Kinetic Atmospheres:
Performance and Immersion
Chapter
1
Introduction: Theatre, Atmospheres, Living Systems
Act so that you will be spared the necessity of
deceiving anyone.
(Gertrude Stein)
Art must start work where something is defective.
(Bertolt Brecht)
Resilient Theatre
We live in a 21st century marked by waning resources and various crises in the
social and natural worlds. Human-induced global climate change and the deterioration
of nature now receive as much attention as the economic fallout and attending
financial stresses of global capitalism or the impact of the new migrations
on old notions of national sovereignty and border security. Increasingly, one
senses naturecultural immunitary deficiency, with no deus ex machina in sight,
and no paleocybernetic remedies. And yet it is not always apparent how environmental
problems are intertwined with social and political problems, and how such intertwining
inevitably affects artistic production and the creative industries. A crisis
of the political imagination could have the opposite effect on the arts –
indeed one might expect artistic positions to articulate diagnoses of the world
or offer visions of resilient interaction and transformation: bold new visions
of what could be, imaginative projections of how human beings might harmoniously
relate to one another, to other species and the living earth.
Artistic positions or forms of expression reflect principles of organization,
certain kinds of management of resources, and in this respect theatres, or the
performing arts in the broadest sense, are quite naturally subject to economic
realities, to limits of sponsorship, travel opportunities, access to work spaces
and tools, various safety rules and risk protocols Even in the countries of
overdeveloped capitalism, many under- or unemployed artists, actors and dancers
find themselves, like the migrant workers, belonging to the precariat laboring
under conditions of everyday vulnerability in our age of austerity. Is it not
inevitable, therefore, that performing and directing, writing, composing and
designing as shared theatrical labor engage their practices, forms and spaces
of expression in the search for fresh viewpoints? In the search for lenses able
to focus on the archive and the repertoire, as well as on the new content that
so-called immaterial labor might shape through the use of old and renewed vocabularies?
In the search for new spaces and protocols under the impact of unforeseen lockdowns
and pandemics?
About five or six years ago I began to work with a large collective of artists
and arts organizations on a shared project in Europe, titled METABODY, which
led my London-based ensemble to the development of a series of installations.
There was no hesitation to shift from stage or film-work – the physical-digital
– to other digital or software-based and networked experiments, in the
spirit of immaterial labor, for example linking distant performers telematically
through the internet, creating a composite virtual stage or learning how to
work with Kinect camera interfaces, sensors or virtual reality (VR) technologies.
The physical-digital intertwining was a premise for working with bodies, not
beyond but with and about living bodies and living environments that mattered.
Takahiko Iimura’s media work on the beach: gone forward into the gallery,
then back to the shore; in his email post he proposes that you choose this one
or that one, whatever the media, you do select one of them at a time, the one
you fit to this or to that.
The digital always retained physical materiality for me. I understood the shifts
to be a part of the construction of complex built environments. In fact I had
always imagined the site-specific in my work as a combination of engaging a
particular place and adapting to it with all the tools and media (somatechnics)
available. Sometimes one also succumbs to and receives from an environent, an
off-site specific nature or urban commons, outside of theatre. A place understood
as milieu, as habitat, and as experiential atmosphere. The energies of bodies
and our imaginations enter into material sites while drawing from the sites’
affective materiality. If you perform in a quarry, the quarry will constitute
your environmental atmosphere and rocky habitat. The tools, materials and media
help to modify the site or be modified with the site’s power – the
site transforming into a constructed reality with a particular atmospherics
or aesthetic energy. The kinetic atmospheres I explore are somatechnical, full
of mutual referrals, real worlds.
Kinetic also, of course, means moving (from the Greek kinesis), motioning, moveable.
In art historical terms, kinetic means “relating to motion.” Since
the early 20th century, artists have incorporated movement into their art, their
objects, either to explore the possibilities of movement, or to introduce a
temporal and architectural dimension, duration in the experience of material
textures or behaviors, and also to reflect on the importance of the machinic
and the light, as well as technologies and projection/rotation techniques (especially
involving electric light and motors) in our modern world. These artistic kinetic
experiments have also very often been related to explorations of perception,
optics, and the nature of vision. Movement, in regard to kinetic art, has been
produced mechanically by motors (for example in Naum Gabo’s Standing Wave,
1919–20) or by utilizing natural movement of air within a space (e.g.
Alexander Calder’s mobiles that he began to work with in the 1930s). Kinetic
art became a major phenomenon of the late 1950s and 1960s; it was an international
exploration, as I became aware visiting a number of museum exhibitions, for
example Lo(s) cinético(s) at Reina Sofia Madrid in 2007, or Kinesthesia:
Latin American Kinetic Art, 1954-1969, first shown at the Palms Springs Art
Museum in 2017.1 In Houston I had seen many more exhibitions of art from Latin
America, Japan, and Korea that involved experiments in light and colored space
art, projection art, technical experiments, moving “sound” (multichannel
acoustic architectures) and visual projections that drew attention of synaesthetic
experience. I remember the exhibition See this Sound: Versprechungen von Bild
und Ton (Lentos Kunstmuseum Linz) – its catalog with a whole range of
provocative essays edited by Cosima Rainer et al in 2009. At that moment, after
having been well aware of visual (sound) artists like Brain Eno, William Kentridge,
Bob Wilson, Meredith Monk, Hélio Oticica, or Steina and Woody Vasulka,
I began to connect ambient sound and atmospheric visual design/choreographies
in my thinking much more explicitly.
Later, during my years in London, I also became aware of an annual festival called Kinetica, initiated in 2009 by Dianne Harris and Tony Langford who founded the Kinetica Museum. Open to galleries, curators and artists from around the world who “focus on universal concepts and evolutionary processes though the convergence of kinetic, electronic, robotic, sound, light, time-based and multi-disciplinary new media art, science and technology,” as stated in the press release, the exhibitions are structured like an art fair, with a wild, unpredictable mix of elements in each showcase, combining futuristic fantasy sculptures, or animal-machine hybrids punning on evolutionary processes, with the latest gadgets and amusing gizmos brought there by inventors themselves. One also discovers stunning laser works or projections such as Venezuelan artist Carlos Cruz-Diez’s Chromosaturation. Participating in each year’s event between 2011 and 2015, I also noted a performance space hosting a range of digital, interactive shows and graphic projections; a key feature here was the 3D stage of Musion Academy which offers its advanced projection system to other artists (the DAP-Lab was invited in 2013 to show “TatlinTower,” a wearable electroacoustic instrument) as well as displaying its own 3D animation research. Judging from the exuberant atmosphere on the opening nights I attended, almost half a century after Cybernetic Serendipity: The Computer and the Arts (ICA, 1968, curated by Jasia Reichardt), the public’s interest in inventive new contraptions and kinetic art objects has not subsided at all. This exhibit attracts up to 10,000 viewers each year.
Since so much of my work since its beginnings in 1986-87 had to do with creating
scenographies for dance-theatre, for movement and projected movement/light/visuals,
drawing also from the synergies of the locale where I was working (while experimenting
with choreographing abstractions, abstract virtualities), I assumed that sceno-graphing
an atmosphere also meant that the public would become immersed in it, move through
it or be moved by it. Atmospheres in this sense are like the weather: they act,
embrace us and slip into us or spread, they move our sensations, vibrate in
us, shape our presentiments. Except that in theatrical-architectural terms they
are also engineered, constructed, actuated. They might deceive us. We become
subjected to illusions. The sound of wind can be heard? Do we hear wind? Atmospheres
are tricky, they are tricksters, technical actors, they are actionable and they
are performed.
In this book I am about to write, weather is being linked to forest knowledge,
a sensual understanding of elemental archives so to speak (if you accept nature
as infrastructural, environmental media and biocycle), and thus reaching back
deeply into an internal time sense, my times of growing up around forests, navigating,
building models of the Umwelt, comparing, crafting and forecasting perceptions.
These are also times of growing older, readapting the techniques with which
I naturalize, readapting memories that have permeated my sensorimotor muscles.
It is my way of sharing choreographic operations with you, which may also to
an extent be resilient operations. They certainly resist commercial pressures
or expectations, as well as the conventions that are associated with the traditional
dramatic and text-based theatre. Choreographing atmospheres might be the simplest
way of putting what I plan to do here.
Choreographing Atmospheres, Expanding Kinesis
[ . . .]
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(c) 2021