{"id":656,"date":"2020-04-13T23:59:44","date_gmt":"2020-04-13T23:59:44","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/imaginedtheatres.com\/?post_type=theatre&#038;p=656"},"modified":"2020-04-12T20:27:40","modified_gmt":"2020-04-12T20:27:40","slug":"the-heightened-impossibilization-of-performance","status":"publish","type":"theatre","link":"https:\/\/www.imaginedtheatres.com\/the-heightened-impossibilization-of-performance\/","title":{"rendered":"The heightened impossibilization of performance"},"content":{"rendered":"<div><strong>March 18, 2020 <\/strong><\/div>\n<div><strong>Chicago<\/strong><\/div>\n<div><\/div>\n<p>&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p>Performance as we know it and as we need it has always had an element of the impossible. That element has become more prominent.<\/p>\n<p>Like many people, we had grand plans a few days ago. We planned to fly to Rijeka, Croatia, in May to continue work on <em>Aquarium<\/em>, our large-scale performance project in collaboration with Helsinki-based artist Essi Kausalainen. We have nearly completed its composition, in advance of its scheduled premier in November. We planned to present a lecture\/performance in August in Turku, Finland \u2013 a version of the event pictured below that we held in Fullerton Hall at the Art Institute of Chicago on February 14th \u2013 featuring\u00a0 guest reader Sherae Rimpsey, and Essi\u2019s costumes that transform performers into particular sea creatures, endangered and charismatic: Elise Cowin as Eyelash Seaweed and Bryan Saner as Lesser Electric Ray.<\/p>\n<p><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"aligncenter wp-image-664 size-full\" src=\"https:\/\/imaginedtheatres.com\/app\/uploads\/2020\/04\/Screen-Shot-2020-04-11-at-1.40.48-PM.png\" alt=\"\" width=\"2014\" height=\"1302\" srcset=\"https:\/\/www.imaginedtheatres.com\/app\/uploads\/2020\/04\/Screen-Shot-2020-04-11-at-1.40.48-PM.png 2014w, https:\/\/www.imaginedtheatres.com\/app\/uploads\/2020\/04\/Screen-Shot-2020-04-11-at-1.40.48-PM-250x162.png 250w, https:\/\/www.imaginedtheatres.com\/app\/uploads\/2020\/04\/Screen-Shot-2020-04-11-at-1.40.48-PM-768x496.png 768w, https:\/\/www.imaginedtheatres.com\/app\/uploads\/2020\/04\/Screen-Shot-2020-04-11-at-1.40.48-PM-700x453.png 700w, https:\/\/www.imaginedtheatres.com\/app\/uploads\/2020\/04\/Screen-Shot-2020-04-11-at-1.40.48-PM-120x78.png 120w\" sizes=\"(max-width: 2014px) 100vw, 2014px\" \/><\/p>\n<p>We planned to perform <em>Scarecrow<\/em> at the University of Surrey in London in September. Now, like so many people, as we wait to learn the future of all of our plans, we turn our attention to matters of care, of service in whatever way we can, and of health, physical and mental.<\/p>\n<p>Our work has always adhered to certain guiding creative principles. One of these proposes that every stage as we find it, no matter how small, requires a smaller stage within it. Reduce the field in order to claim it as your own, to specify and situate yourself as a figure within it, to make the resistive terrain more manageable. If the setting strikes you as too small for your work, shrink it even more. In this way we have always considered the impossibilization of performance a necessity, a tactic of escape to the inside. As a practicality, the impossible reveals how even the most intractable problem arrives with its own set of strange, renewing possibilities.<\/p>\n<p>In one generative case, back in May 2019, we made a performance called \u2013<em>recline somberly like fallen heroes\u2013.<\/em> We created it with and for Millie Kapp and Matt Shalzi, and presented it at Regards, the Chicago gallery, in response to a suite of paintings by Matthew Metzger. We built a raised platform, the largest the gallery could hold, with a surface of 5.5 feet by 11 feet<em>.<\/em> As preparation for that work, Lin Hixson, the director of\u00a0<em>Every house has a door<\/em>, composed a poem titled <em>12 Choreographic Couplets<\/em>, a list of impossible directives for the dancers to actualize on that tiny stage. Here is an excerpt:<\/p>\n<pre style=\"padding-left: 60px;\">Remove a tear from my face.\r\nPut it back.\r\n\r\n\r\nFlee and let out a yelp.\r\nCome back home.\r\n\r\n\r\nA swallow lands on the bridge of your nose\r\nThen sets sail.\r\n\r\n<\/pre>\n<p>Now the principle of impossibility takes on more urgency, and brings to mind once again Gilles Deleuze\u2019s famous phrase about ethics: that we may find ourselves not \u201cunworthy of what happens to us.\u201d What creative channels reveal themselves now in this season of the new impossible? In this time and space of hyperimpossibilization, where do we locate the live? I began writing this a few weeks ago, in a different world, as a simple update on our activities and plans. Now it arrives in this unexpected form, but at the expected time, in early April \u2013 that is, now \u2013 coincident with the disaster. Can we compose a performance that sails to you across a virtual arc, like these words, with the harp vibration of a telegraph, and no risk of contagion? How do we shrink this microscopic stage?<\/p>\n<p>If distancing always affirms that which it distances, then social distancing affirms the social \u2013 my bond to my nearest neighbor, across the divide. In this zone of isolation, how do we gather? We find our way as we find ourselves, flung apart, groping in the new twilight, signaling across the expanse. How do we prepare for the day when we will re-enter, dancing through the eye of a needle, the vast evacuated theatre?<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"Can we compose a performance that sails to you across a virtual arc, like these words, with the harp vibration of a telegraph, and no risk of contagion? How do we shrink this microscopic stage?","protected":false},"menu_order":0,"template":"","_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.imaginedtheatres.com\/api\/wp\/v2\/theatres\/656"}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.imaginedtheatres.com\/api\/wp\/v2\/theatres"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.imaginedtheatres.com\/api\/wp\/v2\/types\/theatre"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.imaginedtheatres.com\/api\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=656"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}