A work in constant progress (and occasional regress).
Release Date:
May 17, 2006
Original Title:
The J. Street Project 2002-2005
Genres:
Documentary
Production Companies:
Arts Council of England
Berliner Künstlerprogramm des DAAD
European Association for Jewish Culture
Kulturstiftung des Bundes, Halle
Production Countries:
Germany | United Kingdom
Ratings / Certifications:
N/A
Runtime: 67
The J. Street Project 2002–5 is a sixty-seven minute film that consists of a sequence of static camera shots of street signs in Germany that incorporate the word ‘Jude’ (German for ‘Jew’). Hiller found a total of 303 signs in streets, lanes, roads, avenues and alleys scattered throughout the country. The work focuses on the dissonance between these mundane, everyday signs and the memories they trigger of a genocidal history. The soundtrack records traffic noise, church bells and other incidental sounds. For this factual, indexical project Hiller maintained a neutral seriality in her approach. Cumulatively, however, it becomes clear that the signs are loaded with the memory of Jewish presence in the locations, not just from modern times but from thousands of years of history. The tension between past and present in the film highlights the sense of absence and traumatic loss. The place names operate as memorials of erasure.
Camera Operator:
Susan Hiller
Marcus Schlicht
Lorenz Trees
Director:
Susan Hiller
Researcher:
David Coxhead
Susan Hiller
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