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obscuritas

obscuritas

One day in the autumn of 2018, during a ritual, a shaman, heir to an ancient tradition, told me: imagine you are letting dark water out of your body, let dark water out of your body. The dark water brought back memories, emotions, sensations. In the last few months, when I arrived in Berlin, the memory of this experience accompanied me almost obsessively. I kept seeing the dark water coming out of my body. Hence Obscuritas was born.

- Silvia Morandi 

Curated by: Michele Fucich
Concept, artistic direction and live performance: Silvia Morandi
Costume design: Krystian Filip
Sound art installation: Massimiliano Cerioni
Photo and video documentation: Kaya Neutzer
SCOPE BLN, Berlin
04-31.03.2023
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Obscuritas is a space. At the same time, it is a performance that happens in this space. It is a blend of physical and spatial elements, live performances, and encounters with the audience. It has no real beginning or end. The aesthetic of Obscuritas is entirely monochrome. The dress is constructed from black paper. The design is reminiscent of historical women’s attire, yet it also suggests natural elements like petrified lava, or foliage, or the features of an uncanny machine. Obscuritas is also a sound installation. The sound does not act as a background, but as a living part of the forms and the space. Areas of hybridization between the human body and matter epitomize Obscuritas; its design is never definitively fixed. The boundaries between the elements remain uncertain, permeable.

The project was created by the Italian performer Silvia Morandi between 2022 and 2023 as part of her artist-in-residence program at Scope BLN. It is a collaboration with the Polish costume designer Kristian Filip and the Italian composer and sound-art performer Massimiliano Cerioni.

 

This project is the latest phase of a research by Silvia Morandi which started in 2020 on the borderland between human and nature. The relationship between body and paper is one of its leitmotifs.

 

Based on "The way to Obscuritas" by: Michele Fucich (integral version below) English translation from original German text: Molly Haig

The way to obscuritas
Silvia Morandi’s Journeys into and around Paper
by Michele Fucich

Obscuritas is the black tip of an iceberg. Like an iceberg, it is primarily white, and it moves almost imperceptibly, yet constantly. Its movement is not only horizontal; it takes place at the molecular level, permeating every microscopic fold of the form. The iceberg itself transforms ceaselessly, mingling with other elements that are no less mutable and vulnerable to global change: atmosphere and seawater. The inside and outside of the iceberg are distinct, and yet metamorphosis reigns universally. Through the metaphor of the iceberg, a specific line of artis- tic research undertaken by Silvia Morandi from 2020 to the present can be introduced. The roots of Morandi’s process lie deep in physical existence, beginning with the color white. Its parallel protagonists are the human body and paper, a dynamic and precisely white material that has linked nature and humanity since the first century AD. Within the iceberg metaphor, one must admit that the color black is unex- pected, but it asserts its right to exist when the color white plays a key role. Opposites (and everything in between) are crucial for metamorphosis. At its core, the working process from which Obscuritas emerged draws from driving forces of change—dynamics that affect the material world and human beings as the meeting points of body and psyche, as well as all living beings. The latest phase of Silvia Morandi’s research began in the spring of 2020, a dark time for humanity, when the earth experienced temporary liberation from oppression on one hand and the tragic retreat of its all-too-arrogant inhabitants on the other. Starting from this “zero point” of human exis- tence, and from the radically new experience of our era, the video performance White Zero examines the most intimate interaction between the body and white paper. A paper dress, hand-sewn by the artist, becomes the protagonist. The setting is a completely empty and equally white room in her apartment. No traditional division of roles between the human body and dress can be recognized here; both act as inextricably bonded primary elements. The agitation of this inseparable unit is constant, but often imperceptible. It shows no predetermined direction: not even a distinct beginning or end. The unique human-paper assemblage eludes any fixed form. It is exposed to vibra- tions. There is action everywhere, even where there is the appearance of calm. If we accept that the human body remains hidden here, almost entirely merged with the white paper, then the crease comes into focus as the driving force. As Gilles Deleuze explained, the fold acts as the epicenter of all phenomena. The fold embodies and reflects not a substance or element, but a transformation—the processes, the events, and the constant metamorphosis to which all matter is subject. Folding and unfolding can produce unpredictable results and new connections, as a fold creates the sudden juxtapo- sition of formerly opposite points. The fold is therefore not only inherent in paper, but also in the body itself: in everything that happens in the body at its points of contact. White Zero thus forms a network of micro- scopic events, of barely visible collisions, catastrophes, and rebirths. They do not involve paper and the body separately, but take place in the liminal space that connects paper to the intimate shocks to which the performer is exposed. In this way, Silvia Morandi actively engages with the forced or self-induced isolation and emotional and social alienation of today’s society. In answer to these conditions, she offers the prospect of reconnection with the forces of the earth, so long as we look beyond dichotomies of human and matter and recognize the human as a knot among knots in a web of relationships—a network of chemical and emotional pro- cesses in dialogue with creation. White Zero is a kind of ground zero of performative art itself: the performer avoids any direct manipulation of the paper. She does not claim it. She never opposes or faces it. Our bodies become the receptors of everything that happens inside and outside of us—including great upheavals in a difficult era. The body and paper encompass this reality; from this their relationship materializes. Silvia Morandi has contin- ued her research in this direction from 2021 to the present, unfolding new hybridizations of body and matter, always inspired by the expansion of human identity and the relation- ship to other life forms. The project Anima Condivisa (Palais Mamming Museum Meran, in collaboration with director Alexandra Kaufmann, curated by Miroslava Hajek, September 2021) is the photo- graphic rendition of the coexistence and mutual discovery of the artist and a rescued swallow, fallen from its nest one month too soon and unable to fly. Alexandra Kaufmann’s photography reveals what happens in their physical, immediate proximity. The body becomes the site of this simultaneously earthbound and spiritual encounter, reflect- ing the mysterious interrelation of humanity and the cosmos. This performative research has no time limits. It draws from the relationship and its smallest developments, including moments of everyday care and pauses, playful provocations, and tender connections. Human and swallow build mutual trust, communicate and act together, and live in increasing symbiosis before saying goodbye. They become participants in a natural choreography. The performances Charta (Around the Corner Festival, Berlin Moabit, August 2022) and Border (Basis, Social Activation Hub Schlanders, September 2022) give new momentum to Morandi’s research on white paper and introduce a collaboration with the Polish dress designer Krystian Filip. In Charta, the paper dress designed by Filip becomes a contact element between body, air, and the architecture of a metallic outdoor staircase. Conceived as a multi-layered confluence of membranes rather than a real dress, this work opens the relationship between performer and paper to the outside world. The cavities and the sturdy parapets of the stairwell are resonating bodies for new interactions, sudden tensions and states of transition. The body is now exposed through the paper and beyond, but the solidity of the material, together with its lightness and transparency, still remains an epicenter—a kind of light diffuser—of the whole event. In Border, the interaction of the performer and the same dress is transported to the interior of an old barracks. The action takes place between time-worn walls and a glass barrier that separates the building from the outdoors. Spectators follow the artist first from outside and then from inside, sometimes experiencing her presence through glass reflections and sometimes directly. The performer sways in a spacious hall, concealed at times by sturdy walls. Layers of the dress can be added and removed. The movements sometimes approach dance, but never break the link between human and paper. Thus the path is paved for Obscuritas, and for the work phase begun in 2022 as part of Silvia Morandi’s artistic residency at Scope BLN. Here the color black emerges, following the variations on white and its interactions with the performer’s body in different spaces. This opposite point on the color spectrum does not remain abstract. It is embodied again in paper as a creative partner and con- necting element in a wider environment. Collaboration with other artists is expanded, and the border between per- formance and other areas of research is further explored. A new, original paper construction by Krystian Filip and a sound installation by the Italian composer and sound- art performer Massimiliano Cerioni come into play. In the Basement of Scope BLN, White Zero is shown for the first time as the starting point and foundation of Silvia Morandi’s line of research. The video work is supplemented with photographic fragments—stills from the film, revealed in all their technical imperfection. They act as folds among a potentially infinite array of other folds. — Michele Fucich English translation from original German text by Molly Haig

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