|
Tati at the Nai
Januari 30, 2003
Think of Tati and the film Mon Oncle springs to
mind, and think of that film and Villa Arpel will appear, the show-box
home of Monsieur Arpel. The exhibition Tatirama at the NAi looks
at the role of architecture in the films of French filmmaker Jacques
Tati.

Stills with the Villa Arpel (designed by Jacques
Lagrange) from Mon Oncle |
With films like Mon Oncle (1958) and Playtime (1967), Jacques Tati
(1907-1982) made a significant contribution to that small but celebrated
group of films in which architecture plays a prominent role; other
leading works are Metropolis (1927) by Fritz Lang, The Fountainhead
(1949), and the sci-fi Blade Runner (1982). Like other museums in
Rotterdam, the NAi is staging the event to coincide with the International
Filmfestival Rotterdam, which started this week.
In his films Tati offers a humorous critique on modern architecture.
He shows how the monoculture, standardisation, transparency, inflated
scale and 'emptiness' of this architecture brought about huge change
and alienation in people's daily lives.
His Villa Arpel in Mon Oncle is fitted out with the latest newfangled
gadgetry for home and garden - complete with dolphin fountain that
starts spurting when the doorbell rings and kitchen cupboards that
open and close automatically. The exhibition features a specially
constructed 1:10 model of the villa. Push the buttons and you can
let the dog out, move the eyes at the top of the house, and listen
to sound fragments from the film.

Stills with the Villa Arpel (designed by Jacques
Lagrange) from Mon Oncle |
It was Jacques Lagrange who helped Tati create forms that reflected
modern times. Jacques Lagrange was Tati's regular set designer from
1953 until the latter's death. Lagrange came from an artistic family,
and both his father and brother were architects. At sixteen he entered
the Ecole des Arts Decoratifs and later the Ecole des Beaux Arts
in Paris.
The set drawings on display at the NAi show that neither Tati nor
Lagrange left anything to chance. Everything was carefully conceived
and designed, and the colourful drawings show that Tati and Lagrange
both had a keen eye for detail. For Playtime (1967) they created
in the studio an entire modern city: Tativille. But the influence
of Lagrange went beyond sets; together with Tati he also wrote the
scenarios and worked out the scenography.

Still from Playtime |
Tatirama revolves around five themes: housing, employment, traffic,
recreation and historical heritage. These themes are taken from
the 'Charter of Athens' (1943) in which Le Corbusier set out his
views on the development of modern architecture. Mon Oncle is about
modern living. In Les vacances de Monsieur Hulot (1953) and Playtime,
Tati looks at developments in recreation and the changes in people's
working lives. Trafic (1971) deals with the rapid rise in the use
of the motorcar. In Playtime historical buildings are always filmed
indirectly. The church of Sacre Coeur, for example, is seen reflected
in the windows of modern architecture: its heyday has passed.

Still from Traffic |
In addition to the model of Villa Arpel and a series of drawings,
the exhibition features a number of hanging screens on which film
stills are projected. Texts projected onto the images clarify the
role of modern architecture and technology in Tati's films. By moving
closer and casting a shadow across the screens, visitors discover
a second layer of text that explains the context behind Tati's ideas.
Plenty of written information therefore, but it's a pity the exhibition
contains so little film material. A small video screen shows short
fragments from Mon Oncle, Playtime and Trafic. Also on view are
five documentaries, on the themes housing, employment, traffic,
recreation and historical heritage. A bit more movie footage from
Tati's work would have been a good idea, however, especially for
all those (young) people who've never actually seen a film by Tati.
Lotte Haagsma
Translation: Billy Nolan
more information:
TATiRAMA, A View on architecture by Jacques Tati NAi, Museumpark
25 Rotterdam through April 27, 2003 The exhibition is curated by
the Mission de préfiguration de la Cité de l'architecture et du
patrimoine/ Institut français d'architecture (Ifa), Paris. The
NAI has adapted the concept and design.
Website of Tativille
|