MIRON ZOWNIR

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Beyond the prosaic boundaries of reality




Miron Zownir. Berlin 2016 . © Miron Zownir




Miron Zownir was born in 1953 in Karlsruhe, Germany. He moved to West-Berlin in the seventies at his early twenties and tried to get accepted at the Berlin Film School, but he was refused and survived with temporary jobs in poor neighbourhoods trying to avoid any feeling of frustration. He took then the camera and began to film in the streets of Kreuzberg, Neukölln and Wedding, where people lived in very hard conditions. The wall at that time was there also very close keeping tourism away and the architecture had still the print of Hitler megalomania mixed by then with the threat of communism. Some years later he moved to London and lived the birth of the punk movement with its volcanic cocktail of nihilism and self-destruction, before expatriating to the United States in 1981, where he stayed until 1995 when he finally moved back again to Berlin after a failed movie project and a sense of artistic isolation. He needed to write in German, he reminds. He has since 1986 written and directed ten short films and worked in collaborating projects with Alexandre Rockwell, Ryu Murakami and Chosei Funahara, as well as a feature-length documentary which was shown at the 2003 Berlin Film Festival. He has written five novels like Kein schlichter Abgang (No easy way out) published in 2003, and a book of short stories, Parasiten der Ohnmacht (Parasites of Hopelessness), published first in 2009 and again in 2011 in the format of audio book featuring thirteen short stories from Zownir's original book and music by FM Einheit. As a photographer, he was hailed by Terry Southern as the "Poet of Radical Photography" and his work has been exhibited in galleries and museums in several countries. He is an artist that sees the light in the dark, in ambiguity, in the other side of the artificial moon created by our decadent western society. To get into Zownir’s work is to get into mystery, into the land of the never answered questions, even the ones never wondered, probably because as The Beatles once sang “living is easy with eyes closed, misunderstanding all you see.” Miron Zownir let us see and wonder.

What is poetry?

There are so many definitions and so many different expressions of poetry, from a simple hearted love letter to the complexity of a drama by Shakespeare or the hallucinatory nightmare voyage of Lautréamont’s Maldoror. But you can also find poetry in an enchanting smile, in the shape and colour of a leave, in the sound of the wind, in anything that triggers your emotions, phantasy and sensations beyond the prosaic boundaries of reality.  

You work on poetry through words but also through photography and filmmaking. What do these visual languages give you that you can’t achieve through the words?

That’s pretty obvious. With words you depend very much on the interpretation of the reader. You could describe a personal crises and someone might think it’s hilarious. You trigger imaginations but everybody’s vision is different. As a photographer you are much more a witness of a moment in time.  And if you’re more abstract and not that explicit you can create images that are closer to drawings or paintings. Film is like recreating or cloning life even if your space up into the most delirious adventures…

Your work is often described as radical. Do you think our society needs radicalism? And what’s radical for you?

Well what’s the contrary to radicalism? Conformism? Hitler, Stalin, Mao were fucking radical too. So is ISIS. Like anything else it depends. Radical is just a word. In my case it means that I don’t censor myself and choose subjects that are not very pleasant, entertaining or commercial.  

One could say that to reduce reality to the use of black and white is to simplify it. What’s the reason behind that use?

You could also say b/w makes it more mysterious, abstract and harder to grab.

Your photography and your films are more fruit of spontaneity or of a previous stage design?

You’re talking about two completely different approaches. My photography is mostly very spontaneous and I’m working alone. My films might have the visual quality of my photos. But filmmaking is a much longer and no solitary process. I write the script, hand pick the locations, do the casting and the directing. I have the privilege of a great cameraman, a great producer and great actors. But I work without any or a very limited budget because the film boards consider me too “radical”.  

Your work often focuses on marginality and its causes. Attraction or denounce?

Definitely no denounce. Why should I devote a big part of my life to a subject I’d despise? That’s absurd. And I’m definitely more attracted to a sexy girl than to a miserable person dying in public. But people on the edge don’t get much attention from anybody else, they have no lobby or support. And there are thousands of other reasons to pay attention to them. And yes there is a kind of feeling of fraternity, compassion and admiration.

Your latest film is Back to nothing shot on abandoned locations in Berlin. There’s a character that announces the end of the world surrounded by broken lives completely hidden by society. Now there is the tragedy of refugees, which are not real refugees because they are still looking for a refuge that Europe denies them.  What is your opinion about this situation and about the reaction of European governments and European citizens?

As I understand a refugee is a person looking for a refuge. Not a person who has already refuge. Anyway I think there are already millions of people in Europe getting food, a roof over their heads and medical attention. Maybe that’s not enough but in what other continent or country would you get that much? And how many more million refugees can Europe shelter? People now in need but with a potentially different outlook, religion and values. Anyone denying a potential cultural clash is a fool. Of cause harbouring refugees is potential business, but the lower income population of Europe will not profit from it. And the ones that profit from it won’t share their profits with the ones in need. On the contrary. Regardless of all this future problems and many more to come I’m always with the underdogs and I wouldn’t deny any of them shelter. But I want to live in a free world and Europe is already too restricted for me. And I don’t need more religious intolerance, or moralistic imperatives because for me any religion is poison.

As an admirer of Einstürzende Neubauten music I must ask you about your project with FM Einheit and the actor Birol Ünel around your book PARASITES OF HOPELESSNESS (Parasiten der Ohnmacht). What could you tell me about this project and about all these parasites of hopelessness?

Unfortunately it’s not translated into English. It was written in German and translated into Bulgarian. Otherwise you could have read it and make up your mind about it. It covers a whole range of losers, psychopath, criminals, drifters, grifters, dreamers and loners. A parasite of hopelessness is a person forced into an unbearable living condition due to a lack of recognition, respect, charisma, health, opportunities, talents or self-esteem. A person living at the fringe and mercy of society eating its crumbs. 
   
Birol and I recorded 13 short stories and poems from my book and FM Einheit did a great soundtrack for it. I would highly recommend the audiobook to anyone. As well as the book “Parasiten der Ohnmacht”, as well as any of my photobooks such as “NYC RIP”, “Down and Out in Moscow”, “Ukrainian Night” etc.

That project also features a special photo show for your short story Final destiny. What is your final destiny? And what do you think is going to be the final destiny of western society?

My final destiny is a grave yard, becoming a speck of dust or an undetectable grain of mud. Ashes to ashes, dust to dust…

As for Europe it will lose its identity. It will be overrun by people who don’t believe in birth control or victims of people that don’t believe in birth control. Victims of wars and starvation, victims of political and religious intolerance. People who will love it and integrate and people who will hate it and fight it. And ultimately Europe will become a potential warzone as any Arabic or African country. With the globalisation and victory of capitalism the cleft between the poor and the superrich will become absolutely intolerant.  Racism is already on the rise! Add to it envy, frustration, hatred, fear and materialistic deficits and Europe slips out of its save and cosy comfort zone.      

Could you tell me a memory from your childhood?

I was a chasing with two other kids towards an entrance of a beautiful garden. But the door was too narrow for three kids. I was half a step ahead of the other two, got pushed by I never found out who, smashed with my forehead at a concrete pillar woke up in the hospital and got yelled at by a Nazi nurse sewing my wound with a gigantic needle that I should keep calm and take it like a man.




Miron Zownir photography | A selection here


An interview by Juan Carlos Romero
Photo by Miron Zownir
All rights reserved