Curated by Kelli McCluskey and Sarah Rowbottam
Cathedral Square until November 5
Tyrone Robinson (pic: PAVLOVA) |
I’m something of a Proximity veteran, having tramped around
the Blue Room, PICA, the Fremantle Arts Centre, AGWA and, now, Cathedral Square
since 2012 in search of the amusement and however big a slice of enlightenment
you can get from a quarter hour or so in the hands, or at least the company, of
a single performer.
That’s the idea of Proximity; an encounter of one performer
with an audience of one, multiplied anything up to twelve (this year a more
manageable nine) times, in one precinct.
It’s a challenge for performers, their curators, Kelli McCluskey
and Sarah Rowbottam, the producer Megan Roberts and stage management, led by Donelle Gardiner. There’s no
disputing it’s also a challenge for the audience.
That challenge for us isn’t logistical – the Proximity team know
exactly what they’re doing and how to do it, and you’re shepherded from site to
site with practiced skill and a small army of vollies.
It’s more about what you do when you get there. There are
some pieces that require your proactive interaction with the artist, some where
the artist leads and guides that interaction and some where you need only
observe proceedings.
The trick is knowing what you need to do, if you need to do something,
and the success of a piece often depends on how clearly that is communicated.
So too Tyrone Robinson’s multifaceted and powerful CONSENT.
Are we engaged in ritual or slaughter? Are we confronted with fear or captive
rage? One day you eat the bear…
LET’S MAKE LOVE Jen Jamieson’s gentle, chatty perambulation
through the laneways and landings of affection is, in part, entertaining pseudoscience,
but, even more enjoyably, a great advertisement for touching and feeling.
These, for me at least, were the highlights of Proximity, as
much for how clearly they placed me within the experience as for the experience
itself.
Other pieces of note, for the same reasons, were Cigdem Aydemir’s
THE RIDE, a gruff but enjoyable piece of film studio trickery on the back of a
motorbike, Martin Coutts’s SHELL GAME, a little game of cards with the South
China Sea and the Spratley Islands as the pack, and Mike Bianco’s THE TREES OF
ST GEORGES SQUARE, a pointed, political induction into the use and misuse of
official gardening.
Less successful were Hannah Brontë’s TRESSE//PASSING – DON’T TOUCH MY HAIR, Liam
Colgan’s REFLUX OF A BLUSH and Nat Randall’s EXCLUSIVE. It’s unfortunate,
because each of them had points to make and were conceived and staged well, but
ambiguities or gaps in advise and instructions left me adrift in the piece and
my part in it. It’s not a comfortable place to be, and not for the reasons the
artists intended. Other audience members will no doubt have made a better fist
of it than I did, and consequently reap greater rewards from them.
It will be interesting to see where Proximity goes from
here. It’s an unusual, perhaps unique, artistic endeavour, and that creates
particular challenges, particularly because there is no established “circuit”
for these pieces and their artists.
After four outings, it’s probably time for an evolutionary
leap in Proximity’s presentation and audience experience to keep what is a
remarkable and stimulating event the “leap into the unknown” its curators seek
to give us.
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