Cartoon Violence: Takeshi Murata and Bunny Rogers
Highlights
- Experience the haunting visuals of Takeshi Murata's I, Popeye, exploring themes of masculinity and existential crisis.
- Engage with Bunny Rogers's Mandy's Piano Solo, a poignant reflection on the impact of male violence in pop culture.
- Immerse in the psychedelic colours of Murata's animation, where cartoon violence meets a liberating release.
- Reflect on the emotional weight of Rogers's work, set against the backdrop of snow falling in Fortitude Valley.
Cartoon Violence brings together two 3D animations by American artists that grapple with the coded, gendered violence that defines that ultimate American cultural product, the cartoon.
Takeshi Murata’s I, Popeye (2010) turns the eponymous sailor man into a crudely 3D-rendered subject suffering an existential crisis. The six-minute video opens on our erstwhile hero absent-mindedly filling cans with spinach on a factory-floor production line. Alienated from his labour, and the ambrosia which grants him his power, his masculinity, he drifts into a psychedelic vision of melting colours and incomprehensible planes. Popeye’s final release is at once violent and liberating, as he seems to tell us: ‘That’s all I can stands, ’cause I can’t stands no more’.
Bunny Rogers’s Mandy’s Piano Solo in Columbine Cafeteria (2016) is haunted by the spectre of the Columbine High School shooting. In this thirteen-minute video, a woman sits at a grand piano abandoned in the School’s cafeteria, performing mournful covers of Elliot Smith songs. Mandy—appropriated from the cartoon Clone High and originally voiced by pop star Mandy Moore—only pauses her elegiac performance to drain a glass of red wine. Snow falls, as if the sky itself were grieving and burying the dead. Rogers’s work meditates on the aftermath of male violence, and how a traumatic event might poison an entire generation, their pop culture, their music, their innocence, their cartoons.
Images and Video
Dates & times
- Next occurrence: reoccurring
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