Jamming in Traffic and Other Orchestrated Scenarios, Hyper Allergic, 2016
Mark Sheerin
BRIGHTON, UK — Johanna Billing is an artist who orchestrates and films idealistic group activities which involve the viewer, but only up to a bittersweet point. She finds volunteers to make music, improvise dance, sail, move into their apartments, run wild in an Italian city, or amuse themselves in a staged traffic jam. In each case, the situations she establishes are part real, part contrived, and, when viewed from the sidelines, remote. They inspire a hopeless yearning, a thwarted humanistic feeling of hope. Billing, who is Swedish, said someone once compared the sensation of her work to skavsår, which in her mother tongue means the chafing of a pair of new shoes. Billing herself appears to like this coinage; “skavsår of the soul!” she recalled with a laugh.
I spoke with Billing, via Skype, about her new film “Pulheim Jam Session,” which has been screening at the High Line in New York this summer. Pulheim is a conurbation of 12 villages, which the German government declared to be a town in the 1970s. Around the same time, jazz pianist Keith Jarrett drove to Köln to give a legendary improvised performance of his own. The Köln concert became the biggest selling solo jazz record of all time, and a key element in Billing’s film is a soundtrack of free jazz piano together with footage of pianist Edda Magnason.
Most of the film, however, is concerned with the transient community of motorists and passengers who find themselves jammed between two built-up zones in Pulheim. The volunteers read, picnic, and walk their dogs, in apparent unawareness of Billing’s cameras. But we can be sure that these “performers” know what to do in a traffic jam like this — Pulheim has apparently the highest number of cars per household in Europe: 2.7 cars. That’s just a bit of backstory unearthed by the artist, for whom research gives her otherwise whimsical films resonance and depth.
Perhaps Billing’s interest in communal situations stems from her own upbringing. The artist grew up in Jönköping, a town which, thanks to its proliferation of churches, is known as the Swedish Jerusalem. She told me worship, baptisms, and speaking in tongues were the three most common pastimes when she was a child. ‘“It was like a Mecca,” she said, “In my class … 75% of the other kids would belong to some of these small churches.” The town had few restaurants, even fewer bars, and the local arts center was a rare place to hang out.
“We had a culture center, where we organized concerts and that was one of the things you could do which was not the church,” she recalled. “That became my community.” But before discovering the devil had the best tunes, Billing was as pious as any local child. “I wanted to sing in the choir,” she said of her early engagement with the local church scene. “When I was younger I wanted so much to be part of one of these churches or communities because they organized the fun things.”
The smaller churches were not as broad as you might imagine and the non-involvement of Billing’s family meant that she remained somewhat of an outsider. With one foot in the camp of community, one foot on the outside, Billing looks back at this time with a sense of revelation: “I think maybe all these things that I work with, in groups, it probably has something to do with growing up in this city and always seeing this double side.” So while she acknowledges she comes off as “utopian,” the reality of her work is more ambivalent.
You might say it was music, rather than art, that gave Billing the sense of involvement she had missed out on. The artist worked as a music journalist while still at art school, to the mild horror of her tutors. Her enduring passion for music has led to work that, along with Jarrett’s improvisation, engages with compositions by Roky Erickson, Wildbirds & Peacedrums, Sidney Barnes, and Arthur Russell. In some cases, the musically trained artist will devise her own arrangements. And in all cases, the context of the chosen track will play well or contrast somehow with the context of her film. (It’s a footnote, but Billing was school friends with the Swedish indie band The Cardigans.)
“Being an artist still allows me to work with music,” she says, as she remembers the difficulty of choosing from a range of teenage interests, including history and architecture. A case in point is Billing’s film “Magical World” (2005), which quietly observes a music lesson at an after-school club in Zagreb. The children play and sing the eponymous track by Sidney Barnes. “At first glance, it’s such a trivial pop tune,” said the artist. But after further digging, the melancholic lyrics seem to speak to a new place and time as Croatia struggled to settle into the EU.
Given that she makes more or less short films which more or less build around a piece of music, it seemed worth asking if Billing grew up with MTV along with local evangelism. “You could see very little of it,” she says. “In the beginning maybe we didn’t even have MTV in Sweden … or we had a Swedish version of it and you could only see that maybe one hour a week!” But having said that, she concludes that MTV and its regional imitators “must have influenced me a lot.” Indeed, it was a director of music videos who taught Billing to edit.
“Even if all those first works [such as ‘Project for a revolution’, ‘Missing out’ and ‘Where she is at’] didn’t have music, everything in the editing for me was still about rhythm,” said Billing. “There are so many rules for how you edit and so many traditions in film, but I never learned that.” Instead, Billing likens her works to rhythmic compositions: “Somehow it’s like making music, even if there is no music or even if it’s a video as a format.”
One doubts whether Billing could make a straight-up music video. Her films are about music, rather than set to music. The music is a way into the idea, rather than the idea itself. In Pulheim, field recordings from car engines or car radios reassure you that you are watching a piece of art, as music bleeds into the broader category of sound design. But Billing does frame her subjects with melody or song. In all her films, music helps us to see how people share experience, acting as a visual aid and bonding agent, rather than auditory distraction.
Purplewashing: Claiming Ambiguous Space in Johanna Billing's In Purple, 2020
A Bench Moving Still, James Merle Thomas, 2016
Jamming in Traffic And Other Orchestrated Scenarios, Mark Scherin, Hyper Allergic, 2016
Learning How to Drive a Piano, Press, 2016
Keeping Time, Villa Croce, Genova, Press release, 2016
Pulheim Jam Session, Press release, 2015
I Wait, You Wait, He/She/It Waits by Lisa Marei Schmidt, 2013
Learning How to Drive a Piano, by Johanna Billing (Pulheim Jam Session Catalogue), 2013
Situation(s), Mac/Val, a conversation about You Don't Love Me Yet, 2012
I’m gonna live anyhow until I die, Press release, 2012
I’m Lost Without Your Rhythm, press release, 2011
Introduction by Bruce Haines, for I’m Lost Without Your Rhythm catalogue), 2009
Iasi, Romania, October 2008, by Christian Nae, 2009
Conversation with Cristian Nae, (for I’m Lost Without Your Rhythm catalogue), 2009
How To play a Landscape, Bryan Kuan Wood (This is How We walk on the moon, Mercer Union, 2009
Johanna Billing, by Juliana Enberg, (Tiny Movements, Catalogue, ACCA, 2009)
While Doing, interview by Robert Cook (Tiny Movements, Catalogue, ACCA, 2009)
A song between us, by Hannah Matthews, (Tiny Movements, Catalogue, ACCA, 2009)
Making Things happen, by Polly Staple (Look behind us, a blue skye), 2007
Forever Changes, Conversation with Philipp Kaiser (Look behind us, a blue skye), 2007
More Films about songs, cities and Circles, interview by Helena Selder, (Look behind us, a blue skye), 2007
Projects for a Revolution, by Rob Tufnell, (Look behind us, a blue skye), 2007
Waiting for Billing, by Maria Lind, (Look behind us, a blue skye), 2007
Getting there, by Chen Tamir, (Look behind us, a blue skye), 2007
Editing is Musical, by Carole Bertinet Look behind us, a blue skye), 2007
Some Thoughts on Billing, Stein and repetition, by Malin Ståhl, (Look behind us, a blue skye), 2007
More Texts About Songs and buildings, by Magnus Haglund (Look behind us, a blue skye), 2007
Regarding Us, by Cecilia Canziani, (Look behind us, a blue skye), 2007
Who is going to finish it? By Ivet Curlin, What How and for Whom (Look behind us, a blue skye), 2007
Sentimental Season, Johanna Billing’s Magical World by Mika Hannula, 2005, (Look behind us, a blue skye), 2007
The Lights go out, the moon wains, by Anne Tallentire, (Look behind us, a blue skye), 2007
A possible triology, by Jelena Vesic, (Look behind us, a blue skye), 2007
City Dwellers and Seafarers, by Kate Stancliffe, (Look behind us, a blue skye), 2007
Lets Go Swimming, by James Merle Thomas, (Look behind us, a blue skye), 2007
Malmö Konsthall, This is how we walk on the moon, interview by Jacob Fabricius, English/Swedish, 2007. (PDF)
More Milk Yvette A Journal of the broken screen, interview by David Berridge
Keep on doing, DCA, Dundee, Conversation with Judith Winter, 2007
This is how we walk on the moon, press release, Documenta, 2007
Another Album, press release, 2007
La Caixa Forum, Another Album, Conversation with Sylvia Sauquet, 2007 (PDF)
No More Reality, interview by Jelena Vesic, 2006 (PDF)
Setting the Scene, A note on the editing of the work of Johanna Billing, by Carole Bertinet, 2006
More films about Songs Cities and Circles, Marabouparken, interview by Helena Selder, 2006 in English, (PDF)
More films about Songs Cities and Circles, Marabouparken, interview by Helena Selder, 2006 in Swedish, (PDF)
Radikal Suplement: Sentimental Season, Johanna Billing’s Magical World by Mika Hannula, 2005
Istanbul Biennal, Interview by Angela Serrino, 2005
Magical World, Press release, 2005
Moscow Biennal, Johanna Billing by Jan Verwoert, 2005
If I can’t Dance I don’t want to be part of your revolution: You don’t love me yet, by Tanja Elstgeest, 2005
A future that might have worked: Between indecision and optimism: Johanna Billing by Nada Beros, Museum of Contemporary Art, Zagreb. 2004
Untitled as yet, Yugoslav Biennale of young artists Belgrade & Vrsac, Serbia & Montenegro, 2004
E-cart, Romania, Interview by Anders Jansson, 2004
CREAM 3: Johanna Billing, by Charles Esche, 2003
You don’t love me yet, press release, Index The Swedish Contemporary Art Foundation, 2003
Moderna Museet Projekt: Where she is at, Catalogue, text by Maria Lind and Mats Stjernestedt (PDF), 2001
Where she is at, Press release, Oslo Kunsthall, 2001
The collective as an option, interview by Åsa Nacking for Rooseum Provisorium, 2001
Make it happen, Interview by Frida Cornell for Organ (in Swedish), 2001