SculptureCenter has announced Chance Motives, a program of time-based work presented through In Practice, SculptureCenter's commissioning program for emerging artists. Chance Motives explores the possibilities for rupture within the ongoing performances of daily life and labor through techniques of orchestration and choreography. Loosely interpreted to include pedestrian systems, rituals, and routines; these performative modes are mobilized as alternatives to the tyranny of risk management. The works in the program make use of methods that can accommodate accident and error, in opposition to both algorithms of efficiency (devised for the hysterical demands of market production) and the pure chance operations of Fluxus. The exhibition will be on view beginning today, February 8 from 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. There will be open rehearsals February 5-7 from 12 to 6 p.m. daily.
Chance Motives is organized within the SculptureCenter galleries as an assembly of discrete presentations (and performative installations) engaging a number of themes: gesture as an index of memory; material and cultural appropriations of natural phenomena; psychic distance from the tangibility of social relationships. The unifying principle is formal, insofar as the commissioned projects deal with pacing, rhythm and synchronicity on their own terms, counter to the prevailing narrative of spectacular acceleration and the debilitating anxiety of crisis in the contemporary moment. The act of building up implies a certain degree of breaking down; the fiction of transcendence (virtuosity) is also a lack of transparency.
The works presented take up time differently, culminating in a collaborative and practical expression of heterogeneous rhythms spanning the first week of February 2014. Rehearsal sessions from Wednesday February 5th through Friday, February 7th will be open to the public from 12-6pm, followed by a final, daylong performance on Saturday, February 8th, from 11am-6pm.Videos