The Vertigo Project is a series of 20 dye transfer prints by Irish artist Jean Curran.
A work of editing and re-presentation that takes key scenes from the original imbibition
print of Alfred Hitchcock’s Vertigo that was released as in Glorious Technicolor the
body of work reveals the cinematographic artistry of the film in a fresh and novel way.
Produced with the full co-opera:on of the Hitchcock Estate, Curran first edited select
frames from a rare original Technicolor dye imbibition print of Ver:go from 1958, and
then printed them using the same dye transfer process by which the movie was
made. Editing 20 still images from the hundreds of thousands of frames that make up
the film, Curran switches from moving pictures to still prints to create a medium-
jumping work in its own right.
Ver:go was first released on the 9th of May, 1958 and is now largely recognized as
Hitchcock’s greatest achievement. The story follows a police detective (Jimmy
Stewart) who falls obsessively in love with the woman he has been paid to follow (Kim
Novak). Suffering from traumatic vertigo Stewart fails to prevent Novak’s character
from jumping to her death. Stewart then spirals into an ever darker state of despair
until a chance sighting of a girl who resembles Novak reignites his passion and
unravels a complex web of deceit and crime.
The film’s underlying themes of voyeurism, eroticism and dark emotions are
portrayed delicately and with great intelligence through Hitchcock’s rigorously
composed shots while his use of colour moves the story in masterfully layered
compositions.
Recognized by film critics and connoisseurs for the care with which each scene was
composed, the single frames and set-ups of Ver:go reveal Hitchcock’s aesthetic not
just as cinematic but as photographic, prefiguring and influencing the work of
contemporary artists from Eggleston to Cindy Sherman. Brought to new life in
Curran’s richly luminous dye transfer prints The Ver:go Project is a fitting 60th
anniversary tribute to the film.