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Fadwa Bouziane on How Performance Art Helps Rethink Connection at a Time of Crisis

The Show opening 121 色库TV 2019 05 03
Fadwa Bouziane, 'Untitled 50,' 2019. Performance. On the artist's shoulder is a board covered in sandpaper; during the performance, the artist sands each piece of a pile of charcoal to dust, covering her body, before standing and leaving the space.
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By Perrin Grauer

Posted on | Updated

鈥淲e鈥檙e bodies with stories that need to be told,鈥 says the performance artist and 色库TV faculty member.

Whether 2020鈥檚 lockdown was a one-time event or a predictor of what鈥檚 to come, artist and 色库TV faculty member Fadwa Bouziane (MFA 2019) believes its impacts will be felt for a long time.

The experience of loneliness, the trauma of isolation and the bizarre ordeal of conducting business and social life through a screen, however, are not the outcome of COVID-19; rather, she says, they鈥檙e thoroughly modern routines which have only become amplified during the pandemic.

鈥淚 think we're craving human touch and craving witness and craving being with a group of people all at the same time,鈥 she says. 鈥淪o, how can we talk about our own trauma of being separated, and overcome loneliness 鈥 which was already a problem before, but, I think, is just exponential right now?鈥

For Fadwa, performance art provides a ready answer to that question.

鈥淚t's good to engage in performance art at times like these, because it allows us to ask how we can rethink our bodies in connection to others,鈥 she says. And while, in many ways, performance art is fundamentally resistant to mediation 鈥 including via a digital screen 鈥 Fadwa says her course will be a study in strategies for remotely communicating bodily gesture.

"The gesture is almost like a mechanism or a machine, with emotion and feeling and thinking ... The gesture is your strategy to tell me your story."

Fadwa Bouziane

She notes the practice of viewing art in traditional exhibition spaces provides a well-established precedent for how to address challenges around connecting at a distance.

鈥淲e're not all living in the space the artist lives, which is the same reality as when you go to a museum,鈥 she says. In other words, the goal isn鈥檛 to figure out how to preserve the immediacy of performance for its own sake, but to find ways performance can be employed to drive closer engagement between people, even at a distance. This points inexorably to collaboration and discussion, Fadwa adds, which are two of the primary ways people process experiences as mundane as a tough day at work, and as extraordinary as a pandemic.

鈥淲e're just acknowledging the world right now, and all the tensions that this disease has brought up,鈥 she says, noting such acknowledgment is made even more challenging by the need to keep apart.

鈥淪o, how can we come back in, deal with it? You can use anything to get your point across. Just be playful, and let's talk about it after.鈥

Fadwa PERF
Fadwa Bouziane, 'Untitled 50,' 2019. Performance.

Fadwa鈥檚 course is just one of the performance-inclusive classes being offered by Emily Carr. Multidisciplinary artist 鈥檚 course 鈥樷 considers the role of digital and online spaces as forums for viewership, participation and performance. With the option of working in a variety of media including performance, photography, video and web-based approaches, Merritt鈥檚 students will set up online studios to present and view their works.

Artist also offers students the chance to examine the relationships between new technologies and performance with her course, 鈥樷 Lauren鈥檚 students will investigate themes including how 鈥渘ew technologies shape and shift what it means to perform live鈥; 鈥渉ow technologies like phones, computers and networks ask us to perform every day鈥; and 鈥渢he Internet's potential as a new type of stage with a new mode of liveness.鈥

Fadwa Untitled11
Fadwa Bouziane, 'Untitled 11,' 2019. Performance, with fabric, book and wind.

Fadwa notes that undertaking a performance work is no easy task. For artists and students alike, there鈥檚 often a sense of fear, she says, because the medium is one鈥檚 own body, and nobody likes to be judged for what they present physically. Critiques can sometimes 鈥渉urt a little bit more鈥 for that same reason. But Fadwa emphasizes that it鈥檚 not the body that鈥檚 being critiqued; rather, it鈥檚 the gesture.

鈥淭he gesture is almost like a mechanism or a machine, with emotion and feeling and thinking,鈥 she says. 鈥淚t's really bold for me, because whereas in painting, a gesture goes into the painting, in performance, all your action counts even more. You鈥檙e putting all of your story into it. We're bodies with stories that need to be told. So the gesture is your strategy to tell me your story.鈥

Executing a performance work, she adds, is a feeling like no other 鈥 a feeling she wants everyone to share.

鈥淚 really, really believe that performance should be mandatory,鈥 she says. 鈥淚 think it helps the mental state of people who receive it, who talk about it, who do it. It's hard, it's funny, it's raw, it's amazing. And in the end, every time I finish a performance, or every time one of my students finish, it just feels so good. Because they've expressed themselves in a way that no other medium can accommodate.鈥