Sunday, May 2, 2010

Waste Land

Waste Land (Director: Lucy Walker): Last summer in Toronto we had a garbage strike, and after a few weeks garbage began being piled up in out­door skating rinks and other city prop­erty. Suddenly our trash wasn’t some­thing we could throw away and forget about; we were living next to it, and it stunk. I sin­cerely hoped that when the strike was settled, people wouldn’t forget the images and the smells, and that it might lead to a more thoughtful approach to recyc­ling, com­posting and other ways of redu­cing the amount of stuff we toss away. I’m sad to say that the cit­izens of our city went right back to our old ways, but it’s always good to be reminded about our garbage. Lucy Walker’s film does that and a whole lot more.

Brooklyn-based but Brazilian-born artist Vik Muniz grew up poor on the streets of Sao Paolo. Now suc­cessful beyond his wildest dreams, he decides that he wants to give some­thing back to the poor of his home­land. Always an innov­ator in using inter­esting mater­ials in his art, he becomes inter­ested in the Jardim Gramacho, Rio de Janeiro’s (and indeed the world’s) largest land­fill. At this massive facility, “pickers” are paid to extract recyc­lable mater­ials from the enormous moun­tains of trash. Like worker ants, they swarm over each new load of garbage as it is dumped. There are 3,000 of these pickers, and they are rep­res­ented by an asso­ci­ation, headed by the cha­ris­matic Tiao. We meet Tiao along with a whole group of pickers who will become par­ti­cipants in Muniz’s most ambi­tious pro­ject to date. He will use garbage to con­struct large-scale por­traits of some of the pickers, posed as if they were in classic paintings.

Along the way, we dis­cover that the pickers have a rich sub­cul­ture, and while some are proud of their work, others long to leave the dump. Many were part of lower-middle-class fam­ilies until unex­pected tra­gedies forced them into a life of scav­en­ging. Many have worked at the land­fill since they were chil­dren, and they claim with dig­nity that they do honest work, and that is better than selling drugs or pros­ti­tuting them­selves like so many other poor Brazilians.

As the pickers col­lab­orate with Muniz on the huge mosaics, he tells them of his plan to sell pho­to­graphic prints and return all the money to them. But quite apart from the money, the oppor­tunity to use the mater­ials they work with every day to create art has a pro­found effect on them. Some find new dig­nity in what they do, while others gain the con­fid­ence to leave picking to try some­thing else. While I was slightly ambi­valent about Muniz using these people as material for his work, Walker wisely includes a scene where he and his wife and col­leagues argue about just this topic. In the end, he feels that doing any­thing is better than doing nothing, and I tend to agree.

One of the very beau­tiful themes of the film is that art is trans­form­ative. Muniz talks about that moment when the raw mater­ials (paint, sand, even garbage) is trans­formed into some­thing dif­ferent. When we look at a painting, for instance, we move closer and fur­ther from the canvas to observe this effect, and with Muniz’ giant trash mosaics, the effect is even more pro­nounced. But quite apart from the lit­eral meaning, we can see that the raw mater­ials of these pickers’ lives are being trans­formed by this pro­cess into some­thing even more beau­tiful than paintings.

Reminiscent of Born Into Brothels, Waste Land will hope­fully have just as pro­found an effect on the lives of at least a few of its participants.

Official site of the film

Here is the Q&A with dir­ector Lucy Walker and pro­ducer Angus Aynsley from after the screening, con­ducted by Hot Docs Director of Programming Sean Farnel:

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Duration: 21:21

9/10(9/10)

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