Faceless body in performance

Date
2015
Authors
Killeen-Chance, Zahra
Supervisor
Randerson, Janine
Nikolai, Jennifer
Item type
Exegesis
Degree name
Master of Performance and Media Arts
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Auckland University of Technology
Abstract

Faceless Body in Performance is a practice-led research project in live and digital performance. There are two series of solo performances, Breath of Air and Black Glove, which explore choreographic procedures that can direct the audience towards ambiguous plays of relation within the embodied, sensory encounter of the performance. The focus is on decentring the modalities of visibility, invisibility, aurality, stillness, and motion, with the aim of exposing intermodal relationships across the senses and genders. The project is located in a post-phenomenological paradigm where the body, environment, and technology are regarded as a field of mutually dependent relations. Don Ihde’s post-phenomenological exploration of amplification technology and notion of an auditory turn, provide a framework for viewing the solo performances as indeterminate plays of relation across the senses and technology. Jacques Derrida’s strategies of deconstruction and notion of undecidability, provide a lens for viewing each of the solo performances as an open-ended process that is irreducible to a final meaning. The project argues that there is a range of choreographic procedures, which can expose performance as an embodied, relational process that resists stabilisation into a single modality or meaning.

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Keywords
Performance , Breath , Deconstruction , Solo performance , Practice-led , Embodied , Ambiguous plays of relation
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