Introduction
Growing up watching classic Turkish melodramas (Yesilçam) that were aired over and over again on daytime television in the 1990s, their discolored imaginary world are always stuck in my memory. ‘Mommy’s Not Home’ is a video installation project that aims to convey the phantasy of that small kid, who is trying to keep his own mother figure at home, similarly to the female characters in those old melodramas.
Yesilçam melodramas have reflected, through the female figure, the Turkish modernization process and the perpetual tension caused by the desire for westernization. Just as is the case in the genre of the melodrama, in this work as well women are, on the one hand, positioned inside, i.e., within the home, while on the other they are passive characters who are nonetheless aware of their sexuality and that they are there for spectacle. As for the home, which, with its closed doors and drawn curtains, is, indeed, conceived as a claustrophobic space, it alludes to the continuity of the family as an institution and its domination over women.
Comprising a total of ten women’s videos and sets’ photographs, this work uses detailed 1:10 models of the actual Yesilçam film sets. The common element in all the sets is the staircase leading to an unknown destination; rather than a mere architectural form these become a vehicle for the women’s unavoidable transformation. The videos run in constant loop in which the women continue to deliver their roles with exaggerated gestures and mimics, the music – the sine qua non of melodrama – is included in the scene as if imposing moods on the spectator.
In this installation project, which is exhibited using CRT monitors placed side by side, television, on the one hand, becomes a representation of representation with this second plane it forms through the screening of a motion picture, and, on the other, lays emphasis on the claustrophobic world within which melodramas confine women.
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