Performing lost space

Bartram, Angela and Gittens, Douglas (2011) Performing lost space. In: Fixed? Architecture, Incompleteness and Change, 7-8 April 2011, University of Plymouth.

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Item Type:Conference or Workshop contribution (Paper)
Item Status:Live Archive

Abstract

The interior of the contemporary art gallery provides its users with a sterilised laboratory for the placement and experience of art. Increasingly, its bleached interior presents an a priori condition for the legitimate assignment of artworks within the complex milieu of the contemporary city. Such interiors have become an architectural typology, a predetermined homogenous non-place within which artworks can reside. In this sense we can look to Lefebvre in order to understand the condition of the gallery space for ‘inasmuch as abstract space tends towards homogeneity, towards the elimination of existing differences or peculiarities, a new space cannot be born (produced) unless it accentuates differences.’(Lefebvre: 1991, 52). The work of the artist, by contrast, liberates difference. More specifically, the art of performance simultaneously generates and exposes marginal space within the gallery interior; it is a corporeal action that deposits residual stains and blemishes across the galleries internal skin, leaving marks and traces that resist homogeneity to create a temporary site of differential experience. The lost, forgotten or overlooked marginal zones and irregularities of the gallery space become a point of ephemeral spectacle and this paper addresses the impact of this spatial and corporeal collision. The research that informs and situates these phenomena traces the lost and unrecorded spaces, irregularities, marks, blemishes and scars that exist within the gallery space before, during and after the performance act. Recorded through orthographic drawing conventions, the research generates a narrative cartography of corporeal intervention within the gallery interior. The co-authors of this research form a collaboration that fuses the dynamics and complexities of the performer’s body with the fixed conventions of architectural drawings. This paper will explore how the body can become an instrument to record and describe the gallery interior beyond, yet from within, traditional architectural systems of representation.

Additional Information:The interior of the contemporary art gallery provides its users with a sterilised laboratory for the placement and experience of art. Increasingly, its bleached interior presents an a priori condition for the legitimate assignment of artworks within the complex milieu of the contemporary city. Such interiors have become an architectural typology, a predetermined homogenous non-place within which artworks can reside. In this sense we can look to Lefebvre in order to understand the condition of the gallery space for ‘inasmuch as abstract space tends towards homogeneity, towards the elimination of existing differences or peculiarities, a new space cannot be born (produced) unless it accentuates differences.’(Lefebvre: 1991, 52). The work of the artist, by contrast, liberates difference. More specifically, the art of performance simultaneously generates and exposes marginal space within the gallery interior; it is a corporeal action that deposits residual stains and blemishes across the galleries internal skin, leaving marks and traces that resist homogeneity to create a temporary site of differential experience. The lost, forgotten or overlooked marginal zones and irregularities of the gallery space become a point of ephemeral spectacle and this paper addresses the impact of this spatial and corporeal collision. The research that informs and situates these phenomena traces the lost and unrecorded spaces, irregularities, marks, blemishes and scars that exist within the gallery space before, during and after the performance act. Recorded through orthographic drawing conventions, the research generates a narrative cartography of corporeal intervention within the gallery interior. The co-authors of this research form a collaboration that fuses the dynamics and complexities of the performer’s body with the fixed conventions of architectural drawings. This paper will explore how the body can become an instrument to record and describe the gallery interior beyond, yet from within, traditional architectural systems of representation.
Keywords:architecture, drawing, performance, body, orthographic
Subjects:W Creative Arts and Design > W100 Fine Art
K Architecture, Building and Planning > K110 Architectural Design Theory
K Architecture, Building and Planning > K120 Interior Architecture
K Architecture, Building and Planning > K100 Architecture
W Creative Arts and Design > W110 Drawing
Divisions:College of Arts > School of Fine & Performing Arts > School of Fine & Performing Arts (Fine Arts)
ID Code:4469
Deposited On:10 May 2011 12:19

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