Deborah-Joyce Holman: Close-Up | Momus

Jul 10 2025


By Gervais Marsh

The Close-Up Reveals Nothing: How Deborah-Joyce Holman Complicates Interiority

A soft, warm light morphs into a shadow of a woman’s braided hair on the back of her neck. There is the sound of faint footsteps as she moves around her flat, shifting objects in the kitchen, the patter of water streaming out of the tap as she makes tea. For sixteen minutes and thirty-three seconds, I watched Deborah-Joyce Holman’s film Close-Up (2024), relinquishing anticipation for what may happen next and settling into an ease of the ordinary scene. I observed actor Tia Bannon’s unexceptional movements around the apartment, interwoven with glimpses of her surroundings: pink tulips in a vase on the kitchen counter, a cobalt teapot, and a striped rug beside a beige couch. The film restages a scene from Holman’s previous multichannel video work Close-Up/Quiet As It’s Kept (2023), organized earlier this spring at the Swiss Institute by curators KJ Abudu and Alison Coplan. While Bannon appears to wander casually throughout the flat, her gestures are highly choreographed, maintaining acute and calculated control of her detachment from the viewer.

Throughout the film, Holman complicates the mechanisms of the close-up as a technique for accentuating intimacy—a window into finer details and emotional resonances. Though the camera pulls the viewer close to Bannon’s face, within the tight proximity of this encounter, her expression maintains a nonchalance. No explicit emotions are conveyed. Panning across a bookshelf in the living room, the camera catches titles of various texts: Elizabeth Alexander’s Black Interior, Kevin Quashie’s Sovereignty of Quiet, Rizvana Bradley’s Anteaesthetics, Denise Ferreira da Silva’s Unpayable Debt, The Funambulist’s 2021 “Against Genocide” issue, and Dionne Brand’s Nomenclature. The collection of books attends to critical questions and theories of interiority, the dynamics of racial capitalism, and insidious manifestations of ongoing colonialism.