{"id":521,"date":"2021-12-09T11:09:56","date_gmt":"2021-12-09T11:09:56","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.critical-stages.org\/24\/?p=521"},"modified":"2026-06-19T10:44:44","modified_gmt":"2026-06-19T10:44:44","slug":"staged-installation-reported-speech-and-syndemic-images-in-blindness-and-caretaker-2020","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.critical-stages.org\/24\/staged-installation-reported-speech-and-syndemic-images-in-blindness-and-caretaker-2020\/","title":{"rendered":"Staged Installation, Reported Speech, and Syndemic Images in <em>Blindness<\/em> and <em>Caretaker<\/em> (2020)"},"content":{"rendered":"\n<p class=\"wp-block-paragraph\"><strong>Georgina Guy<\/strong><a href=\"#end\" name=\"back\">*<\/a><\/p>\n\n\n\n<h5 class=\"wp-block-heading\"><strong>Abstract<\/strong><strong><\/strong><\/h5>\n\n\n\n<p class=\"has-drop-cap abstract wp-block-paragraph\">This essay attends in detail to the&nbsp;specific&nbsp;verbal techniques used in the construction of two installation-based performances presented in London in 2020:&nbsp;<font class=\"no-italics\">Blindness<\/font>, a socially distanced&nbsp;sound installation,&nbsp;adapted by playwright Simon Stephens from Jos\u00e9 de Sousa Saramago\u2019s 1995 novel&nbsp;<font class=\"no-italics\">Ensaio sobre a Cegueira<\/font>,&nbsp;staged at the Donmar Warehouse;&nbsp;and <font class=\"no-italics\">Caretaker<\/font>, a&nbsp;durational installation by Hester Chillingworth live-streamed from the Royal Court. Exploring reported action as an&nbsp;aural\/oral dramaturgy specifically located at the intersection between curatorial and performance-based practices, this critical response takes up the modes of address employed in its case studies to situate these projects in relation to reciprocal modes of production that have, during this century, rendered the gallery a site for performance. Syndemic conditions invert this direction of travel. In order to navigate the reopening of theatres in the context of social distancing, the contemporary stage is reimagined as a space for installation. This transformation is performed via a set of practices that challenge the dominance of the ocular in contemporary culture and critique established modes of looking by foregrounding verbal over visual representation.<br><br><strong>Keywords: <\/strong>Installational theatre, syndemic, pandemic, reported action, verbal description, ocularcentrism, digital performance<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p class=\"has-text-align-right has-white-background-color has-background has-small-font-size wp-block-paragraph\"><strong>He dreamt, at once, that he was pretending to be blind.<\/strong><br><strong>\u201cIf I open my eyes, what will I see?\u201d<\/strong><br><strong>\u201cIf I open my eyes, what will I see?\u201d<\/strong><br><strong>\u201cIf I open my eyes, what will I see?\u201d<\/strong><br><br><span style=\"font-style: italic\">Blindness<\/span>. Adapted by Simon Stephens. Directed by Walter Meierjohann. <br>Performed by Juliet Stevenson. Donmar Warehouse, London. 3 to 22 August 2020<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p class=\"wp-block-paragraph\">A character goes blind. In the audience, we do not see this event occur. Rather, we hear it told, as action reported, by a voice that does not belong to this figure but to a storyteller. It is the responsibility of this narrator to articulate the words of those to whom this happening has happened: \u201cI\u2019ve gone blind. I\u2019ve gone blind.\u201d After this blinding, the blinded character is taken home by someone else, who, we are told, steals his car and then, in turn, also goes blind. There is a proliferation of blindness. The first character moves, disoriented, through his apartment, sits down, falls asleep and dreams of \u201cpretending to be blind.\u201d We wonder, in the theatre, what this pretence might mean. We think of long-standing and contested casting practices wherein non-blind actors have pretended to be blind, for work, for money, for \u201cart,\u201d and about how the repeated question \u201cIf I open my eyes, what will I see?\u201d challenges the limitations of our dominant and always partial visual impressions.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p class=\"wp-block-paragraph\">As the familiar attributes of the newly blind character\u2019s home are rendered strange by an unaccustomed \u2013now acoustic and touch-reliant\u2014form of engagement, so theatre must be rethought in the, at first, unfamiliar and now persisting situation of pandemic. To re-open in the context of social distancing, theatres must first be reconfigured as installations. <em>Blindness<\/em>, an early example of this practice and the case study with which I begin this essay, is an hour-long, socially distanced sonic installation, with sound design by Ben and Max Ringham and text adapted by playwright Simon Stephens from Jos\u00e9 de Sousa Saramago\u2019s 1995 novel <em>Ensaio sobre a Cegueira<\/em>. It was first staged at the Donmar Warehouse in London from 3 to 22 August 2020, repeating four times daily for audience members seated two metres apart on the stage, while simultaneously available in audio-described and captioned digital versions for those of us unable, for various reasons, to be in London and at the theatre at that time.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p class=\"wp-block-paragraph\">In this essay, the online version of the sound installation <em>Blindness<\/em>, with audio description by Julia Grundy for VocalEyes, is reviewed alongside another related example of practice in order to tease out the theatrical and political potential of performance techniques that foreground verbal over visual representation as they render the stage installational. The second case study also, then, takes the form of an installation, this time durational, that was live streamed from the Jerwood Theatre Downstairs at the Royal Court in London continuously from 8 May to 15 October 2020. <em>Caretaker<\/em>, by Hester Chillingworth, transmits a sustained image of the abandoned stage, set, as it was when the theatre closed earlier that year, for Vicky Featherstone\u2019s production of <em>Shoe Lady<\/em> by E. V. Crowe. Intermittently, this view is punctuated not by performers but by texts written by Chillingworth as sonic messages in response to the contemporary context in which the theatre, and the world, now stands.<a href=\"#end1\" name=\"back1\"><sup>[1]<\/sup><\/a><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p class=\"wp-block-paragraph\">These productions are conceived by their creative teams in a syndemic context that puts new demands on the form and familiarity of our cultural and social interactions. The term syndemic is preferred in my discussion of the staging of these installations since it emphasises the intersection of biological and socio-economic factors in shaping our experiences of pandemic (Mendenhall). The interplay of cultural representation and incidents of infection is particularly relevant to the arguments of this essay. While <em>Caretaker<\/em> works hard to reveal structural and institutional exclusions that predetermine certain risks as socially unequal, <em>Blindness <\/em>disturbingly assumes the eponymous position of being blind as metaphor for, what the play text terms, \u201cepidemic.\u201d Since the performance highlights how states sanction the uneven spread of infectious disease, syndemic is a more accurate descriptive term here. The play\u2019s overt pathologization of blindness, however, limits the radical aural potential of its aesthetic strategies that otherwise seek to counter contemporary ocularcentrism. Rather than resolving longstanding flaws in our representational structures, these installations test emerging theatrical approaches and set out the work to be done.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p class=\"wp-block-paragraph\">The following arguments develop from my experience as a non-blind theatre scholar working at the intersection of practices of display and performance.<a name=\"back2\" href=\"#end2\"><sup>[2]<\/sup><\/a> They proceed from ideas initiated in an invited essay for a recent special issue of French theatre journal <em>Th\u00e9\u00e2tre\/Public<\/em> on <em>Faire sc\u00e8ne: Arts de la sc\u00e8ne et arts visuels<\/em> (2021). For this initial piece, I surveyed a wider set of examples, and identified the need to reassess, from the perspective of syndemic, contested tropes\u2014of the tabula rasa and acts of looking that construct perceptions of artistic and cultural \u201cotherness\u201d\u2014that have been key to the formulation of historic relations between performance and the visual arts. Taking account of the two productions\u2019 implication within dominant aesthetic systems and hierarchies of power and ability, this essay explores in depth how <em>Blindness <\/em>and<em> Caretaker <\/em>pursue verbal techniques already developing across theatre and the visual arts in the U.K. in the 2010s (Guy, \u201cReported Action\u201d) to reframe installation as the pertinent mode for staging syndemic. These practices critique established forms of representation, which regulate creative and public interactions, by verbally destabilising visible points of reference, from the <a href=\"#end3\">ubiquitous visual signal of the traffic light<\/a> to <a href=\"#end4\">images of suffering<\/a> that, following Rizvana Bradley, speak only to audiences able to mark their distinction from those depicted. Revealing <a href=\"#end5\">pervasive modes of institutional surveillance<\/a>, <em>Blindness<\/em> and <em>Caretaker<\/em> establish <a href=\"#end6\">emergent forms of syndemic inflected performance<\/a> articulated through reported speech and staged as installation.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p class=\"has-text-align-right has-white-background-color has-background has-small-font-size wp-block-paragraph\"><strong>Welcome.<\/strong><br><strong>I want you to remember me as so many things.<\/strong><br><strong>I want you to remember me as so many things.<\/strong><br><strong>Take care.<\/strong><br><br><span style=\"font-style: italic\">Caretaker<\/span>. By Hester Chillingworth. Royal Court Theatre, London. 8 May to 15 October 2020<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p class=\"wp-block-paragraph\">In the Royal Court Theatre, the unoccupied auditorium is lit. Its recognisable leathered balcony curves tight around the black box of the stage. Two ropes run from the grid into brightly illuminated trap doors. A bulb burns brightly at the vanishing point of this image, as it is constructed on our screens (fig. 1). Sound equipment interjects from the top line of the frame. Most often this pictured sonic machinery is silent, though occasionally it speaks. What we are promised by the artist is \u201csome space and a few words of encouragement\u201d (Royal Court). With that in mind, I leave the scene running in my browser. It is the promise of theatre\u2019s animating language that keeps me listening. A sound like a doorbell ringing, like someone wants to come in, and then a computer-generated voice speaks. \u201cWelcome,\u201d the voice says. \u201cI thought maybe we could do something different today.\u201d Every 20\u201330 minutes in similar formulations composed daily by Chillingworth. \u201cWelcome. I want you to remember me as so many things.\u201d Compositely, I consider, as installation and as theatre (Guy, \u201cLes scenes contemporaines\u201d 80).<\/p>\n\n\n<div class=\"wp-block-image\">\n<figure class=\"aligncenter size-full\"><img data-recalc-dims=\"1\" loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" width=\"800\" height=\"600\" src=\"https:\/\/i0.wp.com\/www.critical-stages.org\/24\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/25\/2021\/12\/image1.jpg?resize=800%2C600&#038;ssl=1\" alt=\"Stage viewed from auditorium with ropes and tree branches suspended from the rig and two trap doors open on the stage floor. A light at the vanishing point.\" class=\"wp-image-523\" srcset=\"https:\/\/i0.wp.com\/www.critical-stages.org\/24\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/25\/2021\/12\/image1.jpg?w=800&amp;ssl=1 800w, https:\/\/i0.wp.com\/www.critical-stages.org\/24\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/25\/2021\/12\/image1.jpg?resize=300%2C225&amp;ssl=1 300w, https:\/\/i0.wp.com\/www.critical-stages.org\/24\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/25\/2021\/12\/image1.jpg?resize=768%2C576&amp;ssl=1 768w\" sizes=\"auto, (max-width: 800px) 100vw, 800px\" \/><figcaption class=\"wp-element-caption\">Fig. 1. <em>Caretaker<\/em>, Hester Chillingworth, Royal Court Theatre, London, 2020. During <em>Caretaker<\/em>, the Jerwood Theatre Downstairs was set for <em>Shoe Lady<\/em> by E.V. Crowe, directed by Vicky Featherstone, designed by Chloe Lamford, which had been running when the theatre was forced to close. Photo: Robert Smael. Courtesy of Hester Chillingworth.<\/figcaption><\/figure>\n<\/div>\n\n\n<p class=\"wp-block-paragraph\">Theatre\u2019s turn to the installational emerges not only in a syndemic moment but also in the context of increased attention to performance from theatre\u2019s counterpoint, the art museum (Guy, \u201cLes scenes contemporaines\u201d 81). In the last two decades, gallery programmes have selectively included repertoires of live work, staging performances that, like their theatrical parallels, often emphasise verbal narration (Guy, \u201cReported Action\u201d 340). What is shared across these spaces are not only visual systems but scenes and actions that are aural and text-based (Guy, \u201cLes scenes contemporaines\u201d 81). In a context wherein emergency governmental controls add further restrictions to existing \u201cbehavioural codes\u201d that shape our artistic encounters, theatrical installations such as <em>Blindness <\/em>and <em>Caretaker<\/em> benefit from the ways in which liveness has spread in recent years to \u201cencompass both human and non-human elements\u201d (Wood 227). Departing from the \u201creal-time presence of bodies,\u201d Tate\u2019s Senior Curator of International Art (Performance) Catherine Wood precis, the \u201cmetaphorical texture\u201d of performance now \u201crepresents a provisional state of things.\u201d<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p class=\"wp-block-paragraph\">At the intersection of display and performance exists a persisting correlation between the theatrical misconception of the empty stage and the museological illusion of the modernist white cube\u2014both fantasies that conceal the historical and cultural specificity of cultural institutions\u2014that seems particularly relevant given the emergency closure of theatre venues in 2020 (Guy, \u201cLes scenes contemporaines\u201d 77). For some time, images of <em>Empty Stages<\/em>, such as Hugo Glendinning and Tim Etchells\u2019s beautiful photographic series (2003\u2013present), have spoken subtly of theatrical potential and participatory modes that combine acts of looking and doing (Guy 15). If such associative images present a \u201cphotographic space that\u2019s like the experience of being in a live performance\u201d (Glendinning qtd. in Giannachi n. pag.), then reconfiguring the stage as installation forges theatrical encounters akin to scenes in a gallery. In syndemic, the fallacy of the tabula rasa resonates beyond any mirage of neutrality to vitalities of sanitation and human frailty. Theatrical installations that foreground aural\/oral representation thus offer renewed opportunities to challenge political and aesthetic assumptions of emptiness.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p class=\"wp-block-paragraph\">As visual and sonic synergies that emphasise the participation of each entrant, ideas of installation are transportable to the theatre. \u201cInstallation\u201d has spread incrementally, recalls participatory art theorist Claire Bishop, from its use in the 1960s to \u201c<em>describe<\/em> the way in which an exhibition was arranged\u201d to become a \u201ccatch-all <em>description<\/em> that draws attention to its staging\u201d (n. pag.; my emphasis). From its earliest iteration, \u201cinstallation\u201d highlights the verbal representation of visual and spatial forms. It is concerned with conveying exhibition in words that accentuate theatricality. In <em>Blindness<\/em> and <em>Caretaker<\/em>, it is reported speech and action that constitutes each installation; events are not enacted physically for the audience but rather narrated in words. The seeming \u201cneutrality\u201d of the term \u201cinstallation\u201d is also part of its appeal, Bishop continues, along with its recognition of \u201cspace as a work in itself.\u201d When the space of installation (that is itself the work of art) shifts to be a physical theatre venue, we encounter new configurations of what the stage is and what it might be.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p class=\"wp-block-paragraph\">In a syndemic context, the site specificity associated with installation art expands beyond the theatre as practitioners use installational techniques to foreground not presence but vacancy. If, as Bishop states, installation art induces a \u201ccritical vigilance towards the environments in which we find ourselves,\u201d then it offers an apposite form for exploring how to make theatre in syndemic conditions (n. pag.). It is important to reiterate here that my engagement with both <em>Blindness<\/em> and <em>Caretaker<\/em> is digital. Though Bishop reminds us that installation art is often \u201cparticularly photogenic,\u201d my remote listening to <em>Blindness<\/em>, and the reframing of the Royal Court theatre as two-dimensional image in <em>Caretaker<\/em>, might at first seem at odds with installation as a practice that emphasises physical presence (n. pag.). To maintain this distinction, however, is to preserve hierarchies of experience that prioritise certain types of encounter. At stake rather is the possibility that different sorts of theatrical occupation might, as Chillingworth suggests, \u201callow for a particularly wide, accessible, inclusive watching [or listening] experience, where the emptiness can be filled by whatever we bring to it\u201d (n. pag.)<a name=\"end3\">&nbsp;<\/a><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p class=\"has-text-align-right has-white-background-color has-background has-small-font-size wp-block-paragraph\"><strong>VocalEyes Audio Describer Julia Grundy: <strong>\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0<\/strong>The lights glow soft red, then orange.<\/strong><br><strong>Juliet Stevenson as Narrator\/Doctor\u2019s Wife: \u00a0\u00a0\u00a0<\/strong>                       <strong>If you can see, look.<\/strong><br><strong>If you can look, observe.<\/strong><br><br><span style=\"font-style: italic\">Blindness<\/span>. Adapted by Simon Stephens. Directed by Walter Meierjohann.<br>Performed by Juliet Stevenson. Donmar Warehouse, London. 3 to 22 August 2020<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p class=\"wp-block-paragraph\">As <em>Blindness <\/em>constructs its visual scenes through spoken commentary, so the introduction to the installation produced by audio description specialists VocalEyes\u2014and available as a separate audio file on their website\u2014sets out the theatre aurally. Inside the auditorium at the Donmar Warehouse (fig. 2), as Grundy establishes in this spoken foreword:<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p class=\"has-white-background-color has-background has-small-font-size wp-block-paragraph\">the usual seating has been removed and new chairs are placed throughout the space. The chairs are utilitarian, the type often found stacked and gathering dust in village halls or assembly rooms, with shaped backs and seats of pale honey coloured plywood within a steel frame. The chairs are arranged in doubles, with two metres between each pair. (VocalEyes)<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p class=\"wp-block-paragraph\">There is pleasing congruence here between the details of this audio introduction and the narrative techniques that construct the performance for which it sets the scene. Despite being a sonic installation, many of the opening cues that initiate the production are visual. \u201cAs you arrive in the auditorium,\u201d Grundy explains\u2014inviting those of us listening at distance to imagine we are in the theatre, just as the script for <em>Blindness<\/em> provokes us to conceive our attendance at its scenes\u2014a \u201ccoloured light\u201d will show you where to sit (VocalEyes).<\/p>\n\n\n<div class=\"wp-block-image\">\n<figure class=\"aligncenter size-full\"><img data-recalc-dims=\"1\" loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" width=\"800\" height=\"533\" src=\"https:\/\/i0.wp.com\/www.critical-stages.org\/24\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/25\/2021\/12\/image2.jpg?resize=800%2C533&#038;ssl=1\" alt=\"Audience wearing headphones seated on black stage in pairs amongst low strip lights.\" class=\"wp-image-524\" srcset=\"https:\/\/i0.wp.com\/www.critical-stages.org\/24\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/25\/2021\/12\/image2.jpg?w=800&amp;ssl=1 800w, https:\/\/i0.wp.com\/www.critical-stages.org\/24\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/25\/2021\/12\/image2.jpg?resize=300%2C200&amp;ssl=1 300w, https:\/\/i0.wp.com\/www.critical-stages.org\/24\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/25\/2021\/12\/image2.jpg?resize=768%2C512&amp;ssl=1 768w\" sizes=\"auto, (max-width: 800px) 100vw, 800px\" \/><figcaption class=\"wp-element-caption\">Fig. 2. <em>Blindness <\/em>at the Donmar Warehouse. Photo: Helen Maybanks<\/figcaption><\/figure>\n<\/div>\n\n\n<p class=\"wp-block-paragraph\">Despite\u2014or perhaps because of\u2014its emphasis on action reported in speech, <em>Blindness<\/em> begins by giving spoken attention to the visual. The narrative commences from an ocular instruction, painted on black peeling walls for those able to observe this command in the reconfigured theatre and then articulated in speech for that audience, as well as those listening remotely: \u201cIF YOU CAN SEE, LOOK; IF YOU CAN LOOK, OBSERVE.\u201d This directive marks distinctions between the three optical activities it invokes, seeing, looking and observing, as concerned respectively with faculties of sight, use of those capacities for directed visual inspection, and more heedful modes of attendance. An observation is, of course, also a verbal remark. This inscribed and then articulated declaration is followed in the script by the evocation of a ubiquitous visual sign: \u201cThe amber light came on. Two of the cars ahead accelerated before the light appeared\u201d (<em>Blindness<\/em>). Here, this visible cue to regulated movement stands for the visual predominance of contemporary cultural codes.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p class=\"wp-block-paragraph\">The play text for <em>Blindness <\/em>describes not only visual scenes but also words and sounds. The first noises to be articulated in the play are shouts, horns and the expressions of a character driving a car that has stalled in front of a green traffic light. The narrator reports:<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p class=\"has-white-background-color has-background has-small-font-size wp-block-paragraph\">To judge by the movements of his mouth he appeared to be repeating some words, not one word but three as was proved to be the case when somebody finally decided to open the [car] door. \u201cI\u2019ve gone blind. I\u2019ve gone blind.\u201d Who would have believed it? Seen at a glance, the man\u2019s eyes seemed healthy. The iris looked bright, luminous. The sclera white, as compact as porcelain. The eyes wide open. (<span style=\"font-style: italic\">Blindness<\/span>)<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p class=\"wp-block-paragraph\">Visual clues fail. The narrated gestures that accompany the reported words\u2014flailing arms, the appearance of enunciation, how the eyes \u201clook\u201d\u2014cannot convey what is taking place. The screen, in this case a window, must be removed so that the sound can reach the characters and be conveyed to those of us listening at a distance. Vision is not the reliable sense here, either for the characters within <em>Blindness<\/em> or for the acoustically-engaged audience. Even so, the behavioural codes for signalling distress in the theatre remain visual. \u201cOn the floor beneath one chair in each pair is an electric torch,\u201d Grundy explains in the audio introduction, to gain the \u201cattention of members of the front of house staff in case of difficulties\u201d (VocalEyes). In keeping with the complex reporting of visual information through oral communication in <em>Blindness<\/em>, these safety instructions are relayed verbally.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p class=\"wp-block-paragraph\">The narrative of the play takes us next to a doctor\u2019s surgery where the character\u2019s eyes are examined, and the inaccuracy of visual perceptions further expounded. The storyteller delivers the doctor\u2019s assessment that, on visible inspection, \u201cyour eyes are perfect.\u201d When the doctor in turn goes blind, Juliet Stevenson asks, performing the voice of the doctor\u2019s wife that is also the voice of the narrator: \u201cWho ever heard of an epidemic of blindness?\u201d It is tempting to heed this disbelief as a challenge to the pathologizing of blindness inherent to this designation. Despite long and troubling histories of narrative and philosophical enquiry that employ blindness metaphorically (Kleege 3), within the construct of the play this summation cannot be trusted because it is previously \u201cunheard.\u201d The narrator\u2019s description of the doctor\u2019s blindness enacts the shift from visual to aural engagement central to the sonic installation. Assuming himself unwatched, the doctor \u201cturned to where he knew a mirror was. He stretched out his hands to touch the glass. He heard his wife enter.\u201d The narrated relationship to the mirror is no longer one of visual recognition but felt location. This first part of the account resonates with Georgina Kleege\u2019s critique, articulated in her writing on blindness and the  \u201cvisual\u201d arts, of the too easy correlation between \u201cthe sighted man\u2019s eyes and the blind man\u2019s hands\u201d (21). However, the doctor\u2019s experience is multisensory; he is alerted to the narrator\u2019s presence not via her reflected image but aurally.<a name=\"end4\">&nbsp;<\/a><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p class=\"has-text-align-right has-white-background-color has-background has-small-font-size wp-block-paragraph\"><strong>What difference does it make? I\u2019ll go blind one of these days.<\/strong><br><strong>Do you honestly think I won\u2019t? It could happen any minute.<\/strong><br><strong>There\u2019s no way I\u2019m going to leave you. I\u2019m staying here, to help you and the others.<\/strong><br><strong>Well of course they\u2019ll be others. You don\u2019t think we\u2019ll be here on our own, do you?<\/strong><br><br><span style=\"font-style: italic\">Blindness<\/span>. Adapted by Simon Stephens. Directed by Walter Meierjohann.<br>Performed by Juliet Stevenson. Donmar Warehouse, London. 3 to 22 August 2020<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p class=\"wp-block-paragraph\">From the initial scenes of <em>Blindness<\/em>, the storyteller comes to refer to the character at the traffic lights as \u201cthe first blind man.\u201d The position from which Stevenson articulates the narrative\u2014that is, from the perspective of the doctor\u2019s wife who retains her sight\u2014raises key questions about the ways in which acts of looking construct perceptions of \u201cotherness.\u201d In her essay, \u201cAnd What Are You Looking At? Formulas for Making the Invisible Visible\u201d (2008), curator and theorist Elvira Dyangani Ose reminds us that identities are \u201cconstituted within a system of representation\u201d wherein the observed \u201cwill never be regarded as adequate\u2014i.e., identical to the subject who is in a position to regard\u201d (96). In <em>Blindness<\/em>, the question of who holds the \u201cposition to regard\u201d is played out in literal terms; only the storyteller can see, and every event is communicated from her visual perspective. As the play progresses, the blindness of \u201cthe first blind man\u201d ceases to be a unique distinguishing characteristic. The narrator is alone in her sightedness and optical engagement with traumatic scenes.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p class=\"wp-block-paragraph\">We hear reported that the characters experiencing blindness are quarantined in a disused asylum, and the storyteller accompanies her husband to this site by pretending to be blind. Looking singularly at the conditions of filth and violence, the narrator perpetuates ableist assumptions that blindness might offer some protection from situations of suffering. Her entreaty that her blind partner can\u2019t expect her to \u201ccarry on looking at these miseries\u201d recalls Kleege\u2019s subtle unpacking of the misconception that \u201ctrue horror can only be evinced through the eyes\u201d (21). Despite her husband\u2019s pleas that she leaves, the narrator insists on staying to \u201chelp you and the others.\u201d Since she encounters the situation of the play visually, the storyteller is unlike the \u201cother\u201d characters in <em>Blindness<\/em>, and indeed the audience, for whom the performance is sonic. The relative modes of experience are different, and the installation reveals how the \u201cglance of one individual at another, of one skin at another, of one face at another, of one gender and another, transforms the beholder into an \u2018other\u2019\u201d (Dyangani Ose 99). The characters that are blind are \u201cother\u201d to the narrator who sees, and she is \u201cother\u201d to them.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p class=\"wp-block-paragraph\">Speaking on their behalf, the storyteller repeatedly gives voice to a visual sensation that is shared by those characters whose ocular perceptions are altered: \u201cI see everything white.\u201d Within the installation, blindness manifests as \u201cwhiteness\u201d and the politics of associating the limits of visual perception with what the narrative calls a \u201cwhite sickness\u201d cannot go unheard. In \u201cPicturing Catastrophe: The Visual Politics of Racial Reckoning\u201d (2021), media scholar Rizvana Bradley interrogates how pervasive discriminations are sustained by \u201cracialized visuality.\u201d It is dangerous to presume, Bradley warns, that \u201clooking has been left untouched by and innocent of the ubiquity and force of racial violence\u201d (n. pag.). How we see and produce images is constituted according to brutal colonial histories. In <em>Blindness<\/em>, the narrator cannot continue to ignore the harmful and harrowing conditions in the asylum: \u201cYou can\u2019t see what people have done, what they\u2019re doing now. Something has to be done about this mess. I can\u2019t go on pretending that I can\u2019t see. I have to tell people.\u201d The impetus here is towards admission and articulation of cruelties previously overlooked.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p class=\"wp-block-paragraph\">The final announcement of <em>Caretaker<\/em> foregrounds how violent images circulate in speech. \u201cYou taught me George Floyd. You taught me breath. You taught me truth twisters. You taught me second spike. You taught me Barnard Castle. You taught me Breonna Taylor.\u201d Chillingworth\u2019s words name acts of racism and dereliction, verbally recalling accounts and images that circulated in the aftermath of these particular instances of institutional failure.<a href=\"#end3\" name=\"back3\"><sup>[3]<\/sup><\/a> \u201cPicturing Catastrophe\u201d from \u201cmore than a year into the pandemic\u201d\u2014and at a similar temporal distance from the performance installations addressed in this essay\u2014Bradley recounts how Joe Biden, now U.S. President, implores his listeners to confront structural racism: \u201cwe have to look at it as we did for those 9 minutes and 29 seconds. We have to listen. \u2018I can\u2019t breathe. I can\u2019t breathe.\u2019 Those were George Floyd\u2019s last words.\u201d Calling out this incitement to observe and listen, Bradley situates Biden\u2019s narrativization as \u201cfulfillment of a murderous script which is incapable of mourning the life it steals\u201d (n. pag.). Looking at pictures of multiracial solidarity alongside private images of black grief, we must face the prospect, Bradley cautions, that, by constructing black people as \u201cobjects of racial empathy,\u201d these scenes are \u201cmerely ciphers for those subjects who immediately recognize themselves as their audience.\u201d<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p class=\"wp-block-paragraph\">In <em>Blindness<\/em>, it is only the narrator who can look, precisely because she remains distinct from those she represents, and it is her voice and perceptions alone that we hear. Her distress is different and must not assimilate the experiences of those she seeks to support. As she narrates, she is constantly concerned that the guards\u2014who are among the last to go blind\u2014are watching: \u201cI can\u2019t let those guards see that I can see.\u201d The asylum is under surveillance and in the play too, as well as under the \u201cmodern aesthetic regime, every visualization becomes a site of enclosure\u201d (Bradley n. pag.). Even so, it is spoken regulations that set out the terms of confinement. The only other voice we hear in the performance interjects ministerial announcements, heard by the characters on the radio or via loudspeakers within the bounds of the asylum. The broadcasts resonate with our lived experiences of negligence: \u201cAttention: the government regrets having been forced to exercise with all urgency what it considers to be its rightful duty to protect the population.\u201d \u201cWe are relying on the public spirit.\u201d \u201cInternees cannot count on any outside intervention.\u201d<a name=\"end5\">&nbsp;<\/a><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p class=\"has-text-align-right has-white-background-color has-background has-small-font-size wp-block-paragraph\"><strong>Welcome.<\/strong><br><strong>I see you. Do you see me?<\/strong><br><strong>I see you. Do you see me?<\/strong><br><strong>Take care.<\/strong><br><br><span style=\"font-style: italic\">Caretaker<\/span>. By Hester Chillingworth. Royal Court Theatre, London. 8 May to 15 October 2020<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p class=\"wp-block-paragraph\">Spoken attention to sight is also significant in Chillingworth\u2019s <em>Caretaker<\/em>. Intermittently, the automated voice intervenes but, unlike in pre-pandemic performances that centred on reported action, there are no performers on stage either in <em>Caretaker<\/em> or in <em>Blindness <\/em>on whom to focus our visual attentions. The monologues are recorded, and we do not see the bodies that shape these sounds. For Chillingworth, this absence is indicative of a broader commitment to examining how \u201cour viewing process[es] change when there are no visible bodies to project onto\u201d (n. pag.). The closed theatres of lockdown offer a testing ground for this premise. On hearing the statement \u201cI see you\u201d (<em>Caretaker<\/em>), it is not clear precisely who or what has us as audience in their sights. We hope it may be Chillingworth, whose interventionist practice promises care. Yet, as we encounter governmental systems of visual surveillance in <em>Blindness<\/em>, we are reminded, with theatre scholar Alan Read, that contemporary arts organisations seek modes \u201cnot just for displaying views of the world (by artists), but ensuring the institution itself is an almighty surveillance apparatus\u201d (143). In the context of online participation, we wonder who it is that is watching us as the disembodied institution reports to look back, not silently but through verbal assertions of its gaze.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p class=\"wp-block-paragraph\"><em>Caretaker<\/em> foregrounds the \u201chaunted\u201d nature of the theatre as a venue constructed by its histories of production and reception. Situating the installation as a \u201cprofessional haunting\u201d dominated by the spectre of the set for a previous show, Chillingworth claims to be startled that their formally experimental work now constitutes the longest running piece at the well-known Royal Court theatre (Chillingworth). Installation also has a complex relationship to established practices, emerging first as a subversive mode but becoming the \u201cepicentre of institutional activity\u201d and \u201cinstitutionally approved artform par excellence\u201d (Bishop). This cultural prominence allows the theatre to turn to installation in a moment of crisis. Formal shifts, and institutional accommodations and exclusions, shape disciplinary politics. In \u201cI Hate Visual Culture\u201d (2017), Maxime Boidy, Julie Patarin-Jossec, and Susan Hansen recount this provocative statement made by critic Rosalind Krauss as an articulation of anti-interdisciplinarity. Following essayist Jonathan Crary, they trace the limits that come with restricting critical \u201cframeworks to the visible while neglecting the other aesthetical or cultural factors\u201d (n. pag.). To avoid hegemonic interpretations \u201cimposed by the visible\u201d we must embrace instead the \u201cconstituent permeability\u201d of our sensory engagements (Boidy et al.).<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p class=\"wp-block-paragraph\">While foregrounding aural performance, <em>Blindness <\/em>presents a dramaturgical structure that seeks to restore the visual. Returning home, \u201cthe first blind man\u201d searches for the \u201csofa where he and his fianc\u00e9 watched television,\u201d rehearsing ingrained habits of a primarily visual existence. Throughout, the aural content of the installation is accompanied by virtual effects designed, as Grundy describes, to \u201cenhance the story as it unfolds\u201d by signalling a particular location or providing emphasis to what is said via \u201cbrief spasms of brightness [that] are triggered by a word or descriptive phrase\u201d (VocalEyes). At the end of the play, the characters regain their optical faculties, and there is a worrying sense in the piece, as in our lived experience now, of desire for return to a pre-pandemic state. Fictional and actual, syndemics make evident not only embodied social connections but also persisting inequalities that unevenly distribute vulnerability (Butler). How blindness is pathologized throughout the play betrays the sonic experimentation of its production and undermines calls in the script to \u201cfind out how we might live\u201d that might be more resonantly heard and more radically attuned to the potential of \u201cblindness arts\u201d (Thompson and Warne 2018).<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p class=\"wp-block-paragraph\">In its resolution, then, <em>Blindness <\/em>risks recapitulating the regimes of visuality it seeks to contest. On escape from quarantine, the narrator initially remains the only non-blind character. She seeks food and shelter, telling us that there is no water or electricity, and that she \u201cdidn\u2019t know if there was going to be a future. We needed to decide how we were going to live.\u201d The need for new forms of liveliness resonates with Judith Butler\u2019s assertion that the key \u201cquestions\u2014how to live, how to face mortality and how best to make sense of the world\u2014are ones that drive the humanities still and again\u201d (n. pag.). It is prudent, Butler observes, that we turn to \u201cwriting and visual art, history and theory to make sense of [our] pandemic world, to reflect upon the question: When the world as we know it falls apart, what then?\u201d In <em>Blindness<\/em>, the cultural relief longed for by the storyteller is sonic: \u201cYou have a radio! We\u2019ll be able to listen to the news! And a little music!\u201d The power of performance exists in its recurrent experimentation with adjacent practices, its transformatory capacity to move beyond its established forms so as to bring us proximity to and perspective on our worldly encounters. Returning to theatrical models playing out in the gallery, Wood reminds us too that \u201cperformance registers the shifting state of contemporary reality\u2014moving with it, or reshaping relations to change its course\u2014to make representations of what it means now to live\u201d (227). In a sustained climate of crisis, the promise of lively reconstruction is vital.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p class=\"wp-block-paragraph\">If the significance of creative encounters is attached to the project of imagining alternative presents and futures, then it is important to acknowledge these mechanisms as flawed. In <em>Caretaker<\/em>, the voiceover implores us, in the affecting final moments of the installation, to \u201ctake more than one look at things.\u201d Iteration is necessary, perhaps, to see past the biases that direct and inflect our attentions. <em>Caretaker<\/em> draws attention to the urgent need to ask again how the ways in which the human body is \u201clabelled and classified in order to distribute power unevenly [can] be represented and played with in performance without risking reinscribing those very same problems\u201d (Chillingworth). Dominating aesthetic categories are exclusive. In \u201cPicturing Catastrophe,\u201d Bradley attests that if we are to move to radical reimaginings, we must nurture an attentional mode that \u201cundercuts every enterprise of world picturing\u201d and \u201creinvent what it means to see\u201d (n. pag.). In <em>Blindness<\/em>, the assertion resounds, \u201cI can\u2019t see,\u201d sometimes uttered by blind characters and, other times, feigned by the narrator but always a vocal declaration of the perceptive limits of sight. At the end of the installation, the \u201cwhiteness of the white sickness\u201d fades and the characters follow \u201cthe blind man\u201d into a sight we hope is not a repossession but a \u201cradically divergent practice of seeing\u201d (Bradley).<a name=\"end6\">&nbsp;<\/a><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p class=\"has-text-align-right has-white-background-color has-background has-small-font-size wp-block-paragraph\"><strong>The way I speak about things has changed.<\/strong><br><strong>I spoke like this.<\/strong><br><strong>Then I spoke like this.<\/strong><br><strong>And now I speak like this.<\/strong><br><br><span style=\"font-style: italic\">Caretaker<\/span>. By Hester Chillingworth. Royal Court Theatre, London. 8 May to 15 October 2020<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p class=\"wp-block-paragraph\">In dialogue with playwright Simon Stephens, production consultant and critical disabilities studies scholar, Hannah Thompson, discusses the ways in which \u201cbeing blind just makes you find other ways of doing things\u201d (n. pag.). Reframing expressions of \u201cimpairment\u201d that too often imply insufficiency, Thompson\u2019s theory of \u201cblindness gain\u201d asserts that blind experiences have wider cultural value, offering alternative ways of living and innovative aesthetic forms. Installations using reported action to elaborate scenes, characters, and events in words de-centre sight as the primary mode of engagement so that audience members\u2014blind and non-blind, in the theatre and online\u2014engage with images aurally. Using sound, and particularly speech, to structure our encounters, <em>Blindness <\/em>takes up the dramatic potential of techniques long established in practices of audio description (designed to give visual information in verbal forms, mainly but not always for blind visitors) and sound installation. If sound art is a self-referential practice, wherein the sonic constitutes both the form and content of a work, then <em>Blindness<\/em> is similarly a metatheatrical aural narrative that explores alternative ways of encountering the world, of the play, and culturally and politically lived.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p class=\"wp-block-paragraph\">In his theory of sound art, curator and critic Morten S\u00f8ndergaard marks out aural attention as a means by which to reorient our perceptions. Drawing on \u017di\u017eek\u2019s definition of events as that which shift our conventional frameworks of encounter, S\u00f8ndergaard posits that, \u201ccurating sound art is a reframing process\u201d (305). On stage, the communicative force of an acoustically constructed installation offers a means to reconfigure how we encounter theatre in syndemic conditions\u2014both practically and affectively\u2014and a form in which to express global crisis. On return to the theatre, Artistic Director of the Donmar Warehouse, Michael Longhurst, stated that, rather than maintaining a \u201cdeserted monument to when we closed,\u201d <em>Blindness <\/em>offered an \u201capposite form\u201d in which to explore \u201chow the restrictions of this moment could in fact become an expressive tool for story-telling\u201d (n. pag.). Listening to a scene described, or an action taking place, prioritises the imagination of the audience, who are responsible for constructing the detail of what is heard, assembling aural clues, about who speaks, is spoken to, or about, into coherent (or contested) mental concepts.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p class=\"wp-block-paragraph\">Some components of the theatrical scene are narrated vividly, such as the storyteller\u2019s instructions on entering the asylum: \u201cThere are six steps in all. Now keep to the right. Hold on to the wall.\u201d Similarly, the narrator often voices both parts of a dialogue, as when she reports the exchange between herself and her husband, wherein he tells her \u201cI can\u2019t see,\u201d and she asks, \u201cWhat are we going to do?\u201d As the installation progresses, however, the script requires that we not only infer sights unseen but also the utterances of characters not reported by the storyteller. Sometimes, this effect places us firmly within the aural reality of the events described; for example, when we hear only one side of telephone conversations. Incrementally, though, the tunnel vision of the narrator\u2019s account fixates on her own expressions: \u201cDon\u2019t be silly, you can\u2019t. Who will you tell? The soldiers? Do you think they\u2019ll care?\u201d We deduce that the doctor wants to reveal that his wife, the storyteller, is not blind to protect her from the unsanitary conditions of quarantine. The character is talking but we hear only the direct speech of the storyteller. The doctor\u2019s words are not included in the narrator\u2019s chronicle of events. Rather, we must imaginatively reconstruct these exclusions.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p class=\"wp-block-paragraph\">The amplified emphasis on the perspective of the sighted narrator in <em>Blindness<\/em> underlines the priority given to optical attention and non-blind experience, while stressing the unreliability both of visual perception and of reported accounts. In her writing on <em>Sonic Possible Worlds <\/em>(2014), art theorist Salom\u00e9 Voegelin reminds us that sound does not hold a \u201csuperior ethical position or reveal a promised land\u201d (3). Modes of engagement premised on listening will not immediately repair systems\u2014social, legal and representational\u2014and relationships long broken, nor do they exist outside discriminatory structures. Rather, aural dramaturgies that centre reported action might enable us to perceive hidden mechanisms of the visual and challenge its \u201ccertain position, not to show a better place but to reveal what the world is made of, to question its singular actuality and to hear other possibilities that are probable too, but which, for reasons of ideology, power and coincidence do not take equal part in the production of knowledge, reality, value, and truth\u201d (Voegelin 3).<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p class=\"has-text-align-right has-white-background-color has-background has-small-font-size wp-block-paragraph\"><strong>I will remember you as thinking before you speak. Sometimes for absolutely ages.<\/strong><br><strong>I will remember silences with you and loud tunes with you.<\/strong><br><strong>I will remember that when you are sad, it is like someone turning off music.<\/strong><br><strong>And that when you are happy, it is like everything has its own soundtrack.<\/strong><br><br><span style=\"font-style: italic\">Caretaker<\/span>. By Hester Chillingworth. Royal Court Theatre, London. 8 May to 15 October 2020<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p class=\"wp-block-paragraph\">In its final moments, <em>Blindness <\/em>asks that we distrust language too. \u201cWords deceive. They take us by surprise,\u201d the storyteller says in response to three words she hears, overhears, hears too much in the instant of the play\u2019s conclusion: \u201cDon\u2019t lose yourself.\u201d Cleansing in the rain alongside two other characters\u2014the \u201cgirl with dark glasses\u201d and the fianc\u00e9 of the \u201cfirst blind man\u201d\u2014the storyteller recounts being brought to tears because of this \u201cverb in the instructive, another verb, a personal pronoun. We feel them come completely alive. They cut right through us.\u201d Able to penetrate not only visual forms of engagement and syndemic situations of crisis, sonic installations also pierce our theatrical encounters by means of these three words against suspension of disbelief. \u201cDon\u2019t lose yourself\u201d in the words, in the sounds, in this fictitious \u201cepidemic.\u201d Instead, we must return our attention questioningly to the syndemic that persists outside the theatre and the way in which it is constructed for us through fraught representational apparatus. The visual revelation of the play\u2019s conclusion enacts this call. Audio Description: \u201cThe large dock door slowly swings open onto the outside world high in the city. Natural light floods in\u201d (VocalEyes n. pag.).<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p class=\"wp-block-paragraph\">The last announcement of <em>Caretaker <\/em>returns to spoken and sonic acts of remembrance that echo Butler\u2019s sensitive attention to the ways in which, in the enduring situation of syndemic, \u201closses are for the most part borne in private\u201d (n.pag.) The interconnected space of the internet, wherein I encountered both of the installations addressed in this essay, has, Butler writes, \u201cmore fully claimed its place as the new public sphere, but it can never fully substitute for the gatherings, both private and public, that allow losses to be fathomed and lived through with others.\u201d Online, grieving and grievances cannot \u201cassuage the cry that wants the world to bear witness to the loss\u201d (Butler). We want our cries to be observed. The last monologue of <em>Blindness<\/em> gestures also to happenings that remain unspoken: \u201cI could talk about . . . the art galleries and the theatres and the cinemas and the football stadia and the early shapes of public conversations.\u201d As we seek new ways to assemble and converse, aural installations that centre reported action offer questioning beginnings that agitate syndemic conditions, existent and representational, to stage how we might live.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p class=\"has-small-font-size wp-block-paragraph\"><strong>Author\u2019s Note<\/strong><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p class=\"has-small-font-size wp-block-paragraph\">This essay builds on some early responses to <em>Blindness <\/em>and <em>Caretaker<\/em> tested in an article translated as \u201cLes sc\u00e8nes contemporaines de l\u2019exposition de la performance: Th\u00e9\u00e2tralit\u00e9, comparaison, auralit\u00e9\u201d for <em>Th\u00e9\u00e2tre\/Public<\/em> no. 239, <em>Faire sc\u00e8ne: Arts de la sc\u00e8ne et arts visuels<\/em>.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<hr class=\"wp-block-separator has-css-opacity is-style-wide\"\/>\n\n\n\n<h5 class=\"wp-block-heading\"><strong>Endnotes<\/strong><\/h5>\n\n\n\n<p class=\"has-small-font-size wp-block-paragraph\"><a name=\"end1\" href=\"#back1\"><sup>[1]<\/sup><\/a> All quotations from <em>Blindness <\/em>and <em>Caretaker <\/em>included and analysed in this essay are transcribed from my online listening experiences, rather than cited from visual readings of published versions (which are, to my knowledge, not available). Additionally, Hester Chillingworth was generous in sharing with me the written text for the final moments of <em>Caretaker<\/em>.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p class=\"has-small-font-size wp-block-paragraph\"><a name=\"end2\" href=\"#back2\"><sup>[2]<\/sup><\/a> In this essay, I follow critical disabilities studies scholars Hannah Thompson and Vanessa Warne in taking the term \u201cblindness\u201d to signal a range of \u201cways of (not) seeing\u201d and employing \u201cnon-blind\u201d to reference lived experiences that are primarily visual (2018).<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p class=\"has-small-font-size wp-block-paragraph\"><a name=\"end3\" href=\"#back3\"><sup>[3]<\/sup><\/a>During the first period of national lockdown in the U.K. in 2020, Dominic Cummings, then Chief of Staff to British Prime Minister Boris Johnson, drove to Barnard Castle near Durham in northern England, claiming that he undertook the journey to check his eyesight.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<hr class=\"wp-block-separator has-css-opacity is-style-wide\"\/>\n\n\n\n<h5 class=\"wp-block-heading\"><strong>Bibliography<\/strong><\/h5>\n\n\n\n<p class=\"hangingIndent wp-block-paragraph\">Bishop, Claire. \u201cBut Is It Installation Art?\u201d <em>Tate Etc. <\/em>Tate, 1 Jan. 2005.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p class=\"hangingIndent wp-block-paragraph\"><em>Blindness<\/em>. Adapted by Simon Stephens. Directed by Walter Meierjohann, Performed by Juliet Stevenson. 3 to 22 Aug. 2020, Donmar Warehouse, London.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p class=\"hangingIndent wp-block-paragraph\">Boidy, Maxime, Julie Patarin-Jossec, and Susan Hansen. \u201c\u2018I Hate Visual Culture.\u2019 The Controversial Rise of Visual Studies and the Disciplinary Politics of the Visible.\u201d <em>Visual Studies<\/em>, vol. 35, no. 4. 2020, pp. 310\u201318.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p class=\"hangingIndent wp-block-paragraph\">Bradley, Rizvana. <a href=\"https:\/\/yalereview.org\/article\/picturing-catastrophe\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noreferrer noopener\">\u201cPicturing Catastrophe: The Visual Politics of Racial Reckoning.\u201d<\/a> <em>The Yale Review<\/em>, 25 May 2021.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p class=\"hangingIndent wp-block-paragraph\">Butler, Judith, and George Yancy. \u201cInterview: Mourning Is a Political Act Amid the Pandemic and Its Disparities (Republication).\u201d <em>Bioethical Inquiry.<\/em> 2020, pp. 483-87.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p class=\"hangingIndent wp-block-paragraph\"><em>Caretaker<\/em>. By Hester Chillingworth. 8 May to 15 Oct. 2020. Royal Court Theatre, London.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p class=\"hangingIndent wp-block-paragraph\">Chillingworth, Hester. <a href=\"https:\/\/royalcourttheatre.com\/in-conversation-with-hester-chillingworth\/\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noreferrer noopener\">\u201cIn Conversation with Hester Chillingworth.\u201d<\/a> Royal Court Theatre. n.d.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p class=\"hangingIndent wp-block-paragraph\">Dyangani Ose, Elvira. \u201cAnd What Are You Looking At? Formulas for Making the Invisible Visible.\u201d <em>Nka: Journal of Contemporary African Art<\/em>, no. 22\/23, 2008, pp. 94\u2013103.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p class=\"hangingIndent wp-block-paragraph\">Giannachi, Gabriella. \u201cThe Making of Empty Stages by Tim Etchells and Hugo Glendinning.\u201d <em>Leonardo Electronic <\/em>Almanac, vol. 17, no. 1. 2011, pp. 102\u201317.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p class=\"hangingIndent wp-block-paragraph\">Guy, Georgina. \u201cFrom Visible Object to Reported Action: The Performance of Verbal Images in Visual Art Museums.\u201d <em>Theatre Journal<\/em>, vol. 69, no. 3. 2017, pp. 339\u201359.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p class=\"hangingIndent wp-block-paragraph\">\u2014\u2014\u2014. \u201cLes sc\u00e8nes contemporaines de l\u2019exposition de la performance: Th\u00e9\u00e2tralit\u00e9, comparaison, auralit\u00e9.\u201d Faire sc\u00e8ne: Arts de la sc\u00e8ne et arts visuels, special issue of <em>Th\u00e9\u00e2tre\/Public<\/em>, no. 239, 2021, pp. 74-81.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p class=\"hangingIndent wp-block-paragraph\">\u2014\u2014\u2014. \u00a0<em>Theatre, Exhibition, and Curation: Displayed &amp; Performed<\/em>. Routledge, 2016.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p class=\"hangingIndent wp-block-paragraph\">Kleege,&nbsp;Georgina.&nbsp;<em>More Than Meets the Eye: What Blindness Brings to Art<\/em>.&nbsp;Oxford UP,&nbsp;2018.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p class=\"hangingIndent wp-block-paragraph\">Mendenhall, Emily. \u201cThe COVID-19 Syndemic Is Not Global: Context Matters.\u201d <em>The Lancet<\/em>, vol. 396, no. 10264, 28 Nov. 2020.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p class=\"hangingIndent wp-block-paragraph\">Royal Court. <a href=\"https:\/\/royalcourttheatre.com\/caretaker\/\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noreferrer noopener\"><em>Caretaker. <\/em><\/a>&nbsp;2020.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p class=\"hangingIndent wp-block-paragraph\">S\u00f8ndergaard, Morten. \u201cSound Citizen: Curating Sound Art in the Distributed Public Sphere.\u201d <em>Curating Live Arts: Critical Perspectives, Essays, and Conversations on Theory and Practice<\/em>, edited by Dena Davida et al., Berghahn, 2018, pp. 303\u201310.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p class=\"hangingIndent wp-block-paragraph\">Thompson, Hannah, and Simon Stephens. <a href=\"https:\/\/soundcloud.com\/donmarwarehouse\/reclaiming-blindness\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noreferrer noopener\">\u201cReclaiming Blindness.\u201d<\/a> Donmar Warehouse, 2020.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p class=\"hangingIndent wp-block-paragraph\">Thompson, Hannah, and Vanessa Warne. \u201cBlindness Arts: An Introduction.\u201d <em>Disability Studies Quarterly<\/em>, vol. 38, no. 3. 2018. n.pag.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p class=\"hangingIndent wp-block-paragraph\">VocalEyes. <a href=\"https:\/\/vocaleyes.co.uk\/donmar-warehouse-blindness-audio-introduction\/%23player=13858&amp;track=1\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noreferrer noopener\">\u201cDonmar Warehouse\u2019s Blindness: Audio Introduction.\u201d<\/a> 6 Aug. 2020.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p class=\"hangingIndent wp-block-paragraph\">Voegelin,&nbsp;Salome.<em>&nbsp;Sonic Possible Worlds: Hearing the Continuum of Sound. <\/em>Bloomsbury,&nbsp;2014.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p class=\"hangingIndent wp-block-paragraph\">Wood,&nbsp;Catherine.&nbsp;<em>Performance in Contemporary Art<\/em>.&nbsp;Tate,&nbsp;2018.<a name=\"end\">&nbsp;<\/a><\/p>\n\n\n\n<hr class=\"wp-block-separator has-css-opacity is-style-wide\"\/>\n\n\n\n<figure class=\"wp-block-image size-thumbnail alignnone\"><img data-recalc-dims=\"1\" loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" width=\"150\" height=\"150\" src=\"https:\/\/i0.wp.com\/www.critical-stages.org\/24\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/25\/2021\/12\/Georgina-Guy-2.jpg?resize=150%2C150&#038;ssl=1\" alt=\"\" class=\"wp-image-530\" srcset=\"https:\/\/i0.wp.com\/www.critical-stages.org\/24\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/25\/2021\/12\/Georgina-Guy-2.jpg?resize=150%2C150&amp;ssl=1 150w, https:\/\/i0.wp.com\/www.critical-stages.org\/24\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/25\/2021\/12\/Georgina-Guy-2.jpg?w=200&amp;ssl=1 200w\" sizes=\"auto, (max-width: 150px) 100vw, 150px\" \/><\/figure>\n\n\n\n<p class=\"wp-block-paragraph\"><a name=\"end\" href=\"#back\">*<\/a><strong>Georgina Guy<\/strong> is Senior Lecturer in Theatre and Performance at Royal Holloway, University of London. Her book <em>Theatre, Exhibition, and Curation: Displayed &amp; Performed<\/em> (2016) was shortlisted for the UK Theatre and Performance Research Association (TaPRA) Early Career Research Prize and formed the basis for a research-led evening course at Tate Modern, London exploring how performance is curated and collected by art museums. This essay is part of a larger project on reported action in contemporary performance contexts and contributes to a developing theory of (post)-pandemic theatre that reconceives the stage as installation.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p class=\"has-text-align-center has-small-font-size wp-block-paragraph\">Copyright <strong>\u00a9<\/strong> 2021 Georgina Guy<br><em>Critical Stages\/Sc\u00e8nes critiques<\/em> e-ISSN: 2409-7411<\/p>\n\n\n<div class=\"wp-block-image\">\n<figure class=\"aligncenter\"><a href=\"https:\/\/creativecommons.org\/licenses\/by-nc-nd\/4.0\/\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noreferrer noopener\"><img data-recalc-dims=\"1\" decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/i0.wp.com\/www.critical-stages.org\/wp-content\/uploads\/2021\/03\/88x31.png?w=800&#038;ssl=1\" alt=\"Creative Commons Attribution International License\"\/><\/a><\/figure>\n<\/div>\n\n\n<p class=\"has-text-align-center has-small-font-size wp-block-paragraph\">This work is licensed under the<br>Creative Commons Attribution International License CC BY-NC-ND 4.0.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":524,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"_jetpack_newsletter_access":"","_jetpack_dont_email_post_to_subs":false,"_jetpack_newsletter_tier_id":0,"_jetpack_memberships_contains_paywalled_content":false,"_jetpack_feature_clip_id":0,"_jetpack_memberships_contains_paid_content":false,"footnotes":"","jetpack_post_was_ever_published":false},"categories":[7],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-521","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","has-post-thumbnail","hentry","category-special-topic"],"jetpack_featured_media_url":"https:\/\/i0.wp.com\/www.critical-stages.org\/24\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/25\/2021\/12\/image2.jpg?fit=800%2C533&ssl=1","jetpack_sharing_enabled":true,"jetpack-related-posts":[{"id":246,"url":"https:\/\/www.critical-stages.org\/24\/endangered-theatre-a-philippine-notebook\/","url_meta":{"origin":521,"position":0},"title":"Endangered Theatre: A Philippine Notebook","author":"Georgina Guy","date":"December 22, 2021","format":false,"excerpt":"Katrina Stuart Santiago* Abstract This is a critical assessment of Philippine theatre in Manila based on ruptures in its status quo of silence over fundamental divides based on language and privilege, as well as important issues of neo-coloniality, inequality, and injustice. The essay argues that the surfacing of these crises\u2026","rel":"","context":"In &quot;National Reports&quot;","block_context":{"text":"National Reports","link":"https:\/\/www.critical-stages.org\/24\/category\/national-reports\/"},"img":{"alt_text":"","src":"https:\/\/i0.wp.com\/www.critical-stages.org\/24\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/25\/2021\/11\/image6b-1.jpeg?fit=800%2C531&ssl=1&resize=350%2C200","width":350,"height":200,"srcset":"https:\/\/i0.wp.com\/www.critical-stages.org\/24\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/25\/2021\/11\/image6b-1.jpeg?fit=800%2C531&ssl=1&resize=350%2C200 1x, https:\/\/i0.wp.com\/www.critical-stages.org\/24\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/25\/2021\/11\/image6b-1.jpeg?fit=800%2C531&ssl=1&resize=525%2C300 1.5x, https:\/\/i0.wp.com\/www.critical-stages.org\/24\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/25\/2021\/11\/image6b-1.jpeg?fit=800%2C531&ssl=1&resize=700%2C400 2x"},"classes":[]},{"id":626,"url":"https:\/\/www.critical-stages.org\/24\/romanian-theatre-waiting-for-the-present-to-take-shape\/","url_meta":{"origin":521,"position":1},"title":"Romanian Theatre: Waiting for the Present to Take Shape","author":"Georgina Guy","date":"December 18, 2021","format":false,"excerpt":"Kinga Boros* Piatra Neam\u021b\u00a0Theatre Festival, 32nd edition, 3\u201312 September 2021, Romania. Romanian theatre at the end of summer 2021 was marked by two deaths. Voicu R\u0103descu, the founder of the Romanian independent theatre movement, passed away first, and Ion Caramitru, director of the Bucharest National Theatre shortly after him. The\u2026","rel":"","context":"In &quot;Performance Reviews&quot;","block_context":{"text":"Performance Reviews","link":"https:\/\/www.critical-stages.org\/24\/category\/performance-reviews\/"},"img":{"alt_text":"","src":"https:\/\/i0.wp.com\/www.critical-stages.org\/24\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/25\/2021\/12\/PER-PiatraN-To-be-con3.jpg?fit=800%2C533&ssl=1&resize=350%2C200","width":350,"height":200,"srcset":"https:\/\/i0.wp.com\/www.critical-stages.org\/24\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/25\/2021\/12\/PER-PiatraN-To-be-con3.jpg?fit=800%2C533&ssl=1&resize=350%2C200 1x, https:\/\/i0.wp.com\/www.critical-stages.org\/24\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/25\/2021\/12\/PER-PiatraN-To-be-con3.jpg?fit=800%2C533&ssl=1&resize=525%2C300 1.5x, https:\/\/i0.wp.com\/www.critical-stages.org\/24\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/25\/2021\/12\/PER-PiatraN-To-be-con3.jpg?fit=800%2C533&ssl=1&resize=700%2C400 2x"},"classes":[]},{"id":372,"url":"https:\/\/www.critical-stages.org\/24\/anatomy-mon-amour\/","url_meta":{"origin":521,"position":2},"title":"Anatomy, Mon Amour","author":"Georgina Guy","date":"November 28, 2021","format":false,"excerpt":"Johannes Birringer* and Mich\u00e8le Danjoux** Abstract In the anatomy theatre of human bodies, contemporary art can be penetrating and distressing, performing its exhibition into haunting pataphysical occurrences, where color, figuration, shapes seep into our imagination like infectious slime. Looking at The Loneliness of the Soul, featuring works by Tracey Emin\u2026","rel":"","context":"In &quot;Critics on Criticism&quot;","block_context":{"text":"Critics on Criticism","link":"https:\/\/www.critical-stages.org\/24\/category\/critics-on-criticism\/"},"img":{"alt_text":"","src":"https:\/\/i0.wp.com\/www.critical-stages.org\/24\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/25\/2021\/11\/featured-1.jpg?fit=800%2C533&ssl=1&resize=350%2C200","width":350,"height":200,"srcset":"https:\/\/i0.wp.com\/www.critical-stages.org\/24\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/25\/2021\/11\/featured-1.jpg?fit=800%2C533&ssl=1&resize=350%2C200 1x, https:\/\/i0.wp.com\/www.critical-stages.org\/24\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/25\/2021\/11\/featured-1.jpg?fit=800%2C533&ssl=1&resize=525%2C300 1.5x, https:\/\/i0.wp.com\/www.critical-stages.org\/24\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/25\/2021\/11\/featured-1.jpg?fit=800%2C533&ssl=1&resize=700%2C400 2x"},"classes":[]},{"id":711,"url":"https:\/\/www.critical-stages.org\/24\/phenomena-of-recycling-in-the-context-of-the-current-independent-scene-in-slovakia\/","url_meta":{"origin":521,"position":3},"title":"Phenomena of Recycling in the Context of the Current Independent Scene in Slovakia","author":"Georgina Guy","date":"December 18, 2021","format":false,"excerpt":"Miroslav Ballay* Abstract The present study explores areas of contemporary independent theatre culture in Slovakia. It maps out a range of phenomena which are drawn from current theatre practice and offers several interpretive probes into selected stage and performative works. The theme of recycling is foregrounded in various contexts of\u2026","rel":"","context":"In &quot;Conference Papers&quot;","block_context":{"text":"Conference Papers","link":"https:\/\/www.critical-stages.org\/24\/category\/conference-papers\/"},"img":{"alt_text":"","src":"https:\/\/i0.wp.com\/www.critical-stages.org\/24\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/25\/2021\/12\/image4-1.jpg?fit=800%2C533&ssl=1&resize=350%2C200","width":350,"height":200,"srcset":"https:\/\/i0.wp.com\/www.critical-stages.org\/24\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/25\/2021\/12\/image4-1.jpg?fit=800%2C533&ssl=1&resize=350%2C200 1x, https:\/\/i0.wp.com\/www.critical-stages.org\/24\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/25\/2021\/12\/image4-1.jpg?fit=800%2C533&ssl=1&resize=525%2C300 1.5x, https:\/\/i0.wp.com\/www.critical-stages.org\/24\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/25\/2021\/12\/image4-1.jpg?fit=800%2C533&ssl=1&resize=700%2C400 2x"},"classes":[]},{"id":66,"url":"https:\/\/www.critical-stages.org\/24\/tadashi-suzuki-and-theodoros-terzopoulos-crossing-boundaries-creating-bridges\/","url_meta":{"origin":521,"position":4},"title":"Tadashi Suzuki and Theodoros Terzopoulos: Crossing Boundaries, Creating Bridges","author":"Georgina Guy","date":"October 17, 2021","format":false,"excerpt":"Penelope Chatzidimitriou* Abstract In the first part, the paper focuses on Tadashi Suzuki\u2019s relationship with Greece and Greek tragedy, a relationship that dates back to the 1970s and extends to the present. At first, Greek tragedy helps Suzuki refashion the postwar Japanese identity in its clash with the colonizing West,\u2026","rel":"","context":"In &quot;National Reports&quot;","block_context":{"text":"National Reports","link":"https:\/\/www.critical-stages.org\/24\/category\/national-reports\/"},"img":{"alt_text":"","src":"https:\/\/i0.wp.com\/www.critical-stages.org\/24\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/25\/2021\/10\/Tadashi-Suzuki-Theodoros-Terzopoulos-800.jpeg?fit=800%2C532&ssl=1&resize=350%2C200","width":350,"height":200,"srcset":"https:\/\/i0.wp.com\/www.critical-stages.org\/24\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/25\/2021\/10\/Tadashi-Suzuki-Theodoros-Terzopoulos-800.jpeg?fit=800%2C532&ssl=1&resize=350%2C200 1x, https:\/\/i0.wp.com\/www.critical-stages.org\/24\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/25\/2021\/10\/Tadashi-Suzuki-Theodoros-Terzopoulos-800.jpeg?fit=800%2C532&ssl=1&resize=525%2C300 1.5x, https:\/\/i0.wp.com\/www.critical-stages.org\/24\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/25\/2021\/10\/Tadashi-Suzuki-Theodoros-Terzopoulos-800.jpeg?fit=800%2C532&ssl=1&resize=700%2C400 2x"},"classes":[]},{"id":681,"url":"https:\/\/www.critical-stages.org\/24\/new-normal-performance-bangkok-owns-the-virtual\/","url_meta":{"origin":521,"position":5},"title":"New Normal Performance: Bangkok Owns the Virtual","author":"Georgina Guy","date":"December 18, 2021","format":false,"excerpt":"Katrina Stuart Santiago* The Bangkok International Performance Meeting (BIPAM) 2021, Bangkok Thailand, 1\u20135 September, 2021. To say that Southeast Asia\u2019s theatre continues to reel from the COVID-19 pandemic would be an understatement. And it isn\u2019t just about the lockdowns, which inevitably mean the closure of our performance spaces. It is\u2026","rel":"","context":"In &quot;Performance Reviews&quot;","block_context":{"text":"Performance Reviews","link":"https:\/\/www.critical-stages.org\/24\/category\/performance-reviews\/"},"img":{"alt_text":"","src":"https:\/\/i0.wp.com\/www.critical-stages.org\/24\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/25\/2021\/12\/PER-Bipam-featured.jpg?fit=800%2C533&ssl=1&resize=350%2C200","width":350,"height":200,"srcset":"https:\/\/i0.wp.com\/www.critical-stages.org\/24\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/25\/2021\/12\/PER-Bipam-featured.jpg?fit=800%2C533&ssl=1&resize=350%2C200 1x, https:\/\/i0.wp.com\/www.critical-stages.org\/24\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/25\/2021\/12\/PER-Bipam-featured.jpg?fit=800%2C533&ssl=1&resize=525%2C300 1.5x, https:\/\/i0.wp.com\/www.critical-stages.org\/24\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/25\/2021\/12\/PER-Bipam-featured.jpg?fit=800%2C533&ssl=1&resize=700%2C400 2x"},"classes":[]}],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.critical-stages.org\/24\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/521","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.critical-stages.org\/24\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.critical-stages.org\/24\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.critical-stages.org\/24\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/1"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.critical-stages.org\/24\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=521"}],"version-history":[{"count":13,"href":"https:\/\/www.critical-stages.org\/24\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/521\/revisions"}],"predecessor-version":[{"id":1029,"href":"https:\/\/www.critical-stages.org\/24\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/521\/revisions\/1029"}],"wp:featuredmedia":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.critical-stages.org\/24\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media\/524"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.critical-stages.org\/24\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=521"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.critical-stages.org\/24\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=521"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.critical-stages.org\/24\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=521"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}