Pink and Gray


[they] are dressed gregariously, inappropriate for their age. They wear bright clashing colours, strange wigs, and are blindfolded with silver scarves. They walk blindly into the future not knowing how the incidental audience of the City Centre will react. The work is about the vulnerability and presence of women on the street, we embrace the unknown, become creative wanderers. We notice that to some, we are clearly invisible, an embarrassment to others as they shift their gaze and move position. Not evident at the time, we realised that in most of the performance photographs, it was men who stared at us, an observable oddity punctuating someone’s lunch time break. We felt it was that precise moment when the ‘look’ was captured that the performance was actualised. A connection made, albeit fleeting…our work was done.



Comments

  1. here the reactions of the bystanders absolutely define the performative record of the event. You must have had a blast making this piece

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  2. Making the invisible, visible, and giving the viewer an immense amount to think about! Talk about observational learning.

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  3. I like how you can potentially only see the reactions and traces of a performance by looking at photos afterwards.

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