Drawing on my recent experience
of working in collaboration with the artist-led project,
Open City, I want to explore the potential of an active
and resistant - rather than passive and acquiescent – form
of stillness that can be activated strategically within a
performance-based practice. The article examines how
stillness and other forms of non-productive or
non-teleological activity might contribute towards the
production of a radically dissenting – yet affirmative –
model of contemporary subjectivity. It will investigate
how the performance of stillness within an artistic
practice could offer a pragmatic model through which to
approach certain philosophical concepts in relation to the
construction of subjectivity, by proposing a practical
application of the various ideas explored therein.
Stillness is often presented as antithetical to the
velocity, mobility, speed and supposed freedom proposed by
new technologies and the various accelerated modes by
which we are encouraged to engage with the world. In one
sense, stillness and slowness have been deemed outmoded or
anachronistic forms of temporality, as fastness and
efficiency have become the privileged terms.
Alternatively, stillness has been reclaimed as part of a
resistant – or at least reactive – “counter-culture”
for challenging the enforced and increased pace at which
we are required to perform. The intent, however, is not to
focus on the transcendent possibilities – or even
nostalgic dimension – of stillness, where it could be seen
as a form of escape from the accelerated temporalities of
contemporary capitalism, a move towards a slower, more
spiritual or meditative existence by the removal of or
self-imposed isolation from contemporary societal
pressures. Instead, this article attempts to explore the
potential within those forms of stillness specifically
produced in and by contemporary capitalism, by reflecting
on how they might be (re)inhabited – or appropriated
through an artistic practice – as sites of critical
action.
The article will suggest ways in which habitually
resented, oppressive or otherwise tedious forms of
stillness, inaction or immobility can be turned
into active or resistant strategies for producing the
self differently to dominant ideological expectations
or pressures. With reference to selected theoretical
ideas primarily within the writing of Gilles Deleuze –
especially in relation to Spinoza’s Ethics –
I want to explore how the collective performance of
stillness in the public realm produces an affect that
both reveals and disrupts habitual patterns of
behaviour. Stillness presents a break or pause in the
flow of events, illuminating temporal gaps and
fissures in which alternative or unexpected
possibilities – for life – might be encountered and
encouraged. The act of collective stillness can be
understood as a mode of playful resistance to, or
refusal of, societal norms, a wilful and collaborative
attempt to break or rupture habitual flows. However,
collective stillness also has the capacity to exceed
or move beyond resistance by producing germinal
conditions for a nascent community of experience no
longer bound by existing protocol; a model of
“communitas” emerging from the shared act of being
still. The focus then, is to reflect on how the
gesture of stillness performed within the context of
an artistic practice – such as that of Open City
– might offer an exemplar for the production of an
affirmative form of subjectivity, by arguing how the practice
of stillness paradoxically has the potential for
increasing an individual’s capacity to act.
Open City is an investigation-led artistic
project – led by Andrew Brown and Katie Doubleday –
that explores how public space is conceptualised and
organised by interrogating the ways in which our daily
actions and behaviours are conditioned and controlled.
Their research activity involves inviting, instructing
or working with members of the public to create
discreet interventions and performances, which put
into question or destabilise habitual patterns or
conventions of public behaviour, through the use of
invitations, propositions, site-specific actions and
performative events. The practical and theoretical
research phase of the Open City project was
initiated in 2006 in collaboration with
artist/performer Simone Kenyon. During this phase of
research Open City worked with teachers of
the Alexander Technique deconstructing the mechanics
of walking, and observed patterns of group behaviour
and ‘everyday’ movements in public spaces. This
speculative phase of research was expanded upon
through a pilot project where the artists worked with
members of the public, inviting them to attempt to get
lost in the city, to consider codes of conduct through
observation and mimicry, to explore behavioural
patterns in the public realm as a form of
choreography, and to approach the spaces of the city
as an amphitheatre or stage upon which to perform.
This culminated in a series of public performances and
propositional/instructive works as part of the nottdance
festival in Nottingham (2007) where audiences were
invited to participate in choreographed events,
creating a number of fleeting and partially visible
performances throughout the city. Members of the
public were issued specific time-based invitations for
collective and individual actions such as ‘Day or
night – take a walk in which you notice and
deliberately avoid CCTV cameras’ or ‘On the high
street during rush hour … suddenly and without
warning, stop and remain still for five minutes … then
carry on walking as before.’

Image 1: Open City
, documentation of
publicly-sited postcards.
As part of this phase of activity, I was invited by Open
City to produce a piece of writing in response
to their work – to be serialised over a number of
publicly distributed postcards – which would attempt
to critically contextualise the various issues and
concerns emerging from the investigation-led research
that the project had been developing in the public
realm. The postcards included an instruction written
by Open City on one side, and my serialised
text on the other. I have since worked more
collaboratively with Open City on new
research investigating how the different temporalities
within the public realm might be harnessed or
activated creatively; how movement and mobility affect
the way in which place and locality are encountered or
understood. My involvement with the project has
specifically been in exploring the use of text-based
elements, instructions and propositions and has
included further publicly-sited postcard texts and the
development of sound-based works using iPod technology
to create synchronised actions. In 2008, I
successfully secured Arts Council of England funding
for a practice-based research trip to Japan with Open
City in which we initiated our specific
investigations around stillness, slowness,
obstruction, and blockage. During this phase of
research we became interested in how speed and
slowness can be utilised within a performance practice
to create points of anchor and location within the
urban environment, or in order to affect a
psychological shift in the way that space is
encountered and understood.
Image 2: Open City, research
investigations, Japan, 2008.
On one level, Open City can be located
within a tradition of publicly-sited performance
practices. This genealogy of politically – and more
often playfully – resistant actions, interventions and
models of spatial occupation or navigation can be
traced back to the ludic practice of Surrealist errance
or aimless wandering into and through the
Situationists’ deployment of the dérive and
conceptualisation of “psychogeography” during the
1950s and 60s. In its focus on collective action and
inhabitation of the everyday as a site of practice, Open
City is also part of a trajectory of artistic
activity – epitomised perhaps by Allan Kaprow’s Happenings
– intent on blurring the line between art and life, or
in drawing attention to those aspects of reality
marginalised by dominant discourses and ideologies.
Performed as part of an artistic practice,
non-habitual or even habitually discouraged actions
such as aimless wandering, standing still, even the
(non)event of 'doing nothing' operate as subtle
methods through which to protest against increasingly
legislated conditions of existence, by proposing
alternative modes of behaviour or suggesting
flexibility therein. Artistic practice can be seen as
a site of investigation for questioning and
dismantling the dominant order – or “major” language –
through acts of minor rebellion that – whilst
predominantly impotent or ineffective – might still
remind us that we have some agency and do not always
need to wholly and passively acquiesce. Life itself
becomes the material for a work of art, and it is
through such an encounter that we might be encouraged
to conceive other possibilities for life.
Through art, life is rendered plastic and capable of
being actively shaped or made into something different
to how it might habitually be.
However the notion of ‘life as a work of art’ is not
exclusive to artistic practice. Various theorists and
philosophers – including Nietzsche, Foucault, Spinoza,
Deleuze and Guattari – have advocated the necessity of
viewing life as a kind of project or mode of
invention, suggesting ways in which one’s “style of
life” or way of existing might be produced or
constructed differently. They urge us to consider how
we might actively and consciously attend to the full
possibilities of life in order to become more
human, by increasing our “affective capacity,”
that is, our capacity to affect and be affected in
affirming or “augmentative terms” (Deleuze, Spinoza
and Us 124). In one sense, Spinoza’s Ethics
offers a pragmatic model – or guide to living –
through which to attempt to increase one’s potential
capacity for being, by maximising the
possibility of augmentative experiences or joyful
encounters. Here, Spinoza formulates a plan or model
through which one might attempt to move from the
“inadequate” realm of signs and effects – the first
order of knowledge in which the body is simply subject
to external forces and random encounters of which it
remains ignorant – towards a second order of
knowledge. Here, the individual body is able to
construct concepts of causes or “common notions” with
other “bodies in agreement.” The “common notions” of
the second order are produced at the point where the
individual is able to rise above the condition of
simply experiencing effects and signs in order to form
agreements or joyful encounters with other bodies.
These harmonious synchronicities with other bodies
harness life-affirming affects whilst repelling those
that threaten to absorb or deplete power. It is only
through the construction of “concepts” – an
understanding of causality – that it is possible to
move from the realm of inadequate ideas towards the
production of “adequate ideas from which true actions
ensue” (Deleuze, Spinoza and the Three Ethics
143). According to Spinoza’s Ethics, the
challenge is to attempt to move from a state in which
existence is passively experienced – or suffered
blindly – as a series of effects upon the body,
towards understanding – and working harmoniously with
– the causes themselves.
In his reading of Spinoza’s Ethics, Gilles
Deleuze suggests that this shift occurs through
consciously selecting those affects that offer the
possibilities of augmentation (an increase in power
through joy) rather than diminution (the decrease of
power through sadness). Whilst Spinoza appears to
denounce affects as simply inadequate ideas that
should be avoided, Deleuze argues that there are
certain life-affirming or joyful affects that can be
seen as the “dark precursors” of the notions (The
Three Ethics 144). According to Deleuze, whilst
such “signs of augmentation remain passions and the
ideas that they presuppose remain inadequate,” they
alone have the capacity to enable the individual to
increase in power, for the “selection” of affect is in
itself the “condition of leaving the first kind of
knowledge, and for attaining the concept” (The
Three Ethics 144). For Deleuze-Spinoza, the
production of subjectivity is a form of endeavour or
“passional struggle,” whereby the individual attempts
to increase his or her capacity for turning affects or
signs into common notions or concepts (The Three
Ethics 145). Deleuze argues that the “common
notions are an Art, the art of Ethics
itself: organising good encounters, composing actual
relations, forming powers, experimenting” (Spinoza
and Us 119). This is then a life-long project
or practice – the making of life into a work
of art – focused on increasing one’s potential to
affect and be affected by signs that increase power,
whilst simultaneously reducing or minimising one’s
threshold of affectivity towards those which diminish
or reduce it.
I am interested in the role that the artist or artist
collective could have in the production of this
Spinozist model of subjectivity; how they might
function as an intermediary or catalyst, creating
conditions or events in which augmentative affects –
such as those made possible through a dynamic or
active form of stillness – are increased and their
energies harnessed. Here perhaps, the affective
potential of an art practice is in itself the “dark
precursor” of common notions, drawing together bodies
in agreement by calling into being an audience or
community of experience. On one level, the artist
performs an analogous role to Spinoza’s “scholia” –
the intermittent sequence of polemical notations
“inserted into the demonstrative chain” of
propositions – within the Ethics, which
according to Deleuze:
Operate in the shadows, trying to distinguish
between what prevents us from reaching our common
notions and what, on the contrary, allows us to do
so, what diminishes and what augments our power, the
sad signs of our servitude and the joyous signs of
our liberations (The Three Ethics 146).
Certainly the project, Open City, attempts
to draw attention to the habitually endured –or
suffered – signs and affects of contemporary
experience; striving to remedy the sad affects of
capitalism through the production of playful,
disruptive or even joyful interventions, events and
encounters between bodies in agreement. The
disempowering experience or affect of being controlled
– blocked, stopped or restricted – by societal or
moral codes and civic laws, is replaced by a minor
logic of ambiguous, arbitrary and optional rules. Such
rules foreground experimentation and request an
ethical rather than obedient engagement that in turn
serves to liberate the individual from habitual
passivity.
Open City attempts to reveal – and then
resist or refuse – the hidden rules that determine how
to operate or perform within contemporary capitalism,
the coded orders on how to behave, move and interact.
It exposes such insidious legislation as constructs
whose logic has been put in place or brought into
effect over time, and which in turn might be revoked,
dislocated or challenged. For Open City, the
performance of stillness can be used as a gesture
through which to break from or rupture the
orchestrated and controlled flow of capitalist
behaviours and its sad affects.
Image 3: Open City, documentation of
performance, Nottingham, 2008.
Random acts of stillness produce moments of friction
within the smooth, regulated flows of contemporary
capitalism; singularised or inconsistent glitches or
jolts that call to attention its unnoticed rhythms and
temporal speeds, by becoming its counter-point or by
appropriating its “language” for “strange and minor
uses” (Deleuze and Guattari 17). Dawdling or
meandering reveals the fierceness of the city’s
unspoken bylaws, whilst the societal pressure towards
speed and efficiency is thwarted by moments of
deliberate non-production, inaction and the act of
doing nothing. In one example of collective
action – at noon on a shopping street – around fifty
pedestrians, suddenly and without warning, stop still
in their tracks and remain like this for five minutes
before resuming their daily activity. In another, a
group of individuals draw to a standstill and slowly
sway from side to side; their stillness becomes a
device for affecting a block or obstacle that limits
or modifies others’ behaviour, creating an infinitely
imaginable ricochet of further breaks and amendments
to routine journeys and directional flows.
Open City often mimics or misuses familiar
behavioural patterns witnessed in the public realm,
inhabiting their language or codes in a way that
playfully transforms their use or proposes elasticity
or flexibility therein. Habitual or routine actions
are isolated and disinvested of their function or
purpose, or become repeated until all sense of
teleological imperative is wholly evacuated or
rendered absurd. For example, a lone person stops
still and holds their hand out to check for rain. Over
and over, the same action is repeated but by different
individuals; the authenticity of the original gesture
shattered and separated from any causal motivation by
the reverberations of its uncanny echo. Such performed
actions remove or distance the response or reaction
from its originary stimulus or excitation, creating an
affective gap between – a no longer known or present –
cause and its effect. This however, is not to return
action back to realm of Spinoza’s first order of
knowledge – where the body only experiences effects
and remains ignorance of their cause – but rather an
attempt to create a gap or space of “hesitancy” in
which a form of creativity might emerge. Within the
act of stillness, habitually imperceptible rhythms and
speeds become visible. By being still it is possible
to witness or attend to the presence of different or
heterogeneous temporal “refrains” or durations
operating beneath and within the surface appearance of
capitalism’s homogeneous flow.
Open City attempts to recuperate the creative
potential within those moments of stillness generated
through the accelerated technologies of contemporary
capitalism: the situational ennui endured
whilst waiting or queuing; the moments of collective
and synchronised impasse controlled by technologies
such as traffic lights and pedestrian crossings, and
even – though perhaps more abstractly – the nebulous
experience of paralysis and impotency induced by fear,
anxiety and uncertainty. Performances attempt to
neutralise these various diminutive affects by
re-inhabiting or re-framing them; ‘turning’ their
stillness towards a form of memorial, protest or
social gathering, or alternatively rendering it
seemingly empty, unreadable or absurd. This emptiness
can also be understood as a form of disinterestedness
that refuses to react to immediate stimulus – or lack
of – and rather remains open to other possibilities of
existence or inhabitation. Stillness is curiously
equivocal, an “ambiguous or fluctuating sign” that has
the capacity to “affect us with joy and sadness at the
same time” (Deleuze The Three Ethics 140).
The external appearance of stillness is ultimately
blank, its “event” able to affect a “vectorial
passage” of contradictory directions, towards an
“increase or decrease, growth or decline, joy or
sadness” (Deleuze, The Three Ethics 140). Open
City attempts to transform the – potentially –
diminutive affects of stillness into “augmentative
powers” by occupying the stillness of contemporary
capitalism as a disguise or camouflage for producing
invisible performances that hijack a familiar language
in order to misuse its terms.
More recently Open City have adapted or
occupied the moments of stillness made possible or
enabled by everyday technologies: the inconsistent
rhythm patterns of stopping, pausing or circling about
on the spot exhibited by someone absorbed in a
mobile-phone call, text messaging or changing a track
on their MP3 player. Here, certain technologies allow,
legitimate or even give permission for the disruption
of the flow of movement within the city, or are used
as a device through which to explore and exploit the
potential of collective synchronised action through
the use of recorded instructions.

Image 4: Open City, public performance
from the Dislocate festival (Yokohama,
Japan, 2008).
The alienating and atomising affects of such personal
technologies – which are habitually used and isolate
the individual from their immediate surroundings and
from others around them – are transformed into tools
for producing collective action. In one sense, Open
City’s performances operate as a form of “minor
art” as outlined by Deleuze and Guattari, where a
major language – the dominant order of capitalism and
control – is neutralised or deterritorialised before
being “appropriated for strange and minor uses” (17).
For Deleuze and Guattari a minor practice is always
political and collective, signalling the “movement
from the individual to a ‘collective multiplicity’”
where there is no longer an individual subject as such
but “only collective assemblages of enunciation”(18).
The minor always operates within the terms of the
major but functions as a destabilising agent where it
attempts – according to Simon O’Sullivan – to “stammer
and stutter the commodity form, disassembling those
already existing forms of capital and indeed moving
beyond the latter’s very logic” (73). However, as with
all acts of deterritorialisation there is always the
potential that they will in turn become
reterritorialised; assimilated or absorbed back into
the language of the “major”. This can be seen, for
example, in the way that the proposed radical
potential of the flash-mob phenomenon has been swiftly
recuperated through the language of the corporate
publicity campaigns of high-profile companies –
specifically telecommunication multi-nationals - for
whom the terms ‘community’ and ‘collectivity’ are
developed as Unique Selling Points for further
capitalist gain.
By contrast, the intent of Open City is to
create an event that operates not only as a visible
rupture, but which also has the capacity to transform
or radicalise the subjectivities of those involved
beyond the duration of the event itself. Open
City encourage the movement from the individual
to a “collective multiplicity,” through performances
that produce synchronised action where individuals
become temporally united by a rule or instruction that
they are collectively adhering to. Publicly
distributed postcards have been used to invite or
instruct as-yet-unknown publics to participate in
collective action, setting the terms for the
possibility of imagined or future assemblies. Or more
recently, recorded spoken word instructions listened
to using MP3 player technology have been used to
harmonise the speeds, stillness and slowness of
individual bodies to produce the possibility of a new
collective rhythm or “refrain” (Guattari, Subjectivities).
For example, within the Dislocate festival (Yokohama,
Japan, 2008) a group of individuals were led on a
guided walk in which they engaged with a series of
spoken instructions listened to using MP3 player
technology. The instructions invited a number of
discreet performances culminating in a collective
moment of stillness that was at once a public
spectacle and a space of self-contained or private
reflection.

Image 5: Open City, public performance
from the Dislocate festival (Yokohama,
Japan, 2008).
Once still, the individuals listened to a further
spoken text which interrogated how the act of ‘being
still’ might shift in meaning moving from or
between different positions. For example, stillness
can be experienced as a controlling or restrictive
mode of enforced waiting, as an act of resistant
refusal or protest, or alternatively as a model of
quiet contemplation or idle daydreaming.
For Spinoza, a body is defined by its speeds and
slowness – by the relationship between motion and rest
– and by its capacity to affect and be affected. In
attempting to synchronise the speeds and affectivity
of individuals through group action, Open City
create the conditions for the production of Spinoza’s
“common notions” – or second kind of knowledge –
through the organisation of a collective or shared
understanding of causality by bodies in agreement.
Acts of collective stillness also function in an
analogous manner to the transitional or liminal phase
within ritual performance by producing the possibility
of “communitas,” the transient experience of
togetherness or even of collective subjectivity. In From
Ritual to Theatre, The Human Seriousness of Play,
anthropologist Victor Turner identifies a form of
“existential or spontaneous communitas” – an acute
experience of community – experienced by individuals
immersed in the "no longer/not yet" liminal space of a
given ritualistic process, in which “the past is
momentarily negated, suspended or abrogated, and the
future has not yet begun, an instant of pure
potentiality when everything, as it were, trembles in
the balance” (44). Stillness is presented as pure
disinterestedness, a non-teleological event enabling
nothing but the possibility of a community of
experience to come into being.
Within Open City then, the gesture of
stillness recurs as a device or “event-encounter” for
simultaneously producing a break or hiatus in an
already existing formulation of experience, at the
same time as creating a gap or space of possibility in
which to imagine or affirm an alternative mode of
being. Referring to the Deleuzian notion of encounter,
O’Sullivan reflects on the dual presence of rupture
and affirmation within the moment of encounter itself
whereby “our typical ways of being in the world are
challenged, our systems of knowledge disrupted”
(Sullivan,xxiv). He argues that the encounter:
Operates as a rupture in our habitual modes of
being and thus in our habitual subjectivities. It
produces a cut, a crack. However … the rupturing
encounter also contains a moment of affirmation, the
affirmation of a new world, in fact a way of seeing
and thinking this world differently (Sullivan, xxv).
Open City attempts to create the conditions
for these dual possibilities – of rupture and
affirmation – through the production of joyful
encounters between bodies within the event of
performed stillness. Stillness operates as a double
gesture where it creates a stop or block – a break
with the already existing or with the events of the
past – and also a moment of pause, the liminal space
of projection; a future-oriented or preparatory zone
of pure potentiality. Stillness thus offers the
simultaneous possibility of termination and of a new
beginning, within which it becomes possible to move
from a paradigm of resistance – to the present
conditions of existence – towards one of augmentative
refusal or proposal that invites reflection on a still
future-possible way of life. Poised at a point of
anticipation or as a prophetic mode of waiting,
stillness offers the promise of as-yet-undecided
possibilities where options for future action or
existence remain momentarily open, not yet known.
Collective stillness thus always has a quality of
“futurity” by creating the transitional conditions of
communitas or the possibility of a community
emerging outside or beyond the temporal frame of
capitalism: a community that is still in waiting.
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