Dead Sea
Pioneer Works
Curated by David Everrit Howe
24-29 July, 2019
A new commission years in the making, Tamar Ettun’s performance Dead Sea is her largest-scale production to date, encompassing the entire main hall of Pioneer Works as well as an upper floor mezzanine. Building upon the artist’s continuing interest in trauma, emotional empathy, and the universality of shared human experience, this performance is also perhaps her most intimate.
Dead Sea is composed of a succession of unfolding actions, movement phrases, and short stories that revolve around a fictional character named Abigail, who’s never been to the beach. Gigantic sails made of parachute fabric, lifeguard stations, sculptural motifs, larger-than-life curtains, and set pieces provide a fantastical escape for her. In the style of Magical Realism, Ettun’s narratives about Abigail’s life are both whimsical and horrific, detailing not only first loves and the rush of dating, but also death and repeated sexual assault at the hands of family members and boyfriends. Their guilt is complicated by the fact that Abigail once loved all of them, and in a way, they were also victims—of a patriarchal society that passed on such behavior from generation to generation. Fault belongs to the perpetrator, but also to the system that perpetuates it.
The performance begins and ends with the unraveling and then collapse of hand-dyed parachute fabric, which serves as something of a symbolic horizon line, delineating an above-water performance space from one “below the waves.” For Ettun, who was raised an Orthodox Jew and was one of four females serving in an Israel Defense Forces parachute unit, the fabric is rich with meaning; it has come to symbolize the brutality of institutionalized violence. For Orthodox theorist and Holocaust survivor Emmanuel Levinas, compassion is an ethical responsibility of humans, and Dead Sea conveys a nuanced opinion on blame and forgiveness, finding in both a complexity that mirrors lived experience.
Tamar Ettun: Dead Sea was commissioned by Pioneer Works and curated by David Everitt Howe.
Choreography: Mor Mendel
Score: Helado Negro
Performers: Laurel Atwell, Tamar Ettun, Mor Mendel, Tina Wang
Lifeguards: Aika Akhmetova, Roni Aviv, Echo Eraso, Caseena Karim
Costume Design: Veronika Brusa of BERENIK
Fabric Design: Aimee Burg, Soule Golden
Fabric Seamstress: Jennica Drice
Installation and Fabrication: Julian Townley, Willie Vantapool, Adrian Hayman, Vincent Sicilio
Producer: Amanda Grossman
Photography: Walter Wlodarczyk
Pioneer Works
Curated by David Everrit Howe
24-29 July, 2019
A new commission years in the making, Tamar Ettun’s performance Dead Sea is her largest-scale production to date, encompassing the entire main hall of Pioneer Works as well as an upper floor mezzanine. Building upon the artist’s continuing interest in trauma, emotional empathy, and the universality of shared human experience, this performance is also perhaps her most intimate.
Dead Sea is composed of a succession of unfolding actions, movement phrases, and short stories that revolve around a fictional character named Abigail, who’s never been to the beach. Gigantic sails made of parachute fabric, lifeguard stations, sculptural motifs, larger-than-life curtains, and set pieces provide a fantastical escape for her. In the style of Magical Realism, Ettun’s narratives about Abigail’s life are both whimsical and horrific, detailing not only first loves and the rush of dating, but also death and repeated sexual assault at the hands of family members and boyfriends. Their guilt is complicated by the fact that Abigail once loved all of them, and in a way, they were also victims—of a patriarchal society that passed on such behavior from generation to generation. Fault belongs to the perpetrator, but also to the system that perpetuates it.
The performance begins and ends with the unraveling and then collapse of hand-dyed parachute fabric, which serves as something of a symbolic horizon line, delineating an above-water performance space from one “below the waves.” For Ettun, who was raised an Orthodox Jew and was one of four females serving in an Israel Defense Forces parachute unit, the fabric is rich with meaning; it has come to symbolize the brutality of institutionalized violence. For Orthodox theorist and Holocaust survivor Emmanuel Levinas, compassion is an ethical responsibility of humans, and Dead Sea conveys a nuanced opinion on blame and forgiveness, finding in both a complexity that mirrors lived experience.
Tamar Ettun: Dead Sea was commissioned by Pioneer Works and curated by David Everitt Howe.
Choreography: Mor Mendel
Score: Helado Negro
Performers: Laurel Atwell, Tamar Ettun, Mor Mendel, Tina Wang
Lifeguards: Aika Akhmetova, Roni Aviv, Echo Eraso, Caseena Karim
Costume Design: Veronika Brusa of BERENIK
Fabric Design: Aimee Burg, Soule Golden
Fabric Seamstress: Jennica Drice
Installation and Fabrication: Julian Townley, Willie Vantapool, Adrian Hayman, Vincent Sicilio
Producer: Amanda Grossman
Photography: Walter Wlodarczyk