Celebrating River Phoenix
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SLATER BRADLEY AND ED LACHMAN: SHADOW - WHITNEY MUSEUM OF AMERICAN ART: 28 OCTOBER 2010 - 10 APRIL 2011

Artists have long engaged with the mythology of Hollywood, creating a hybrid of art and cinema that has become an important strand of contemporary art. Shadow (2010), a video installation by Slater Bradley in collaboration with Academy Award–nominated cinematographer Ed Lachman, takes as its inspiration the unfinished Hollywood film Dark Blood (1993) for which Lachman was the cinematographer. In the film, River Phoenix plays a disturbed, young, half–Navajo widower who lives like a hermit near a nuclear testing site in the Nevada desert, waiting for the apocalypse and making kachina dolls that he believes have magic powers. Phoenix’s character’s wife died from radiation poisoning from the site. A married couple becomes stranded when their car breaks down in the desert and they are rescued by the widower, who falls in love with the woman. The film progresses to a dramatic ending in which the young man dies, but because of Phoenix’s own untimely death, the final scenes were never filmed.

Based on Lachman’s memories and impressions of filming Dark Blood seventeen years prior, Shadow constructs a prologue that imagines the widower’s life just before he meets the couple. Although it contains references to what takes place in the original film (now the future) and is haunted by Phoenix’s ghostly presence, major elements of the original—the couple, the car breaking down, the attraction of the widower to the woman—do not appear in Bradley and Lachman’s film, and parts of their story—the little girl, the deserted house, the bar—do not appear in the original. The two narratives are woven together by threads of fact and fiction whose boundaries are never made clear. The bar in Shadow was the one frequented by Phoenix while filming the original movie, for example, and the location, near the Capitol Reef in Utah, is the same as in Dark Blood. The photographs found by the widower in the prologue were discovered by chance by Lachman and Bradley in the bar. They were taken in 1993 and show Lachman and Phoenix at work on Dark Blood. In a further twist, Ben Brock, who plays Phoenix as the widower, bears an uncanny resemblance to Slater Bradley. Shadow thus becomes a triple portrait of the actor, the cinematographer, and the artist, transforming a conventional cinematic narrative into a labyrinthine tale that blurs the lines between illusion and reality, past and future.
Slater Bradley, Ed Lachman, Shadow, Dark Blood, River Phoenix
Slater Bradley, Ed Lachman, Shadow, Dark Blood, River Phoenix
Slater Bradley, Ed Lachman, Shadow, Dark Blood, River Phoenix
During the shooting of the uncompleted film Dark Blood, Ed Lachman, the film's cinematographer, took a number of black-and-white Polaroid photographs as exposure checks, including this image of River acting in the deathbed scene that was to have occurred at the end of the film.
River Phoenix Dark Blood death scene
Installation View - Whitney Museum of American Art.
​Photographs by Bill Orcutt.
Slater Bradley, Ed Lachman, Shadow, Dark Blood, River Phoenix
Slater Bradley, Ed Lachman, Shadow, Dark Blood, River Phoenix
Slater Bradley, Ed Lachman, Shadow, Dark Blood, River Phoenix
Slater Bradley, Ed Lachman, Shadow, Dark Blood, River Phoenix
Copyright - Ed Lachman and Slater Bradley

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  • Home
  • Menu
    • Bio
    • Did You Know?
    • Activist
    • Earth Day 1990
    • Filmography
    • Dark Blood
    • Quotes By River
    • Quotes About River
    • In Search Of River Phoenix: The Truth Behind The Myth - By Barry .C. Lawrence
    • Phoenix Press
    • Miscellaneous/Other
  • Updates & Blog
  • Contact Me
    • About CRP
    • Links
    • Guestbook
    • Fanlisting
  • River Exclusives
  • Visions Of Rio
    • Fan Art
  • Aleka's Attic
    • Music
    • Felix And The Hurricanes - Rise River Rise
  • 25 Years Without River
    • 20 Years Without River
    • 40th Birthday Fan Wall
    • Memorial Bridge At Kanapaha Botanical Gardens - Gainesville, Florida
    • Memorial Garden - Arcadia, California
  • RPCP Official
  • Paul Walker Mini-Site
  • In Loving Memory Of Corey Haim