The Work
In the works
Films
- Charismatic Megafauna
- Mighty Tacoma
- FULL ON LOG JAM
- Woodswoman
- Babyman
- Little White Horse
- Portrait #3: House of Sound
- Red Stallions Revenge
- Portrait #2: Trojan
- Lure
- Portrait #1: Cascadia Terminal
- Britton, South Dakota
- 9 is a secret
- Westward Ho
- Richart
- Satan's Holiday
- The Ugly Movie
- Yawn
- The Yodeling Lesson
- Olympia
- Mine
- Food is a Weapon
- Crowdog
- Warning
- U.C.A. Box
- Worse
- Random Union
- Rube Ranch
- Toxic Shock
- Fatal Plus
Installations
- flat as a board (knot)
- Longhorn
- The Dirt Bird
- Zoobomb Pyle
- The House of Sound
- Nice Package
- Lovejoy Lost
- Hope and Prey
- Patriot Act
- Rising Up
- Hunting Requires Optimism
- Drivers Lounge
- Rubberneck
- Clearcut
- The Yodeling Lesson Installation
- A Nice Ass
- Below
- Ring
Photography
Books
Curation
- A Natural Selection
- Hunker Down To Rise Above
- Stumptown Sap
- Follow Me To Certain Death
- The Hunt
- DeComposer
- Beamsplitters
Tours
Stencils
Portrait #3: House of Sound
11 minutes 22 seconds 2009
35mm to HD
cinematography: Eric Edwards
score: Jef Brown
edit: Vanessa Renwick
online edit : Tim Scotten
film transfer: Jim Barrett- Downstream
made with support from Ruth Ann Brown and the Regional Arts & Culture Council
The Portrait Series is part of an ongoing series of filmed places, stories and histories of Cascadia
with scores by musicians living in the Pacific Northwest.
"Circling the empty corner where a historic Portland record store once stood among a strip of black jazz clubs, Portrait #3: House of Sound is a testimonial to a community and cultural space recently demolished. The beautiful black and white 35mm footage, subtly tinged with loneliness, both juxtaposes and compliments the rich, vibrant voices sampled from a radio broadcast tribute to the record shop. The film moves between laughter, fond memories, melancholy and finally, conviction that despite physical destruction, the House of Sound will never die."-MIXFEST
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Vanessa Renwick
House of Sound
by Jon Raymond
Like the song says: you don’t know what you’ve got ‘til it’s gone.
We
know this is true, more or less. We feel it whenever we say goodbye to
our friends and loved ones at the end of the night. We sense it in the
aging buildings we walk past on the street. We see it in our own
thinning pants. Everyday, this minor shock of sorrow is available, a
dim background awareness of time’s passage, and a vague comprehension
of the demonic, inverse ratio between a thing’s presence in our lives
and its preciousness in our minds. As things fade from view, they
assume a final shape, and sweeten in the honeycomb of memory.
Joni
Mitchell made a hectoring folk song of the sentiment. She seems to
think we could know what we’ve got before it’s gone, and the fact that
we don’t is a matter of our own lousy morals. A harder truth to
consider, though, is the one that suggests we literally cannot know;
that we are physically barred from comprehending the value of what we
adore until the moment it ceases to exist. It is only in the presence
of death, absence, that the heart really opens.
Vanessa Renwick,
filmmaker, installation artist, mother, and activist, brings us to this
hard truth with some regularity. In a series of artworks over the past
decade she has bravely eulogized the passing of such unlikely public
objects as traffic onramps, nuclear reactors, and civil rights
protections in the Bush-Cheney era, allowing viewers the chance to note
whatever lingering anger, resignation, bitterness, or euphoria these
respective disappearances might imply. In “Clearcut,” for example, the
artist documents the destruction of public murals largely taken for
granted until their final moments of existence. In “Portrait #2:
Trojan” she records (with the help of cameraman Eric Edwards) the
implosion of a mothballed nuclear plant, an unloved monument that is
now, nonetheless, perversely missed.
The most recent object of
Renwick’s attention is the dearly departed building on the corner of
Beech and Williams that once housed the House of Sound, a record store,
community anchor, and landmark for passersby. Founded in1964, the
store was itself the remnant of a nearly mythic neighborhood in the
city’s history, a strip of black jazz clubs that evaporated with the
development of Memorial Coliseum and Emanuel Hospital in the area. In
retrospect, the lost neighborhood has come to seem like a flashing
sliver of Harlem itself, a beacon of livelier, more colorful times in a
part of town only recently rediscovered by developers.
Renwick’s
response to the loss of the House of Sound is characteristically
stalwart and unintrusive. Like a kind of hospice nurse of community
architecture, she has quietly tended the patient, dressing its wounds,
cleaning its body, making room for relatives to view the remains. She
has collected family histories and arranged the services. Here, now,
the sign rests, surrounded by votive candles, as ghostly images and
voices, remembering, float in the air.
What is there to say,
though? The House of Sound is gone. It’s a fact we have to deal with,
as we deal with any number of unhappy changes in life. The loss is not
exactly tragic-"another wrecked building in the constant wreckage of
the city’s upward progress-"but to let it go unrecognized would have
been. Thanks to Renwick, we are at least allowed a moment to mark the
passage. Thanks to Renwick, the preservationist, we are granted the
dignity of mourning.

