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TLDR

Candice Breitz
TLDR, 2018
Thirteen channel video installation
Variable Dimensions

Candice Breitz
‘TLDR,' 2017
13-Channel Installation / 13 Hard Drives:
3 Projections, 10 Flatscreen Monitors 
This installation is shown across two separate rooms: Installation:
3-Channel Projection, colour, sound
Duration: 60 minutes Interview Room:
10 Suspended Monitors, colour, sound
Duration: Approximately 11 hours
 A sequel to ‘Love Story’
A demand for the decriminalisation of consensual sex work.
A portrait of a Cape Town-based community of sex workers.
A reflection on the relationship between whiteness, privilege and visibility.
A celebration of the resilience of a community against impossible odds.
A calling into question of the fetishisation of celebrity.
A treatise on the obsolescence of white feminism.
A dissection of the attention economy.
A cautionary tale about social media.
A musical. ‘TLDR’—a multi-channel video installation—is a portrait of a community of sex workers who live and work in Cape Town. The work grew out of a series of interviews (these are included in the two-room installation) and an intensive workshop with the featured participants, extending an ongoing conversation between Breitz and SWEAT (the Sex Workers Education & Advocacy Taskforce), the non-profit organisation with which the sex workers are affiliated. In the first room of the installation, a 12-year-old narrator occupies the central screen of a three-channel projection. He recounts a true story from the recent past, vividly evoking an ideological battle that pitted feminists against feminists, and human rights organisation Amnesty International against an awkward coalition of prominent Hollywood actresses and sex work abolitionists. Delivered with the disarming frankness of a child, the dramatic tale underscores the life-and-death stakes motivating the international struggle of sex workers for basic human rights. A Greek chorus composed of eleven sex workers responds to the story as it unfolds, annotating and animating the boy’s words from the screens to his left and right. The chorus offers commentary via dozens of protest posters bearing slogans drawn from the archives of sex work advocacy. Their commentary is set within a minimal choreography that features a range of props inspired by the opinion-saturated vernacular of social media. Costumed in a shade of orange that is the signature colour of SWEAT (but also of the uniforms worn by convicted offenders in South African prisons), the collective’s calls for the decriminalisation and de-stigmatisation of their labour is articulated via synchronised gesture, ‘white privilege masks,’ over-sized emojis, hand-painted signage, a grim reaper figure and the power of protest song. The three-channel narrative is embedded in a soundtrack that bounces between improvisatory performances of a range of protest songs drawn from the portrayed community’s shared repertoire (sung predominantly in Zulu and Xhosa), and bite-sized sound samples derived from popular hits that reference sex work (from Tina Turner to Rihanna, from Roy Orbison to Donna Summer). ‘TLDR’ was shot on location in Cape Town during October 2017, following a week-long workshop with the SWEAT community. The three-channel installation has a duration of 60 minutes. In the second room of ‘TLDR,’ visitors are invited to spend time with a series of intimate documentary interviews, via which the first-person testimonies of the same sex workers can be heard. The interviewees offer frank comment on their labour, describe the socio-political conditions under which they found their way into sex work, and articulate their political goals as sex work activists. Collectively, these spoken testimonies add up to approximately eleven hours of viewing. Very much a sequel to Breitz’s ‘Love Story’ (2016)—which can be accessed via a separate link on this Vimeo page—‘TLDR’ invites reflection on the relationship between whiteness, privilege and visibility; and on the shrinkage of attention spans within an information economy that fetishizes celebrity and thrives on entertainment. Addressing the often-fraught relationship between art and activism, the work points a finger at itself to bluntly ask whether and how artists living privileged lives can succeed in amplifying calls for social justice and meaningfully representing marginalised communities. ‘TLDR’ is narrated by Xanny ‘The Future’ Stevens, and features a cast of activists affiliated with SWEAT (the Sex Workers Education & Advocacy Taskforce): Zoe Black, Connie, Duduzile Dlamini, Emmah, Gabbi, Regina High, Jenny, Jowi, Buhle Nobuzana, Tenderlove, Nosipho ‘Provocative’ Vidima. In memory of Nokuphila Kumalo. ‘TLDR’ was commissioned by and debuted on the B3 Biennial of the Moving Image in Frankfurt-am-Main during November 2017. The above text is sourced from the catalogue of the B3 Biennial. MORE ABOUT SWEAT: sweat.org.za