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pOpticons

TONY SCHULTZ
Dance + Technology Expert
Bronxville, NY USA
BIO | POSTS

Over the past few weeks of my Dance and Technology class at Sarah Lawrence College, the students and I have been programing, dissecting and repurposing surveillance systems to develop mediated performance outlets/environments. To aid and inform our strategies in this project we have been thinking and reading about panopticism.

What is panopticism anyway? wiki wiki

Jeremy Bentham’s Panopticon, a theoretical architecture imagined in the 1780’s, is illustrated above. The name literally means the “all-seeing place.” He describes it as a multi-purpose architecture whose design principles are applicable to constructing factory, school, prison, hospital or asylum. A multi-story ring of individual cells surround a central watchtower; every cell is visible from the watchtower while the watcher remains invisible.

The viewer can see everything while remaining invisible.

This panoptic prison named Presidio Modelo, built under the dictatorship of Gerardo Machado in Cuba, once held the one and only Fidel Castro. It is now a national monument.

Foucault uses the Panopticon to analyze the new ways in which power is exercised in the modern world and the role surveillance technologies play in creating a disciplined/docile body. He describes Bentham’s architecture as a kind of multi-staged performance space.

The unverifiable possibility that a subject is being observed at any time is the essential mechanism by which the machine operates. Visibility, as Meghan noted in class, makes one take responsibility for their own subjection.

He who is subjected to the field of visibility, and who knows it, assumes responsibility for the constraints of power; he makes them play simultaneously upon himself; he inscribes in himself the power relation in which he simultaneously plays both roles; he becomes the principle of his own subjection. Discipline and Punish 202

What does this have to do with performance? Everything…

Foucault describes the stacks of cells; “They are like so many small cages, so many small theaters, in which each actor is alone, perfectly individualized and constantly visible.

In one way the panopticon is like a super-theater, a nesting of many stages.

However Foucault stresses that surveillance architectures are exactly the reverse of those of theater. He writes, “We are much less Greeks than we believe. We are neither in the amphitheatre, nor on the stage, but in the panoptic machine.” Survellence allows one to see many while theater and spectacle is based on many seeing one
Compare the structure of the Panopticon to that of the Globe Theater.

Different yet the same. Definitely involved in a complex tangle.

This assembly can be used as a dance technology. On April 28th and 29th 2007 Martha Williams directed and performed in a dance installation entitled Stacked, converting an out of business clothing store into a surveillance menagerie. Each dancer took residence in one of nine changing rooms which they themed and designed the interiors of. Camera feeds from each cell were composed and projected in the central room so that all of the dances could be seen at once.

Turning the panopticon back into a performance space constitutes a double reversal.

With this in mind, take another look at the dance-cube I prototyped last fall. In this staging the cameras are on the perimeter of the studio so that the gaze is directed from the outside in (as in theater) rather than from the inside out.

Though still, looking at this dance I am reminded of the cells of the panopticon.

They are like so many small cages, so many small theaters, in which each actor is alone, perfectly individualized and constantly visible.

Could we characterize the structure of the internet as panoptic? Here is a great essay that explores that question.
This very space is haunted by panoptic geometries. Have a look at the contributor list in the sidebar, look at all those little faces, “perfectly individualized” subjects you can see all at once and may click on to reveal “so many small theaters.

The design of social networking and internet dating sites, showing all your friends faces in an array, seduces us with a kind of panoptic fantasy, being able to see many at once. This is where things become slightly more complicated. Just like the panopticon embeds tiny theaters in an array, these social technologies embed so many small panopticons in a matrix of connectivity. Each cell is now its own theater and watchtower.

All these ideas should not creep us out. Rather, they should inform our thinking about performance and visibility and the way technology provides new venues for artistic expression. It is an open problem. In my estimation projects like Martha William’s Stacked, my dance-cube, or The(Inter)Mission are all part of a project to reverse-the-panopticon. While flirting with aspects of surveillance and making the subject hyper-visible, they enhance communication rather than simply separate us into little boxes.

So next time you feel like you are under surveillance consider it an opportunity to put on a show.

Recent Posts by tony schultz

Hello Glasgow

kate40 uksmall Posted by Kate Bordwell

I’ve been quite slack at posting all round really, and I promise to do better, because there is such a lot going on here in Glasgow that I would like to tell Wingers all about.

First of all, I have found classes to go to at The Scottish Ballet and The Dance House (thank you for the tip Article 19.) The Scottish Ballet classes are, well, ballet classes and they are HARD. Everything goes very quickly and I have to work very hard to keep up. The great thing about this class is that it’s in a really nice big rehearsal room, there is a good pianist and the teacher makes quite funny jokes. Also, if you get there early you can watch “the proper dancers” rehearsing before class begins.

The Dancehouse is for contemporary, and I do a class that is largely Graham based with some Cunningham thrown in. Hooray. It is at the Scottish Youth Theatre and my only complaint is that the floor is not sprung. Ouch. But the class is taught by a guy called Martin Robinson, who trained at my beloved London School of Contemporary Dance a.k.a. The Place - which makes me happy since I am not the only person making the great move up north.

The Scottish Youth Theatre is an impressive building - a strange and wonderful mixture of very modern and very old. It used to be the Sherriff Court in Glasgow.

Our class takes place in “The Purple Room”. There are lots of rooms named after colours, but they are not coloured inside.

It’s the Easter holidays at the moment, and there is no dancing. Also, I have hurt my knee training for a (running) race, so I don’t know when I will be going back. Boo. I will have to make up for not dancing by watching a lot of dancing - watch this space as I have some very exciting things to tell you about later in the month.

I am absolutely loving living in Glasgow. What I like most is the fact that there is so much culture just jammed in to a tiny space and it is very accessible. For example, a few weeks ago my friends said to me on a Friday afternoon,”What are you doing tonight?” I said I had been going to see a comedy show but that it had been cancelled. “Well come along to the CCA (Centre for Contemporary Arts) - there’s a free gig to launch The Ballad of the Books.” So off we went and watched some bands, including the Trashcan Sinatras, whom I used to listen to when I was a small teenager.

The CCA is practically next door to the Glasgow School of Art, a hulking great Charles Rennie Macintosh building at the top of the very steep hills which in Glasgow are called Drumlins. Some people say it feels a bit like San Francisco in Glasgow. But probably no one who has actually been to San Francisco…

The CCA is another old building that has been made new. In the centre of the building there is a courtyardy sort of place where there’s a bar and a mezzanine level. It was here that we watched the bands.


All in all this is a wonderful place and I look forward to telling you more about it.

In other news, I recently became an aunt, to Megan. Here she is with her babysitter.

Recent Posts by kate bordwell