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Your Morning is My Night
4 minutes 40 seconds
This is an edited excerpt of Eiko and Iris McCloughan's experiment working over Zoom on May 5, 2020 as a part of Eiko's Virtual Creative Residency hosted by Wesleyan University.
Read Iris’ accompanying poem My Morning is Your Night.
Iris is both a dramaturg and a collaborator in Eiko's Duet Project. Iris is in their studio in Brooklyn, New York and Eiko is in a suburb of Tokyo, Japan 6761 miles away. Both are restricted under the emergency order due to the coronavirus pandemic. We are in a situation we could not imagine when we subtitled our project as “Distance is Malleable”.
Now already a month in quarantine in Japan, I realize I will be away considerably longer from New York, where many of my collaborators are. I proposed to Iris to continue our collaboration in moving in separate places at the same time to create material as a part of The Duet Project.
In this first experiment, we wanted to explore
- How do we use Zoom differently so that bodies and movements are captured? 
- How do we fully recognize that we are in two different places? 
- How can we work kinesthetically and feel each other? 
- How do we make our physical distance malleable? 
Like many other people working at home and engaged in Zoom meetings, I appreciate we have a tool to converse digitally and document these conversations through recording. But like others, I too feel increasingly frustrated with its default settings, with its default variations; we are reduced to our faces, front-sided, and at best usually only with our upper bodies (head and shoulders). Different walls or selected pictures (i.e., a forest that does not swing with wind).
In this first session, we tried to break Zoom's conventions by
- Placing our computers in different positions, 
- Moving a computer itself with our bodies, 
- Instinctively alternating times we move consciously with the screen composition or ignore what it captures and improvise imagining each other as a duet partner. 
I edited the footage from the Zoom recording with the emphasis above. Working on this edit gave me a long time to watch Iris and myself, possibilities of connection I was not aware of while moving. So editing became also a process to be engaged and to learn how two artists deepen our selected encounters and are affected by each other.
While editing, I decided to play the music my dear friend David Harrington shared with me with this comment: "To me this performance is at it’s heart something beyond, way beyond normal musical experience and expression." I was surprised how it lifted my spirit. i have not danced to music for many years, and Iris and I certainly have not. But editing became my dance to this amazing music.
Music: Bach-Werke-Verzeichnis 244 performed by singer Kathleen Ferrier (1912-1953) with violinist David MacCallum
 
                
              