#Grace Jones #R&B #new wave #art rock #electronic #industrial #post-punk #post-disco #actress #performance artist #Jamaican #music video
The Corporate Cannibal video is in black and white, and the only images that appear on the screen are those of Grace Jones’ face and upper body, black against a white background. But Jones’ figure is subject to all sorts of electronic distortions. The most common effect is one of elongation: her face is stretched upwards, as if she had an impossibly long forehead, as if her notorious late-80s flattop haircut had somehow expanded beyond all dimensions. Or else, her entire body in silhouette is thinned out, gracile (if that isn’t too much of a pun), and almost insectoid. The image also bends and fractures: her mouth stretches alarmingly, her eyes bulge out and expand across the screen like some sort of toxic stain. And sometimes Jones’ figure multiplies into two or three distorted, and imperfectly separated, clones. Nothing remains steady for more than a few seconds; the screen is continually morphing, and everything is so stylized and disrupted that we don’t get a very good sense of what Jones actually looks like today. Her facial features remain somewhat recognizable — Grace Jones has never looked like anyone else - and at a few moments, we get a brief almost undistorted close-up of her eyes, nose, and mouth - but there is something monstrous as well about this individuated “faciality”; and in any case it is gone almost before we have had the time to take it in. From: http://www.shaviro.com/Blog/?p=653