The project I worked on the last 5 weeks of the minor.
Flux
What started as a research on the subject of identity, eventually became more about answering a very personal question: "Who am I (at this very moment)?" but also "What has formed my sense of I?"
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I didn't really know what I wanted to make when I started this project. Everything's a medium and can be used to tell a story I learnt during my minor. So did I want to make an animation? or not?.. I only knew that I wanted to research the subject of "identity" as I felt like my sense of I had changed in a really short amount of time, probably due to subjecting myself to quite a lot of new experiences, and meeting new people. I didn't feel like """the old me""" anymore. "Who am I?" and other questions arose. Basically I was having an identity crisis. I didn't know whether that was good or bad, but being aware that I was changing, and not knowing anymore where I was going, or where I wanted to go (and the anxiety that comes along with that) really drove this project.
So what made me feel like I was changing, in the first place? The outside world. Every setting we step into, every person we meet, has the potential to change and shape us in a profound way.
Based on that thought, I went onto the streets and let people draw/write on me what their unique characteristics are. As a metaphor for the environment that literally "shapes" me/us.
So I had all these clothes now and indeed, met a person on the street who I will not forget thanks to this little experiment. But as happy as I was with all these drawings/writings I didn't have anything to go on to continue my research, except the extreme awareness I had, of how differently I behaved in each setting. Quite obvious, as we all play different roles depending on the setting/person.. but
it really made me think which one of those 'roles' I play is the real me? is the authentic me? When am I most 'myself'?
so I did some research on Jung's "persona" and Winnicott's "false self" & "true self": "Winnicott used true self to describe a sense of self based on spontaneous authentic experience, and a feeling of being alive, having a real self." ...
So if the “true self” is a sense of self based on spontaneous authentic experience, I have to seek these kind of experiences out, right?
I found inspiration in the automatic writings of the Surrealists and decided to have "automatic dialogues" with people for my next experiment:
a one-to-one dialogue with different people, where we
let our “subconscious” speak. I say one word, and someone else says another word right after that; speaking whatever comes to our minds without stopping to think first.
I was also curious to find out where my words (and the words of others) come from. As I was also extremely aware during this period that everything I say, is a collection of words I heard before from others. The way I speak, my mannerisms, are all a combination of the traits of people I have met/seen before.
A friend of mine came with the suggestion to only film the eyes, so I did. And after looking at all the different dialogues I was struck by the eyes, and how they seem to look around and search continuously (for the right words to say?).
I was also curious to find out where my words (and the words of others) come from. As I was also extremely aware during this period that everything I say, is a collection of words I heard before from others. The way I speak, my mannerisms, are all a combination of the traits of people I have met/seen before.
A friend of mine came with the suggestion to only film the eyes, so I did. And after looking at all the different dialogues I was struck by the eyes, and how they seem to look around and search continuously (for the right words to say?).
I then did more research and stumbled onto Erik Erikson’s Psychosocial Stages of Development, and Marcia’s Identity Statuses. There was one stage of identity development that resonated with me:
So I had found my focus points for my story:
-"Identity moratorium: The status of a person who is actively involved in exploring different identities but has not made a commitment."
- there is no final endpoint in identity development.
- and we’re shaped by our environment
-"Identity moratorium: The status of a person who is actively involved in exploring different identities but has not made a commitment."
- there is no final endpoint in identity development.
- and we’re shaped by our environment
So with these focus points, I did some visual research, how can I communicate this? I was visually really interested in
“fragmentation”, and the taking on of many different forms. Continuous change. and I thought it would be good to try out projection mapping again as the way it can transform anything you project on, seemed suitable.
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So I did more experiments where I even used live footage of myself, but I didn't want to focus so much on myself in my work..
.....
and I missed the interaction I had with others during the early parts of my process. Plus I was curious how others feel about their identity, and if they are going through/or went through the same thing I’m going through at the moment.
So I decided to interview people and film them. (mainly classmates, and other people that I regularly interact with.) Some of the questions I asked:
- "How would you describe yourself",
- "How would you describe yourself when you were younger",
- "What caused you to change"
- etcetera.
So I had all this footage, and now I just played around with it:
and experimented with what surface I could project on:
And what would I do with the audio?
Well, I had some really great conversations with the others, and some people told me things that really touched me and I could identify with... it was kind of like I was discovering myself again during the interviews... It made things clearer about who I was, am, and where I’m going. So I decided to answer the question of who I am by rearranging the audio in such a way that the others seemingly tell my story, of who I was/am and where I’m going. Who I am, and where I’m going will always (in a way) be influenced by the people around me, anyway.
In the end I also simplified the visuals, as all the details were too distracting:
But projecting onto lifeless objects, felt lifeless. So I thought about projecting onto myself again, literally saying the words of others as a performance..:
..but the message I
wanted to convey (how WE are ALL shaped by our environment, and
continuously changing) didn't work this way (plus it was boring to look at/listen to) so...
The final work:
Based on the interviews I did with people, I eventually projected the videoportrait(s) onto a mirror +
let the audience listen to the interviews. When seated, the viewer would
see their own face in the mirror, with the faces of others layered on
top of their own.
![]() |
exhibited at Breda's central train station |
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excerpt from Flux (full version is around 4 minutes)
And through this project I finally accepted that as a natural part of life, instead of fighting it, I suppose. So it's been a valuable experience.