Harun Farocki
- Original name in full:
- Harun El Usman Faroqhi
- Born:
- January 9, 1944, Neutitschein, Sudetenland (now Nový Jičín, Czech Republic
- Also Known As:
- Harun El Usman Faroqhi
Harun Farocki (born January 9, 1944, Neutitschein, Sudetenland (now Nový Jičín, Czech Republic—died July 30, 2014, Berlin, Germany) was a Czech-born German filmmaker, video artist, and writer known for his provocative politicized “film-essays,” assemblages of footage from several sources accompanied by subtitles or voice-over commentary.
Farocki, who changed the spelling of his last name as a young man, was born to an Indian father and a German mother. At the end of World War II, the Faroqhi family left Neutitschein (then in Nazi-occupied Sudetenland) for India and then, during the partition of India in 1947, went to West Java, Indonesia, before settling in Hamburg (then in West Germany) in 1958. Farocki left home in 1962 for West Berlin, where he studied drama, sociology, and journalism at the Free University. Interested in the work and theory of Bertolt Brecht and the films of French New Wave director Jean-Luc Godard and having already begun writing film criticism for local papers, Farocki turned to film studies (1966–68) at the German Film and Television Academy. When in 1968 he joined other radical activists in occupying the school and renaming it for the influential Soviet filmmaker Dziga Vertov, he was suspended.
In 1969 Farocki created Nicht löschbares Feuer (The Inextinguishable Fire), a 25-minute agitprop film that explored and criticized the use of napalm during the Vietnam War. Typifying what would become his characteristic film-essay structure, the film built an argument from found film clips and photographic images. Farocki incorporated footage of the Dow Chemical Company factory in which napalm was manufactured. He also went on camera and read the testimony of a Vietnamese survivor of a napalm bombing and—to help the viewer imagine the extremely painful feeling of napalm on the skin—extinguished a cigarette on his arm.
Unable to find funding for the genre of films he was interested in making, Farocki became a writer and editor for Filmkritik magazine in 1974, a position he held through 1984. During the 1970s he supported his filmmaking by directing television programs, including episodes of Sesamstrasse (the German version of Sesame Street) in 1973. He meanwhile continued producing experimental films that explored the power of images and the nuances of perception, including Der Ärger mit den Bildern (1973; “The Trouble with Images”), which addressed the overuse of images by television news. That film was his first composed entirely of pre-existing footage, none of which had been created by Farocki himself. In 1978 he made his first (of three) fictional feature film, Zwischen zwei Kriegen (Between Two Wars), in which Farocki played the role of a filmmaker working on a film about the German steel industry boom during the Weimar period. His two other feature films were Etwas wird Sichtbar (1982; Before Your Eyes, Vietnam), a meditation on personal versus official collective memories of the Vietnam War, and Betrogen (1985; Betrayed), a Hitchcock-influenced story of murder and cover-up gone wrong.
Farocki was particularly prolific in the 1980s and ’90s. While further exploring the power of images, he honed his slow-paced, observational aesthetic beginning with the film Ein Bild (1983; An Image), in which he spent four days observing and filming a Playboy centrefold photo shoot. For his critically acclaimed Bilder der Welt und Inschrift des Krieges (1988; Images of the World and the Inscription of War), he showed blurry aerial images of the Auschwitz concentration and extermination camp that had been taken in 1944 by the Allies. The film then reveals that the photographs were taken as part of a reconnaissance mission to document the region’s industrial sites and that the CIA did not realize that it had also photographed Auschwitz until the late 1970s.
Farocki’s films of the 1990s were all created from existing images and film footage, including surveillance and archival footage, professional training videos, and his own prerecorded material. In other words, he performed most of his directorial work as an editor rather than behind a camera. In Leben - BRD (1990; How to Live in the Federal Republic of Germany)—an ironic film that comments on the disciplined nature of West German society and how life is learned rather than simply lived—Farocki pieced together 32 scenes from instructional videos on such topics as childbirth, police training, how to cross a street safely, and bank employee training. In 1995 Farocki produced Schnittstelle (“Interface”), his first work for a museum setting. It marked a turning point in his career, because up to that point he had produced films for television or theatres. Many of his later works were video installations that dealt with issues related to war and violence and the role therein of technology and surveillance. Among the notable later works were Ich glaubte, Gefangene zu sehen (2000; I Thought I was Seeing Convicts), in which he worked with prison surveillance videos; Auge/Machine I–III (2001–03; Eye/Machine I–III), in which he examined images of war and the technology used to make them; and Ernste Spiele I–IV (2009–10; Serious Games I–IV), which treated combat training simulators.
Farocki created more than 100 films over the course of nearly five decades. He exhibited widely, was the subject of several major solo exhibitions and retrospectives, and participated in the German art festival Documenta (1997, 2007). He also held teaching positions at the University of California at Berkeley (1993–99) and at the Academy of Fine Arts in Vienna (2004–11).