TROPICS

 

Short film 8′ – 2018
Director – Mathilde Lavenne
Composer – Léonore Mercier
Production – Jonas Film

Site internet du film

T R O P I C S dessine une orbite autour d’une exploitation agricole mexicaine. Des voix éparses semblent raviver et troubler la mémoire du lieu. En traversant la matière, le film fige le temps, les hommes et dévoile le spectre d’un paradis perdu.

Réalisatrice
Mathilde Lavenne

Composition sonore
Léonore Mercier

Production
Elsa Klughertz / Jonas Films

Assistante de production
Fanny Béguély / Jonas Films

Production executive
Fundacion Casa Proal

Carlos Couturier
Coordinateur de production

Michel Blancsubé
with the support of
Scam, Brouillon d’un rêve,
Chroniques, platform of production and diffusion of Région Provence-Alpes-Côte d’Azur
Edis, Fonds de dotation, Frac Provence-Alpes-Côte d’Azur
SECONDE NATURE & ZINC
The Fresnoy, studio national des arts contemporains
The CNC Dicréam
The Atelier 105, Lightcone

Voices
Javier Grapin Cabrera, Sergio Eduardo Graillet Contreras, Martha Lilia Proal Bordonave, Margarita Lemus Pesqueda

Apparitions
Manuel Eusebio Rodriguez, Martin Bello Mendez, Maribel Mendez Vaca, Rosalia Mendez Delon, Carmen Perez, Jaquelin Ramos Mendez, Blanca Romero Mendez

Sound design
Majordome

Mixage
Christian Cartier

Recorder
Martin Delzescaux

Design graphic
Lucie Baratte

Assistant réalisateur
Rodrigo Suarez
Team FabLab of Mexico / University of Anahuac Norte

Coordination VFX
Maestro Gonzalo Perez Ramirez
Ing. Ivan Hernandez Sanchez
Ing. Jose Florencio Marin Rodriguez
Dr. Eduardo Garduno

General manager
Francisco Hebrard Franco Pancho

Avec l’aide de
Jonathan Pepe, David Ayoun, Cédric Flazinski

Festivals
2018 Ars Electronica- CyberArts Exhibition – OK Center, Linz, Austria
2018 Chroniques, FRAC PACA, Marseille, France

Prix
2018 Golden Nica, Ars Electronica Prize, Computer Animation, Linz, Austria.

FR

T R O P I C S dessine une orbite autour d’une exploitation agricole mexicaine. Des voix éparses semblent raviver et troubler la mémoire du lieu. En traversant la matière, le film fige le temps, les hommes et dévoile le spectre d’un paradis perdu.

EN

TROPICS draws an orbit around a Mexican farm. Scattered voices seem to revive and disturb the memory of the place. Crossing the matter, the film attempts to stop time and men, and reveals the ghost of a lost paradise.

« Mathilde has long been interested in the anthropological dimension of the societies that she is brought to encounter through her work, but also in their relationship to the myths and cosmogony at the foundation of some of their beliefs. Behind all this is the depth of the landscapes where live the men that require it—a depth both physical and psychological, and completely unfathomable, as one could already tell from her 2013 film with the evocative title: Focus on Infinity.
Here, the question of landscape is again central but is reconsidered by the artist who uses, for part of it, relatively diverse technical means. With TROPICS, Mathilde Lavenne carries out a sort of transduction of the landscape.
Working from digital data, she uses a FARO scanner, a tool used in architecture to scan buildings. She installs this device on various sites and follows certain routes on the map, some of which she has tracked by foot to produce these stratified images, likened to “a kind of phantom map of the chosen site.” Then, from the myriad of points thus obtained, she renders a three-dimensional landscape. Thanks to this process, Mathilde has obtained a superimposition of layers that gives her progression along these paths lined with banana trees the appearance of a voyage through appearances, in the most literal sense. Nature looks like a laminate of finely meshed films that connect different surfaces of reality, which are not necessarily related to one another in our ordinary experiences.
The black and white shots could give the impression that the images were taken at night with infrared goggles except that here, the reversal of values and the greenish tone that characterize such images are precisely absent.The images give us the feeling of penetrating the structure of matter and reaching what usually remains invisible— with this work, we aren’t invited to discover a landscape that we don’t know but the very strangeness of the world of which it is only one element. »

Gilles A. Tiberghien