A Plot, A Scandal
A Plot, A Scandal
A Plot, A Scandal, 2023, 20 mins
If a scandal lacks propriety, then Ligia’s A Plot, A Scandal scandalises the meanings of ‘plot’—as land, scheme or narrative.
Ligia uses choreography as a practice of study and critique. Closing the gap between subject and object of study, A Plot, A Scandal Ligia tries to figure out how to figure herself outside of what Western Man has figured for her. A kind of figuring outside figuring: instead of an embodiment—where the body is a kind of solitary confinement granted to us by power—she practices an enfleshment, in which the flesh is a shared physical site of unguarded joy but also always an exposure to violence.
In the film, Ligia drags John Locke, who’s Second Treatise of Government (1689), set out Man’s ‘natural rights’ to life, liberty and property: ownership of himself, his body, his status as human, and his right to own and extract from anything he deems less-than-human. She invokes Cuban/ Yoruban ‘Black’ José Aponte’s plotting of a slave rebellion in 1812. And she‘s haunted by the spirit of her grandmother, Lolón Zapata, who courted scandal by using her plot of land to perform the Afro-Dominican spiritual practice of palo.
She asks how to interrogate the self, when the self is based on racist Eurocentric fictions. And she finds ways to do so under the consuming white gaze, and within a system of representation (dance, the theatre) fully in the knowledge that political representation has been developed as a regulative response to radical anti-colonial insurgency. She poses the problem of how we learn to desire something more than being a person, something other than being represented.
As viewers, we see Ligia seeing us seeing her in the terror of being seen, and her creating a space to interrogate that terror. But she also leaves space for another story, another possibility to emerge, even though—like Lolon’s palo—some things are just lost. She makes a lost epistemology present, without representing it.
A Plot, A Scandal plots the embodied sociality of rebellion. It reminds us of another meaning of ‘plot’: to conspire; to be so close so as to breath together.
Ligia has prepared a short film for us to watch after the film, in which she discusses her thinking and practice.
ReadBio
Ligia Lewis works as an artist, choreographer, and director. She presents her work on stage, in a gallery or museum, through film or exhibition format. Lewis’s works are often marked by physical and emotional intensities by which comedy and tragedy collide. Through her work, the performer and audience confront a confluence of processes that disrupt normative conceptions of the body. At the same time, she negotiates the ghostly traces of history, memory, and the un/known. Her expressive concepts form movement, speech, affects, thoughts, relations, and utterances within a highly defined choreographic landscape. Held together by the logic of interdependence, disorder, and play, she creates space(s) for the emergent and the indeterminate while tending to the mundane. In her work, sonic and visual metaphors meet the body, materializing the enigmatic, the poetic, and the dissonant—her work slides between the familiar and the unfamiliar. Lewis’s work continues to evoke the nuances of embodiment.
Lewis recently finished works including: “A Plot / A Scandal” (2022), “Still Not Still” (2021), “deader than dead” (2020). In Fall 23’, Lewis opened her first solo exhibition, “study now steady” at Center for Arts, Research and Alliances (CARA) in NYC (US), which includes the newly commissioned film “A Plot, A Scandal” (2023) departing from the stage work of the same name. A survey of her stage works was presented at HAU Hebbel am Ufer (Berlin, DE) under the title “Complaint, A Lyric” in November 2023, which included the trilogy: “Water Will (in Melody)” (2018), “minor matter” (2016), and “Sorrow Swag” (2014). Further commissions include “Sensation 1/This Interior” (High Line Commission, 2019); “so something happened get over it; no nothing happened get with it” (Jaou Tunis, 2018); “Melancholy: A White Mellow Drama” (Flax Fahrenheit, Palais de Tokyo, 2015); $$$ (Tanz im August 2012); and “Sensation 1” (sommer. bar, Tanz im August 2011 and Basel Liste, 2014). Lewis is one of the participating artists in this year’s Whitney Biennial: Even Better Than the Real Thing.
She presented in multiple venues across Europe, the US, and abroad, including the MOCA, Los Angeles; HAU Hebbel am Ufer, Berlin; Tanzquartier, Vienna; MCA Museum of Contemporary Art, Chicago; Mudam Museum, Luxembourg; Wien Modern, Vienna; Kaserne, Basel; Redcat Theater, Los Angeles; Hammer Museum, Los Angeles; Walker Art Center, Minneapolis; beursschouwburg, Brussels; Kaaitheater, Brussels; Arsenic, Lausanne; High Line Art, New York; Performance Space, New York; OGR Torino; Stedelijk, Amsterdam; TATE Modern, London, and Cordova Gallery, Barcelona; and Human Resources Los Angeles, LA. Her work has also been presented at festivals and biennials such as the Ruhrtriennale, Bochum, Germany; Tanzplattform, Germany; Short Theater Festival (Prisma), Rome; Spring Festival, Utrecht; Politik im Freien Theater Festival, Frankfurt; Liverpool Biennial; My Wild Flag, Stockholm; Side Step Festival, Helsinki; Biennale of Moving Images / Centre D’Art Contemporain, Geneva; American Realness, New York; The Donaufestival, Krems, Austria and Julidans, Amsterdam.
Lewis is the recipient of the German Theater Award Der FAUST in the category of Performance in Dance (2023) for “A Plot / A Scandal,” the Tabori Award in the category of Distinction (2021); a Foundation for Contemporary Arts Grants Award (2018); a Bessie Award for Outstanding Production for minor matter (2017); a Factory Artist residency at tanzhaus nrw (2017-19); and a Prix Jardin d’ Europe from ImPulsTanz for Sorrow Swag (2014). Her work has been presented in multiple venues across Europe and the U.S. and is currently touring.
Access
BSL
The live spoken elements of this event will have live British Sign Language interpretation; the simultaneously interpretation of spoken English into signed language and vice-versa as required. more
Live Captions
This event will have Live Captions; a verbatim transcription of dialogue into text as it is spoken live. In-person, the text will appear on a screen beside or behind the speaker. Online, the live captions will appear along the bottom of the screen. The captioner for Episode 11 is Andrew Howells. more
English Subtitles
The film has English subtitles
Pre-recorded Post Screening Comments with in-person BSL and Live Captioning
See general Access information for Episode 11: To End the World As We Know It event