A man returns home at night. He blinds himself and picks up the lamp, creating shadows on the walls. The image switches to a negative, and the man staggers through a doorway and collapses. He wakes up in a garden full of flowers.[1]
Production
Brakhage moved from Denver to San Francisco in late 1953, living with poet Robert Duncan and artist Jess Collins. He discovered the Art in Cinema series organized by Frank Stauffacher at the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art. He took odd jobs to finance his filmmaking practice, shooting The Boy and the Sea and The Extraordinary Child.[2][3]
While living in New York, Brakhage was introduced by James Tenney to the music of Edgard Varèse.
Brakhage wanted to use a recording of Edgard Varèse's Ionisation for the film's soundtrack. He went to New York to approach Varèse about using it in the film, but his request was rejected because Varèse did not own the copyright to the recording.[4][5] Brakhage ended up spending some time studying under Varèse and learning about "the relationship between music and film".[6]
Analysis
Critic P. Adams Sitney characterized The Way to Shadow Garden as a trance film.[7] It is influenced by the psychodramas of Maya Deren, such as Meshes of the Afternoon. The film deals with the subjects of sexual anxiety, masturbation, loneliness, and suicide.[8]
^Hamlyn, Nicky (2018). "Brakhage's Blacks". In Leslie, Esther; Lori, Marco (eds.). Stan Brakhage the realm buster. Indiana University Press. pp. 11–14.
^Anker, Steve; Varela, Willie (2005). "Remembering Stan Brakhage: An E-mail Conversation between Steve Anker and Willie Varela". Journal of Film and Video. 57 (1/2): 14–15.
^"Program". Film Culture. Vol. 46. October 1968. p. 13.