Partially Buried Continued is a meditation on ways in which one’s associations to history, location, and genealogy become tangled in a subjective web which makes it complicated to separate history from fiction. The ways in which photography and memories can become intertwined and the differences between memory as an active process and remembrance as a memorializing act are explored through the persona of the filmmaker, who moves between Korea, Berlin, Ohio, the 1950s, the 1970s, and the 1990s, while attempting to negotiate her present with that which preceded her.
“She invokes two dead artists and ponders the traces of their lives in the continued wake of their deaths. Indices. Inscriptions. Quotes. Birth parents, blood relations, artistic forebears. The usual artist’s roster tugs at her.”
Expanding on Green’s 1996 film Partially Buried, Partially Buried Continued focuses on the mingling of the present and the past, what is near and what is far, what is other and what is one’s self through reflecting on the photographic medium via a re-examination of images taken during the Korean War by the film character’s father, which she viewed as a child; photographs taken in Korea in Kwangju on May 18th, 1980, and photographs taken by the artist in Kwangju and Seoul in 1997. Works by the artists Robert Smithson and Theresa Hak Kyung Cha are also a recurring reference point in the film, as is the year 1970. Both artists worked with language, location and time.
The complexities of how we find ourselves entangled in relationships to countries and nationalities, to locations and to time, and to ensuing identifications continue to be questioned in Partially Buried Continued.