My Thought Process Part VIII – Look Back In Intimacy

We have finished our performance of Intimacy now. I really enjoyed performing in the durational one-to-one medium and I truly believe that this medium was the only way Intimacy could have been performed. Looking back at our performance, I very much agree with the points made in the following video.

The performance was never about the piece being liked or understood by those who participated in it as non-performers. The piece was only meant to be a gateway into exploring the journey of intimacy between two people in an interaction. Has this journey been completed? No. Not in the slightest. To finish exploring intimacy between to people would take you a lifetime. However, I do believe that Intimacy opened the door for a sense of genuine intimacy between performer and non-performer during the performance and for me, the way I view intimacy will be forever changed.

I do not see Intimacy as a success or as a failure. It was an exploration of a subject that spans humanity. Intimacy is something we all desire and wish to receive, be it from friends, families, lovers, pets or even ourselves. Because this exploration has only just begun, and it will take a lifetime to complete, all I can say about Intimacy is that it is In Progress.

Live Stream of Intimacy!

Hello everyone! Please find below a live stream of a section of our performance Intimacy!!!

This live stream is also being aired in the Lincoln Performing Arts Centre so if you have not been able to book a time slot for the performance but are in the area please feel free to come and check out the live stream. Otherwise, enjoy viewing it here!

Live streaming video by Ustream

My Thought Process Part VII – Response to a work-in-progress show

19/11/13 – This was the date of our work-in-progress show. We demonstrated two of the five stations we will have in our performance to a group of participants who gave us feedback after the work-in-progress show had finished. We used the work in progress show to explore the physical intimacy of holding each other, the use of media through an anonymous username in an online messenger and the durational aspect of our performance. The responses were positive and the feelings our performance elicited from the participants were either exactly or very close to the feelings we were hoping to elicit from them – that of beginning to feel intimacy and trust. Overall the work-in-progress show achieved its aim.

For all four of our stations the performer and the participant will be in a one to one environment. As a group, we decided that this would be the greatest medium to perform in as our piece is about interrogating the idea of the individual by exploring the depths of human intimacy and addressing the barriers we put up inside of ourselves to block out intimacy.

With this in mind, my research has moved away from IS and AS performance and has focused on one to one performance. My research has led me to Mike Pearson and his thoughts on what he calls Solo Performance.

“Solo performance can draw together narratives, data sets and disciplinary perceptions, both like and markedly unlike; in their juxtaposition, overlay and friction at a certain place, they might reveal it’s multi-temporality, and through disciplinary convergences, enhance it’s appreciation.” Pearson, M (2011) 2. Why Solo Performance? [online] Available from: http://www.nottingham.ac.uk/landscape/documents/eventpapers/toolkit/2whysoloperformance.pdf [Accessed 21 November 2013]

One vital thought Mike Pearson writes about is this idea that performing one to one can bring different narratives together. I feel this is at the heart of what our piece is about. We are inviting a member of the public to participate in bringing us their story – who they are and what they’re about – as we bring them our story. This coming together of two people with two different lives with the goal of sharing one intimate moment of our separate lives with each other is the heartbeat of our performance.

I will continue to study Mike Pearson’s thoughts on one to one performance and test whether or not they are relevant to our piece as each new thought presents itself.

My Thought Process Part VI – The Journey Of Our Performance

This post is dedicated to informing our readers of how our performance has developed from our initial conceptions to what we now have.

To begin with, as a performer I am captivated with the combination of durational and one-to-one performance. This is because I feel that a one-to-one performance allows both the performer and the non-performer to begin to experience a very personal journey together and if the piece is durational then they get to complete that journey together uninterrupted.

As the members of this group feel similar to how I do about this performance medium, durational one-to-one performance has always been the heartbeat of our performance idea. To begin with, we wanted to explore the question of ‘There are tens of thousands of words in the English language, so why do we only ever use the same two to three thousand over and over again when we talk to each other?’ To explore this question we were going to take it in turns to read out loud every word and definition in the largest dictionary we could find from cover to cover. We were going to group the words together so one person would read A through to E, the next person would read F through to J and so on.

Through discussing and refining this idea we began to ask ourselves what was the real reason behind asking this question. We came to the conclusion that because we are limiting ourselves from using the full extent of the English language, we were limiting ourselves in the interactions we were having between each other. This provoked the new question of ‘What are we limiting ourselves from in our interactions?’

To answer this, I looked at the very core of human interactions and discovered that it is intimacy which is at the heart of all interaction. For example, if we are very intimate with someone – say a lover or close family member – then we are very happy to engage them and are very open to them in our interactions with them. Likewise, if we are very hostile with someone then we do not even try to engage them and instead we try to cut them off or block their interactions with us. I soon realised that depending on where you are on this line affects your interactions with someone. I then started to question ‘If someone could be moved along this line towards a place of intimacy, would their interactions become more personal, deep and connecting?’

I decided that they would, and when we as a group discussed all of our individual thoughts and research we decided that our piece as a whole should be about moving the participants along this line from where ever they happened to be personally to a place of strong and powerful intimacy with us. Our overarching line of enquiry was ‘What happens if we are very intimate with the participants? Will they reciprocate our intimacy? If they do or if they don’t, what happens then?’ I must stress that our group are not concerned with intimacy in a lustful or sexual way, but instead intimacy between two people as a feeling of closeness.

With our definitive line of enquiry decided upon. We began to list situations of intimacy. We came up with the following – Being with family can be intimate, sharing secrets can be quite intimate, talking about your body can be quite intimate, being held and holding someone can be quite intimate, being on your own can also be quite intimate in the sense that you become more one with yourself.

From our list, we had four one-to-one stations and one solo station. We agreed who would be on what station and arranged them as the following.

Station One (Beth) – Family Intimacy

Station Two (Shellie and Media:Laptop) – Sharing Secrets Intimacy

Station Three (Gabriel) – Body Intimacy

Station Four (Jordan) – Being Held and Holding Intimacy

Station Five (Participant on their own with Media:Live Stream) – On Your Own Intimacy

Personally I am glad to have set up the fractionation that occurs between the first and second station. They go from exploring intimacy with Beth in a representation of family type intimacy to having to sit at a laptop and anonymously type to another anonymous person over an online messenger. We have decided that this different type of intimacy, one of anonymity, is quite jarring and this has been intentionally set up with the hopes that the participants will begin to miss and crave a genuine person to talk to, which they will be presented with in station three. Once they are given a genuine person to talk to, we hope that this will allow the participants to want to move themselves further along the line towards intimacy, which is the aim of the performance.

Please bear in mind that what I have explained to you is how our performance has currently developed. We have a work in progress show coming up soon so this may all change but for now, this is our performance.

My Thought Process Part V – Response To Hugging Exercise

In order to explore the increased level of intimacy that will occur during a one-to-one performance, our group have explored these levels privately as a group. We devised an exercise which borrowed elements from performing artists Adrian Howells and Marina Abramovic. We borrowed Adrian Howells’ concept that we communicate more through touch than voice and mixed that with Marina Abramovic’s durational performances. What we created is an exercise where two people hug for 5 minutes uninterrupted. We then developed this exercise further by experimenting with hugging in different situations which provoked  different feelings of intimacy. First we hugged side by side, then hugging whilst sitting on each other’s lap, then laying down on top of a bed and hugging and finally laying down under the duvet whilst hugging. Please see the post Our first practice by Gabriel for a video of this exercise being performed.

I found that the more intimacy the situation provoked the more intimate the hug became. Hugging under a duvet is a lot more intimate than hugging side by side. The factor of time was also important in developing the intimacy. When we hug someone who is dear to us, rarely do we hug them for even a minute in length at a time even though it may feel longer. By having a set duration of 5 minutes you go on this internal journey that takes you past your boundaries of comfort and into a new place in which only you and the one you are hugging exist in.

For me the most intimate hug was the one which took place under a duvet. I believe this is because of the childhood association we have with the duvet. As a child we believe that being under the duvet is a place of safety and I feel that, that childhood belief transcends the barriers we place upon ourselves as adults. Again, the duration of the hug really aids in going well beyond your internal comfort zone.

We have also come up with how we can incorporate the use of media in our performance. We are going to change the duvet from a physical one to a metaphorical one and see if when people are given something to ‘hide’ under, such as a pseudonym on an online chat room, do they feel like they can go beyond their internal comfort zone and share intimate parts of their lives? This will be something we will need to explore with people who are not in our small group as we are all quite open with each other. We are also going to use a webcam to live stream our performance for the world to see, of course the participants will be unaware of this because we want their reactions to be genuine and not ‘acted for the camera’. We want their reactions to be like that of Marina Abramovic in the video I included in my post My Thought Process Part II. If you have not yet seen this video, please do watch it.