"In the past few months
my practice has taken an intense interest in the human body, breathing in
particular. I am drawn to all aspects of it, the movement it generates through
us, the sound, the rhythm, the beat. I enjoy the thought that my audience may
fall into conscious breathing when experiencing my work, to take notice of the
air coming in and the breath going out.
Capturing the essence of
breath through sound/light/image, and with it altering or creating a space.
Whether it be a room or only a portion of it. To at least for a moment make way
for awareness in the audiences experience with their own breathing. By
modifying or creating a space where the audience can be a part of rather than look from the outside in on, I am able to open the
doors into a deeper experience: where not
noticing the air entering and leaving the viewers body becomes almost
impossible, and the choice of breathing together or alone rises before them.
Can a synchronisation between spectator and work take place? How does each work affect the body?
By way of sensory
deprivation the audience can do nothing but focus on their own individuality,
their own breathing and from there an endless cloud of questions and ideas can
emerge: the first breath, the last breath, the lack of breath, the breath we
take every day. ‘The focus is less on writing and on the present moment as
always already passed (a lament), but on experience, and on the present moment
as the product of a particular type of encounter (an analysis.)”1"
Josie Do Nizza (2012)
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