Culture

Vivarium show blurs the lines between life and art

Hypnotic 'microperformances' at On the Boards (through April 17) succeed with deadpan acting and an off-kilter look at ordinary experiences.

Vivarium show blurs the lines between life and art
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Ashli Blow

Hypnotic 'microperformances' at On the Boards (through April 17) succeed with deadpan acting and an off-kilter look at ordinary experiences.

L’Effet de Serge begins where creator Philippe Quesne’s  last work ends — with a man dressed in a spacesuit  standing in what appears to be a foggy  garden, seen through a full-length sliding-glass door.  The man starts to speak in a hushed monotone, explaining that  this is the final scene from his last production, a technique Quesne  uses presumably to create some kind of context for the work to come.

It’s an arresting image and sets the stage for what will become a  hypnotic presentation of one- to three-minute “microperformances” that  Serge, portrayed by actor Gaëtan Vourc’h, presents  over the course of the next hour.

Slowly, the fog lifts  and Vourc'h walks through the door to a  darkened white box-like room, Serge’s apartment.  As he removes his spacesuit and walks around the room,  he narrates his actions in an almost inaudible hum and  describes the objects he sees — a ping-pong table littered with toys  and knickknacks, a TV, a sound system, and books and bags strewn around  the floor. He sits down at the table, orders a pizza and begins to play  with his toys, the silence punctuated only by  his voice on the phone, his munching on potato chips, and a remote control  box that delivers the chips to him from  across the room.

At this point, it’s easy to wonder if anything of import will ever happen to Serge  and the audience. But patience is rewarded in a few minutes as a guest  appears, eager to attend one of Serge’s weekly Sunday microperformances.  Serge carefully arranges a chair in the center of the room, offers the  guest a drink then sits down wordlessly at the table. The guest watches  as Serge slowly attaches a sparkler to the top of the motorized box,  then lights the sparkler and sends the box turning in circles around  the guest. After the requisite one to three minutes, Serge brings the  box to a halt, and it’s clear the performance is over. He invites  the guest to the following Sunday’s performance and escorts him to  the door.

This is the first  of the four ritualistic microperformances Serge presents to a changing  array of “friends” over the next 45 minutes. In his near-silent  way, Serge maintains total control over every aspect of the performance  experience, determining by which door his guests enter, what they drink  (he offers only red wine, water, or orange juice), where to  sit and how long after the performance they may stay. In one  sexually charged exchange, a female  guest takes her time eating a slice of  pizza so that she is the last one to leave, clearly hoping Serge will  ask her to stay. He watches in silence as she takes bite by bite, then  quietly sees her out when she’s done.

It would give away too much of the  fun of L’Effet de Serge to describe the other microperformances, but suffice it to say you’ll probably  never hear or see Wagner’s “Ride of the Valkyries” in quite the  same way again, and may well find new pleasure in  the music of John Cage. Quesne’s capacity to look at common objects  or experiences anew turns Serge into an  everyman, albeit one with an off-kilter sense of himself and the world.

The success of L’Effet de Serge, whose title translates literally to  “the effect of Serge” but is also a play on words referring to  heating of the planet, depends largely on the character of Serge, and  Vourc’h plays him to deadpan perfection.  Vourc’h never breaks the hint of a smile,  even when he’s ridiculously costumed in neon-wire fake eyeglasses.  Like Quesne, Serge is a serious artist  and remains steadfastly focused on making art of even the smallest,  everyday actions.

The cast is fleshed out by a group  of non-actors, some of them local On the Boards patrons and some of  them members of Quesne’s staff. They bring an air of reality to the  show, blurring the lines between life and art, which seems to be the  point Quesne is making. We should be grateful to him for creating such  a haunting work that demonstrates once again the power we have as  humans to find beauty in the least likely places.

If you go: L’Effet de Serge, by Philippe Quesne and Vivarium Studio, through April 17 at On the Boards,  100 W. Roy St. Tickets cost $25 and are available at the box office,  by phone (206-217-9888), or online.

Ashli Blow

By Ashli Blow

Ashli Blow is a Seattle-based freelance writer who talks with people — in places from urban watersheds to remote wildernesses — about the environment around them. She’s been working in journal