|
Cardboard
Squares- A Movie
Tamar Paikes, a plastic artist resides and creates
in Jerusalem
These days,
concluding several years of labor, Tamar has finished "Cardboard
Squares",
a documentary film relating the way she coped with the complex experience
of grief which befell on her family; a family who lost a father
and two older brothers. Her father Michael Paikes was killed during
the Six Day war, her eldest brother Yoni was killed in Ramat Ha'Golan
during the Yom Kipur war, and Daniel, her second brother, fell while
climbing the top of the Monte -Blanc. The movie tells the personal
story of Tamar and her family, while simultaneously raising questions
of memorialization and memory on an overall level as well, concerning
our Israeli society, which has been exposed to grief throughout
its existence and development.
During this film we accompany Tamar's journey in the footsteps of
her Father and two brothers, as she meets family members and friends
from the past, while sharing with us her fears and misgivings through
words and artistic creation.
Her mother Arnona acts as a central axis in this film, an extraordinary
woman who held, with all her power, a family that grew smaller and
smaller with each catastrophe throughout the years. After all the
men in the family died, she was left with two daughters.
Tamar relates her story: "throughout the years, I lived an
allegedly normal life, as if there is no grief. Only during the
making of this film did I understand that every step I make stems
from a ceaseless dialogue with the dead. Throughout the four years
of working on this movie, I've been trying to unveil the atmosphere
of mystery and vagueness surrounding the residence of death within
the house I grew up in. After years of living in the shadow of a
silence accompanying the grief in my house, in this movie I try
to confront between the repression dictated by my mother and my
basic existential need to talk and share my pain. The movie moves
between two poles, on the one end is a widow and loving mother,
bereaved, cynical, disillusioned, and angry, keeping at a distance
any national symbols that appropriate grief and the dead into the
heart of the nation. A woman who espouses the idea that life belongs
to life, believing that there is no use to fiddle with the dead.
I stand on the opposite pole, grappling, for the first time in my
life, with the classical formula of memory formation: a visit to
the cemetery, touring the location where the brother fell, and meeting
friends of the death. The movie examines the two alternatives.
I'm constantly attempting to connect the disjoint fragments, and
to find my own path, this is a necessary condition for my sanity.
I lost my father before I took my first breath in this world. I
never chose this or what happened later. I want to meet the world
again on my own terms".
Tamar participated in different projects of the 'Raz-Ram' foundation
as a guiding artist. We look forward to the screening of the movie
and the significant debate it will generate.
|