Rabbits, Machines, and the Ontology of Performance
Aleksandra Wolska Theatre Journal Johns Hopkins University Press Volume 57, Number 1, March 2005
https://muse.jhu.edu/article/179613
Abstract
This essay argues for theatre as a mode of becoming rather than one of vanishing. By working through the temporal constructs that have traditionally fostered a sense of transience in performance, this essay attempts to establish appearance as a category of thought. It focuses on the praxis of performance, taking as its example a 2002 production in the Philadelphia Fringe Festival entitled machines machines machines machines machines machines machines and its subsequent unfolding in the everyday. Contrary to the dominant critical model of thought that casts theatre as inevitably and unstoppably moving towards its own end, absence, and death, this essay contends that performance is a force of animate presence, continuation, and becoming.
Theater Fragments
1. BODY-COSMOS-THEATER
Totus Mundus agit histrionem
Stage and cosmos - that vast starry infinitude hanging above our head - appear to have a yen for each other.
This mutual attraction found its expression in the open-air theaters of ancient Greece, where the deities descended from the cosmic heights to participate in human affairs. It became manifest in Sanskrit Drama when Shiva, the god of the actors, danced the universe into being. It came to light in Medieval Mysteries where the entire city transformed into a site of a cosmic pageant from Creation to Judgment Day. Throughout history, the stage often embodied cosmic processes just as the universe, too, embodied itself as theater.
Since there is no theater without an actor, in this cosmos-as-theater and theater-as-cosmos paradigm, the body of an actor by necessity acquires a cosmic dimension. In his or her body, the universe and theater unite. The actor’s body becomes both the theater-body (Theatrum), and cosmic body (Universum), in which the drama of a lived reality unfolds.
This tripartite somatic alignment - body, theater, cosmos - came into close relief during the European Renaissance, when the notion of Theatrum Mundi coincided with the concept of the human body as microcosm (Plotinus), while the theater itself became configured as the Globe. Jumping more or less four hundred years to the present moment, the triadic equation of body-cosmos-theater, may re-emerge again, delineating a rich field of far-reaching explorations into the nature of all three.
Why now? Why is this triadic paradigm a potent conceptual device at the present time? A short answer would be: because of the discoveries of science, which brought us an expanded and problematized notion of matter (body) itself.
Contemporary science challenged the inert and atomic structure of matter, configuring it instead as a primarily energetic and, potentially, proto-sentient phenomenon. This is of course a hypothesis, often challenged as pseudo-scientific and mystical. As hypothesis go, however, this above one is not disproved (and there's much evidence pointing in the direction of its veracity) and, moreover, should it be true, this vision of matter as alive brings with itself a rich and exciting philosophical paradigm, within which our reality becomes accessible through a vastly more complex and subtle epistemological apparatus and data. In other words, if one is to think about matter at all and if we don't really know what matter fundamentally is, and given, moreover, that we have to choose a working hypothesis, why not choose an exciting and interesting one? Which is to say that if we choose to regard performance as a philosophical discipline, we may finally have to make an existential decision: do we wish to inhabit an interesting universe or a dull one?
Choosing a paradigm of matter-as-proto-consciousness, the arts themselves -- such as visual arts for example - would cease to be merely subjective and critically irrelevant epiphenomena.They would become material manifestations of deep conscious codes hidden within the folds of matter itself. As such, they could become tools of deep knowing. If we, like Neo-Platonist, choose to configure matter again as alive, permeated with energy, and capable of transformations, if, in other words, we choose to regard it as embodied consciousness, then we can view such matter as enfolding creative codes that give rise to the supposedly immaterial formations such as art, literature and drama. Such matter would function then as what Neo-Platonist called a "storehouse of images" arising both “in the mind of God and in the flesh of the world.” Should we allow the hypothesis to function critically in the study of what happens on stage, then the actor’s body-as-a-cosmos-cum-theater would cease to operate only as a poetic metaphor and could becomes a site of practical explorations into the nature of cosmos and theater in one (actor's) body housed.
Stage and cosmos - that vast starry infinitude hanging above our head - appear to have a yen for each other.
This mutual attraction found its expression in the open-air theaters of ancient Greece, where the deities descended from the cosmic heights to participate in human affairs. It became manifest in Sanskrit Drama when Shiva, the god of the actors, danced the universe into being. It came to light in Medieval Mysteries where the entire city transformed into a site of a cosmic pageant from Creation to Judgment Day. Throughout history, the stage often embodied cosmic processes just as the universe, too, embodied itself as theater.
Since there is no theater without an actor, in this cosmos-as-theater and theater-as-cosmos paradigm, the body of an actor by necessity acquires a cosmic dimension. In his or her body, the universe and theater unite. The actor’s body becomes both the theater-body (Theatrum), and cosmic body (Universum), in which the drama of a lived reality unfolds.
This tripartite somatic alignment - body, theater, cosmos - came into close relief during the European Renaissance, when the notion of Theatrum Mundi coincided with the concept of the human body as microcosm (Plotinus), while the theater itself became configured as the Globe. Jumping more or less four hundred years to the present moment, the triadic equation of body-cosmos-theater, may re-emerge again, delineating a rich field of far-reaching explorations into the nature of all three.
Why now? Why is this triadic paradigm a potent conceptual device at the present time? A short answer would be: because of the discoveries of science, which brought us an expanded and problematized notion of matter (body) itself.
Contemporary science challenged the inert and atomic structure of matter, configuring it instead as a primarily energetic and, potentially, proto-sentient phenomenon. This is of course a hypothesis, often challenged as pseudo-scientific and mystical. As hypothesis go, however, this above one is not disproved (and there's much evidence pointing in the direction of its veracity) and, moreover, should it be true, this vision of matter as alive brings with itself a rich and exciting philosophical paradigm, within which our reality becomes accessible through a vastly more complex and subtle epistemological apparatus and data. In other words, if one is to think about matter at all and if we don't really know what matter fundamentally is, and given, moreover, that we have to choose a working hypothesis, why not choose an exciting and interesting one? Which is to say that if we choose to regard performance as a philosophical discipline, we may finally have to make an existential decision: do we wish to inhabit an interesting universe or a dull one?
Choosing a paradigm of matter-as-proto-consciousness, the arts themselves -- such as visual arts for example - would cease to be merely subjective and critically irrelevant epiphenomena.They would become material manifestations of deep conscious codes hidden within the folds of matter itself. As such, they could become tools of deep knowing. If we, like Neo-Platonist, choose to configure matter again as alive, permeated with energy, and capable of transformations, if, in other words, we choose to regard it as embodied consciousness, then we can view such matter as enfolding creative codes that give rise to the supposedly immaterial formations such as art, literature and drama. Such matter would function then as what Neo-Platonist called a "storehouse of images" arising both “in the mind of God and in the flesh of the world.” Should we allow the hypothesis to function critically in the study of what happens on stage, then the actor’s body-as-a-cosmos-cum-theater would cease to operate only as a poetic metaphor and could becomes a site of practical explorations into the nature of cosmos and theater in one (actor's) body housed.
2. STANDING ON STAGE IN A POOL OF LIGHT
A ghost light on an empty stage. I walk towards it. I move slowly. I am barefoot and can’t see my feet, and there may be a nail or a tack on the floor. Finally, I stop. Darkness on all sides. I stand in a pool of illumination - moon over water - alone in a dark theater. I feel like a cosmonaut suspended in a light capsule floating in the void. I sense someone’s presence. There is someone here. I look out, peering into the darkness. Anybody out there? No answer. But I notice that I just saw that: I saw myself looking out. I hear a breath. An intake and an exhalation. The breath stops. I notice that I have just stopped breathing. So it is me. I am here with me. But still, there is more. Still more presence. The darkness itself is aware. Aware of me. Not in a distant kind of way but in an intimate, inquisitive fashion, as if following my every breath and counting every hair on my head: “Who are you? What would you have happen?” It is watching me watching myself, embracing the two of us in one act of seeing, a third watcher. Our seeing, however, is not only seeing. It is a complex perceptual act enmeshed in the flesh: my skin seeing darkness that touches my eyes.
Within this enmeshing, however, the fundamental tripartite paradigm remains: I am myself, perceiving myself in the act of perception. One, two, three. From within that cluster, the new “I” emerges, encompassing all three iterations of a perceiving being. This new "I" functions in simultaneity that is multifarious. Sometimes it coalesces as the one standing on the dusty floorboards and looking out, her feet cold; other times it floats into the audience to watch the shape of the body or the expression of the hands from the back row. Still other times it lifts itself up towards the ceiling to observe a small figure below. But it always embraces, always a substratum in which everything occurs. Soon, this multisensory act of awareness becomes a sentient sphere filled with numerous, rapidly shifting and shimmering points of embodied vision; sensing eyes are everywhere, in every particles of dust, above, below around and in-between. I am both here and there and everywhere at once, a fundamentally tripartite entity, but infinitely divisible into perceiving singularities. I am the one who is three who can also become many, as many as there are points in space.
And then, it happens. It feels more than natural, it feels necessary, unavoidable. My foot moves to do a quick tap on the boards of the stage—one, two, three. My right arm flies up, fingers uncurling into a curlicue. Standing on an empty stage in a pool of light, I perform. Habit? Perhaps. I work in the theater. But I rather think it is more than that. Performance appears to be my response to the void that surrounds me. Darkness, even if filled with my own breath and awareness, comes rather close to the way my imagination represents the idea of nothingness to itself. So, I raise my hand so that I can exist. I perform, so I am not nothing. I feel that I cannot just stand there, as if a voice in my head said “do something, why don’t you,” intimating that the emptiness itself hungers for expression. inciting and inviting it. I don’t know if it does so in fact, but I do know that only if I raise my hand, bending my fingers just so, I will emerge into existence, etching something like a fleeting human hieroglyph into the blinding darkness, accounting for my conscious moment in the feeble light.
Still: for whom do I do that? For myself? So that I can exist as myself? Yes, that seems to be what is happening. But something else operates here, too. If it were only “me, myself, I,” then why bother. I don’t cook for myself, either. Performance wants an audience, but an audience who is also fundamentally different than the performing self, Other than it, not just self-Same, no matter how expanded and panoptical it may be (“Who is out there?” an actor wants to find out, “I hope it is not only family”). The expanded self, watching itself watching itself, although an inherent part of the perceptual phenomenon of the theatrical experience, contains within itself a presentiment and a locus of the Other. Facing the void I perform, not only for myself, not only for the three aspects of my own perceiving, but also for something vaster and larger, for some unknowable but present audience, an ancient watcher up there in the sky of my own mind, hidden within its grey matter, which is also perhaps the dark matter itself. Facing the void, I perform for myself as the Other that is the same as me and the infinite universe, both.
Within this enmeshing, however, the fundamental tripartite paradigm remains: I am myself, perceiving myself in the act of perception. One, two, three. From within that cluster, the new “I” emerges, encompassing all three iterations of a perceiving being. This new "I" functions in simultaneity that is multifarious. Sometimes it coalesces as the one standing on the dusty floorboards and looking out, her feet cold; other times it floats into the audience to watch the shape of the body or the expression of the hands from the back row. Still other times it lifts itself up towards the ceiling to observe a small figure below. But it always embraces, always a substratum in which everything occurs. Soon, this multisensory act of awareness becomes a sentient sphere filled with numerous, rapidly shifting and shimmering points of embodied vision; sensing eyes are everywhere, in every particles of dust, above, below around and in-between. I am both here and there and everywhere at once, a fundamentally tripartite entity, but infinitely divisible into perceiving singularities. I am the one who is three who can also become many, as many as there are points in space.
And then, it happens. It feels more than natural, it feels necessary, unavoidable. My foot moves to do a quick tap on the boards of the stage—one, two, three. My right arm flies up, fingers uncurling into a curlicue. Standing on an empty stage in a pool of light, I perform. Habit? Perhaps. I work in the theater. But I rather think it is more than that. Performance appears to be my response to the void that surrounds me. Darkness, even if filled with my own breath and awareness, comes rather close to the way my imagination represents the idea of nothingness to itself. So, I raise my hand so that I can exist. I perform, so I am not nothing. I feel that I cannot just stand there, as if a voice in my head said “do something, why don’t you,” intimating that the emptiness itself hungers for expression. inciting and inviting it. I don’t know if it does so in fact, but I do know that only if I raise my hand, bending my fingers just so, I will emerge into existence, etching something like a fleeting human hieroglyph into the blinding darkness, accounting for my conscious moment in the feeble light.
Still: for whom do I do that? For myself? So that I can exist as myself? Yes, that seems to be what is happening. But something else operates here, too. If it were only “me, myself, I,” then why bother. I don’t cook for myself, either. Performance wants an audience, but an audience who is also fundamentally different than the performing self, Other than it, not just self-Same, no matter how expanded and panoptical it may be (“Who is out there?” an actor wants to find out, “I hope it is not only family”). The expanded self, watching itself watching itself, although an inherent part of the perceptual phenomenon of the theatrical experience, contains within itself a presentiment and a locus of the Other. Facing the void I perform, not only for myself, not only for the three aspects of my own perceiving, but also for something vaster and larger, for some unknowable but present audience, an ancient watcher up there in the sky of my own mind, hidden within its grey matter, which is also perhaps the dark matter itself. Facing the void, I perform for myself as the Other that is the same as me and the infinite universe, both.
3. AT THE SHORE OF THE PACIFIC
I am standing on the rocky shore of the Pacific. Behind me, a shallow cave, surrounded by steep canyon walls and barnacle-covered rocks. When the tide comes in, the access route to the cave closes, teeming with waves. I have not looked at the tide calendar. All the more urgent that I do what I came here to do, and soon: find out if “All the world’s a stage.” Why here? Because of my need for space. For breath and width. For scope. I wanted to leave the little rooms of darkened theaters despite the greatreckonings that may be happening there because, for some time now, I wanted to leave any confined space, finding my world tiny, overwrought, enclosed in a bleeping gadget such as an I-Phone or a computer screen, the space around it shrinking to the size of my own obsession with clicks. These days, in everyday speech at least, when we say “the world” we often mean a prison of sorts, a tight enclosure, a hermetic social conglomerate that is secular, materialistic, ridden with conflict, turbulent, on the verge—a cluster of personal, socio-political and economic variables about which we fret, born into the existential condition of care and governed by time with its pressures.
However, even within this intense involvement with the world as a collection of complicated things permeated by time, something else opens to us when we say "world." By the ocean, the world reveals its inner, secret dimension of space. And that is why I'm here. To soak in the vastness. The vastness which, despite the contemporary ethos of rush, speed an care, is still our domain.
Despite its limited perceptual field locked in technological gadgets - screens and the like - the world of the 21st century has expanded in other significant ways. The territories of the non-human have grown dramatically due to the relatively recent and groundbreaking developments in science and mathematics. Our non-human sphere includes now not only the raging winds and ominous celestial bodies like it did in centuries past, but also the enigmatic particles of the subatomic realm, which are so unpredictable as to appear almost human, not to mention the ever-expanding galaxies, the supernovas and the dark matter, all threatening to unseat the hegemony of a narrowly defined horizon, regularly assaulting the rational mind. These vertiginous phenomena do constitute our world whether we think of them daily or not, manifesting in popular culture as fantasies of humanity’s evolutionary expansion or as hyper-vigilant, apocalyptic anxieties and visions of cosmic doom.
Finally, when we do think about it, despite being locked into a "small room" of much of our contemporary theater, the stage itself is all-encompassing. It welcomes—and thrives on—vastness. From Sanskrit and Greek dramas to contemporary performance art, it embraces celestial and archetypal realms. Even during the period of 19th century realism it managed to attract the otherworldly into the confines of the little rooms, scattering seagull feathers in gardens and vine leaves in living quarters illuminated by the sacrificial flames of the fireplace. As a comprehensive—but open-ended—phenomenon, the stage itself calls for that which is not only narrowly human but also non-human and cosmic.
So here, at the shore of the Pacific, I remember that the world is mysterious, complex, vast, and that it may be a stage. And so I begin. Feeling the winds moving the waters into ever-changing configurations of shape and motion, I focus on the experience of the wind, its sensation on my skin. Here, at the ocean’s shore, the world ‘worlds’ in its most elemental, direct way. And so I ask: are you the stage, the earth upon which I stand? If so, how do you summon vastness? I close my eyes, trying to feel my way through the surface of the rock, down to its core. Granite. Hard. Not much coming back. I open my eyes again. The flowing mist speeds up, and, like an unfurling banner, brushes across my face. A solitary pelican emerges from behind the craggy peaks, swooping across the horizon. I follow its flight, listening to the heavy wings swooshing in the air. I turn to the left as it passes me by. And then I realize that that is what it means to follow a bird. It means to move while it moves, to incline, to sway, me and the bird, together. The mist speeds up its advance, flowing towards the pelican from the opposite direction, forming, where I stand, a momentary crosscurrent with the bird’s flight. I flow into that. One arm leans into the misty current and turns my body to the right; the other still traces the bird—which by now started to buoy itself up towards the rocky spires—and moves to the left. I expand into that cross-movement. Although the mist subsides soon after, scattered by the gusts of air, the movement continues. One arm circles above the head, the other dives beneath, their gestures opposing, continuous in the shifting currents of the wind.
And then I remember. Or rather, my body does. Or they remember me, perhaps. The Five Dakinis. I learned this crisscrossing movement of the arms during rehearsals for Kalachakra puja at the local Buddhist center, training to take part in the dance of the elemental female deities representing earth, water, fire, air and space—and five aspects of enlightened wisdom. Their dance was all about the arms, their cross-motion, not unlike that of the wafting mist and the pelican’s flight, both arms undulating in the opposite direction from one another. It took me hours to master it. But now I am finding it again, or it is waking itself up in my body. The right arm dives more sharply under the left arm’s more rounded undulation. I seem to be following the Dakinis, swept and swayed by the wind in the open mouth of the cave. Am I dancing a recent memory of a rehearsal or has my body tapped directly into the expressive potential of the elements themselves? I think more the latter, for isn’t that how the Tibetans themselves came up with these movements, exposed as they were to the interplay of elemental forces atop the high Himalayan plateaus? This movement originated in close proximity to the overwhelming void of the space shooting up from the mountains and gathering under the wings of condors. But I don’t need to determine any of this right now. Only the movement matters for it is fun, engrossing. In one way or another, I am present and alive in the in-between spaces of dramatic elemental encounters. I lift up and join the flow of what feels like a primordial experience, unfolding within nature-as-play.
The wind shifts. A dragonfly passes by, struggling with the turbulent air; a slick head of a seal emerges from the waters and disappears, lapped back down by the waves. I move with each creature in turn, but not, I realize, in an imitation of their movement but in its improvisatory continuation. I do not mimic. I simply take what’s given and move within it. Unlike the actors who strive to identify with their roles, I cannot say that I am, or would even want to be, the pelican’s flight, the seal’s dive, the dragonfly’s flutter. Much too interesting to be in this hybrid place of the human and elemental in-between, as an unfolding of energy, of motion. And it is where I am, after all, standing on the shore and moving with the wind as myself, whatever or whoever that is, my orange parka opening and closing with the gusts of wind. I am located in the participatory world as the indeterminate substratum of its elemental and animal movements and transformations. I am their becoming - but not being - human, if being means accomplishment and stasis. They are my becoming - but never being - bird, seal, ocean.
Again, something else happens, like that time in an empty auditorium: performance wakes. Moving with the wind, I feel prompted to give the next moment a twist, as if to say: “here, watch that!” to the sky and the waves. And so I turn, bend and twirl. I hop and skip. I make faces at the wind. Who is doing all that? There is someone here that is doing that. Here, at the shore of the Pacific, facing the the ocean, I am the earth-becoming-me, for this is where I sand, on the floor of the world, inclining towards turbulent waters. And that is why I want to move, to become her, the earth, for it is she who moves in me, who turns and jumps and twirls in me.
I stand on the rocky shore as if on the primordial stage facing the misty sky and tumultuous ocean, performing the earth’s desire for movement and expression. My arms reach out and play, creating half geometric and half zoetic shapes frolicking with seagulls, casting faint shadows onto the vaporous mists. I move, dancing myself out of the slow spirals of geological time, the dead limbs of ancient dancers and deities intertwined in mine. In that moment of the return of that dance I am freed from the singularity of my being, involved in the dramatic event staged - or so it feels - by the earth herself. My feet, sinking into sand and pebbles, create a cleft that appears like a birth canal out of which the body lifts itself up as I move through the earth’s desire to proliferate as one, two and ten thousand things, unfurling themselves into a curve of my arm, flying into the undulating wrist and twirling fingers, which can reach for a top hat and a cane, a veil and a mask, if I so desire and if it pleases you.