16 | Sight&Sound | November 2019
By Sophia Satchell Baeza
A major figure of the American avant garde,
Shirley Brimberg Clarke (1919-1997) was
born into privilege as the daughter of Polish-
Jewish immigrants who made their fortune in
manufacturing. Rebelling against a repressive
bourgeois upbringing, Clarke turned first to
dance, and later film and video, to express her
distinctive vision of the world. Moving freely
across genres and media throughout her career
(and often within a single work), Clarke’s
cinema explores the porous boundaries between
narrative and documentary filmmaking, and
film and other media, such as painting, dance,
performance and video. Her 1960s features
The Connection (1961), The Cool World (1963)
and Portrait of Jason (1967), for which she is
arguably best remembered, address issues of
urban alienation, poverty, addiction and racism,
focusing on lives lived at the margins of American
society. Fearless in both her personal and creative
life, Clarke produced a body of work that is as
formally innovative as it is rooted in social protest.
Clarke initially trained as a dancer, immersing
herself in New York’s vibrant post-war avant-
garde dance scene. Although her dance career
never quite earned her the critical acclaim
she’d hoped for, it had a lasting impact on
her subsequent filmmaking and video work,
informing an interest in how movement is
recorded formally, while introducing her to
key avant-garde dancers and choreographers.
Dance in the Sun (1953), Clarke’s first short film,
captures the sinuous choreography of professional
dancer Daniel Nagrin. Bounding off the stage
and out of the cinematic frame, it quickly cuts to
him dancing on the sand. By fluidly switching
between the two locations, Clarke extends
Nagrin’s choreography into a new – potentially
fantasy – space. Much like her then more
established contemporary, dancer and filmmaker
Maya Deren, Clarke uses editing to conjure up an
individual’s interior life: a memory, perhaps, of
a long-ago dance under the sun. Bullfight (1955)
similarly cuts between different environments,
editing on shared gestures to create a sense of
continual motion and high drama. Flitting back
and forth between Anna Sokolow’s bullfight-
inspired choreography and actual footage of a
fight in an arena, Clarke’s montage mirrors the
elegant and precise movements of the dancer with
those of the matador, creating a dramatic stand-off.
Other short films evoke a dance without
dancers, using the rhythms of the edit and
movement within the frame to capture the
dynamism of urban life. Bridges-Go-Round
(1958), a colourful experimental short on New
York’s suspension bridges, uses overlapping
footage (often moving in opposing directions)
and pulsing zooms to animate otherwise static
structures, creating moments of cinematic
abstraction and a visual affinity with jazz.
Jazz is the pulsing vein snaking through
much of Clarke’s work, right up to her final
feature Ornette: Made in America (1985), a portrait
of free jazz pioneer Ornette Coleman. Her first
feature, The Connection, includes a group of real
jazz musicians among the cast, adding a sense of
spontaneous authenticity to the subterranean
underworld being depicted. Jazz in this context
connotes a mood and a milieu, a hip stance by
then inscribed into the Beat Generation mythos
that Clarke’s film was consciously tapping into.
A love of avant-garde dance and
jazz inform Shirley Clarke’s complex,
kinetic portraits of lives lived at the
margins of American society
Birth of the cool: Shirley Clarke’s work emphasises improvisation, changes in dramatic intensity, syncopated editing and the apparent absence of a script
Clarke frequently spoke of how
her identification with outcasts
was informed by a feeling of not
belonging in a man’s world
PROFILE: SHIRLEY CLARKE
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