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THE
BOAT GOD OF THE LAKESIDE SPORTS CLUB
TAZ, 1.6.2006
It's Just a God Doing the Job!
A sassy and imaginative combination of documentary film, conceptual
art and social work:? Robert Bramkamp's film "The Boat God of
the Lakeside Sports Club" opens today at the Brotfabrik
by Brigitte Werneburg
As God, you haven't got a chance in this country. As God, you are
condemned to long-term unemployment. None of the pious Christian,
Judaist or Muslim faiths need to even bother nodding their heads in
agreement of this; as of yet, it has never been reported anywhere
that their God has even once applied to a job-creation program. Enki,
the 5,000-year-old Sumerian Bringer of Civilization, on the other
hand, did just that. And he failed.
At the moment he is a freelance artist, which is what he probably
was for the longest time. Whether or not he could get funding for
an "I-Inc." program is not mentioned in Robert Bramkamp's
documentary film about the Wendisch-Rietz Lakeside Sports Club, which
is where Enki was active a summer long. The film ends with Enki trying
to convince his employment office caseworker to extend his job-creation
program position at the sports club – if not as a god, then
at least as an actor playing god. That way, he could deal with the
permitted cultural tasks as defined by location and simultaneously
slip into the role of janitor, thus also getting the required work
at the sports club done.
On the one side, the proper job, which generates taxes and social
benefits for the state; on the other, the voluntary activities that
have nothing to do with the job market – Robert Bramkamp has
transferred this socio-political, volatile fiction into a aesthetic
fiction: He has taken the actual, existing fulltime job at the Wendisch-Rietz
Lakeside Sports Club (which, in turn, cannot afford to pay for it)
and simply defined it as a godly issue. This brilliant maneuver changes
his documentary film into a great film, a film both impudently political
and extremely imaginative visually.
Enki, Sumerian God and totally normal, German job-creation program
participant, has landed. Not in the chic Bad Saarow, but in an un-chic
location. And there he wants to now distribute the mythical Me amongst
the people – 100 of them, each one enabling a special ability.
Me 33 permits the discovery of the correct house paint color. Each
Me gets a yellow numbered sign and a location; this way Bramkamp can
approach the facets of life and work at the club strictly documentarily
while simultaneously but slowly labeling and serially numbering the
entire landscape. Mundane jobs are staged as performance, and the
commonplace documentary torques into a comedy. Picture postcards of
the lake at sundown become intelligent conceptual art.
And here again Rober Bramkamp tests the limits of documentary film:
Enki is really a role, and the actor Steffen "Schortie"
Scheumann takes some risks in it. For he must help the laymen in their
performances – the people at the club, from the lake and surrounding
area – and they should not let themselves be distracted by Enki
and his Godly, prophetic demeanor. It does not always work out like
that, which sometimes takes its toll on Steffen Scheumann's act. Exactly
that, however, brings the documentary aspect of the film back into
play: The question of the maintenance and development of the lakeside
sport club's social topography. On the Internet, the website www.enki100.net
continues to promote and drive the pertinent artistic activities of
the network project.
Den Artikel finden Sie unter:
http://www.taz.de
Copyright ©
Contrapress media GmbH
Vervielfältigung nur mit Genehmigung des taz-Verlags
Erscheinungsdatum 1.6.2006, S. 27, 120 Z.
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