MILITARY EYES

A Camera Obscura Project in the Army Bunkers

of the Golden Gate

Headlands Center for the Arts, San Francisco, USA, 1996

Military Eyes - Golden Gate
Military Eyes - BATTERY WAGNER
Military Eyes - BUNKER B1S1#129
Military Eyes - BUNKER B4S4 DAVIS
Military Eyes - BUNKER B1S1 WALLACE
Military Eyes - BUNKER B1S1 SMITH
Military Eyes - B1S1 RATHBONE
Military Eyes - Luftbild
Military Eyes - Karte
Military Eyes - Karte
Military Eyes - Karte
Military Eyes - Roaming through Bunkers
Military Eyes - Hit the Road
Military Eyes - RAGS ONLY BATTERY WALLACE
Military Eyes - ACTING AT NIKE MISSILE BASE
Military Eyes - ACTING IN BUNKER B1S1#129
Military Eyes - Detail
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Aerial view (infrared)
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Aerial view (infrared)
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Extract from catalog: FRANZ JOHN – MILITARY EYES

Military Eyes - Triangle

Franz John, a Berlin-based artist, developed the project which became »Military Eyes« as a site-specific investi­gation while an Artist-in-Residence at Headlands Center for the Arts (HCA) in 1996. He chose the site for this pro­ject because of its location amidst the unique con­fluence of military architecture and dramatic wilder­ness.

Following old military maps, Franz John explored the area on foot, becoming intimately familiar with the terrain and military architecture. Using the vantage points provided by the remains of the military bunkers, John recorded traces of the soldiers’ activities and observations made in the bunkers. He employed both the older camera obscura technique, and a modern hand copier drawn across the concrete surfaces.

Unlike traditional photographic techniques, the copier allowed him to work instantly and capture visual information on site. To gain artistic access to this unusual architecture, John explored ideas about the potential relationship between strategic planning, tactical behavior (i.e. selection of place) and aesthetic perception.

Pazifiküste, Beobachtungsbunker, Blick durch den Sehschlitz.
Project Military Eyes – Pacific Coast, military bunker, view through observation slit, 1996

In his words, “carvings on the wall, sketches, notes and even accidental traces can give infor­mation about how generations of soldiers have lived and what they might have perceived. Those traces are also references of collective percep­tion as the point of view throughout the bunkers was stand­ard­ized by the restricted views from observation slits. While I’m working, I think about the boredom of the soldiers who spent hour after hour in the bunkers doing tedious »militar-fremde« jobs such as plotting wind direction, the humidity in the air and even the rotation of the earth”.

 


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