Making High Wire
By Catherine Yass
When I was a child I climbed out of my bedroom window, on to the roof and up to the top. It was about six in the morning. I sat astride the rooftop, exhilarated and frightened. Coming down was harder as the tiles kept slipping, making me lose my foothold.
High Wire is a dream of walking in the air, out into nothing. But it has an urban background and the high-rise buildings provide the frame and support. The dream of reaching the sky is also a modernist dream of cities in the air, inspired by a utopian belief in progress.
Every time I see Didier turning back I remember hearing him shout, from where I was standing on another rooftop, ‘C’est pas possible!’ But something was possible, he returned safely. And something emerged from the actuality of the walk, which was a moment when reality became more of a dream than the dream itself.
By James Lingwood, 2008
Before developing the idea of making a film of a man walking on a high wire, Catherine Yass had already made a number of photographic and video works which registered an experience of the urban environment from a startling perspective. In 2002, she suspended a film camera from a crane in London’s Docklands to create a destabilising video installation entitled Descent. Two years later, she attached a camera to a small remote-controlled helicopter which circled Broadcasting House, the BBC headquarters in London, to create another vertiginous viewing experience.
For both these works, Yass framed the idea, and then of necessity delegated the recording process. The proposal for High Wire involved a very different and more direct kind of human agency. By the time of our early meetings, the concept had crystallised as an idea to ask a high-wire artist to wear a tiny video camera attached to his head as he traversed the space between two very high buildings, walking on a very thin wire.
The choice of location was central to Yass’s conception for High Wire. She envisaged the high-wire artist walking between two concrete blocks of high-rise social housing: buildings emblematic of that momentous period in the history of the Western city when architects, planners and politicians first imagined, then began to implement, a vision for a new kind of city with a new kind of housing, reaching high into the sky.
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Image: installation shot of High Wire at the Whitworth, The University of Manchester in 2011. Photograph: Michael Pollard