Jean Mil: Luc Peire’s Environment
In 1969, Jean Mil completed his film Luc Peire’s Environment with electronic music by Yagodic Davorin. The shoot took place inside and around Luc Peire’s Environnement I (1967).
“An experimental short film? Not an experiment, not a try-out, but a short film dealing with art, in a different way than many documentaries and educational films about art. Why not talk of an art-fiction-movie? My fantasy was awakened on entering Peire’s‘chamber’.
I visualized: vertical … graphic rhythm … architecture … stereo … parallelepiped … Brasilia … magic … vertigo … endless … gnosis … Peire’s Environnement presented for me the particular‘optical’ challenge of transposing the limited space of the chamber, mirrored above and below to give an endless parallelepiped, onto the film screen as an endless tower. For this we used wide angle and fish eye lenses. Given the mirror effect, the shooting points had to be very carefully chosen to produce a maximum perspectival and spatial effect. How did the turbulent vertigo effects come into being? It was really very simple, and a question of practical inventiveness. The camera stands upright and revolves on a gramophone turntable, with the cinematographic recording speeds (6, 12 or 24 images a second) determining the various turbulence speeds.” (Jean Mil in 2007)
“Zoals de filmmaker Jean Mil in Luc Peires Environment ging, erin opging, erop inging en zo zijn film creëerde, zo raakte ik speels poëtisch bezield door Jean Mils filmische verkenning en z’n hoogst persoonlijke ontdekking van Peire’s integratiewerk. In zijn film Luc Peire’s Environment en begeleid door het klankdecorum van Yagodic Davorin treedt Jean Mil, en wij met de cineast, binnen in de originele kunstkamer van Peire. De regisseur schept er in de volstrekt nieuwe ruimte zijn eigenzinnig ritme van ontmoeting en ontdekking en zo wordt zijn film gelukkig geen klassieke kunstdocumentaire of een droog leerdocument. Zoals Peire in zijn Environment de reguliere maten van het doorsnee tableau bewust doorbreekt, zo heeft Jean Mil in zijn Peire’s Environment lak aan de gangbare regels van de klassieke kunstfilm.” (Wouter Hessels)