003 Program Notes

About Emily Richardson

Emily Richardson is a filmmaker and researcher examining the trace of human presence on particular landscapes and environments on the cusp of change.

Richardson’s films document sites of power and corporate interest at particular moments in time uncovering layers of narrative embedded in these contested landscapes, whether East London prior to the Olympics, abandoned military architecture of the Atomic Weapons Research Establishment of Orford Ness, the oil industry on the Scottish coastline, the contentious expansion of Sizewell nuclear power station, or the exploitation of the Far North.

Richardson’s work sits within a lineage of filmmakers addressing ideas about our relationship to and impact on natural and constructed landscapes and environments through a reflexive observational approach to making work using a cross-disciplinary methodology that includes walking, photography, filmmaking, sound recording, historical and archive research, interviews, books and podcasts.

Richardson's films have been shown in galleries, museums and festivals internationally including Tate Modern and Tate Britain, London, Pompidou Centre, Paris, Barbican Cinema, London; Anthology Film Archives, New York and Venice, Edinburgh, BFI London, Rotterdam and New York Film Festivals.