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SAIC CLASS OF 2020 GRADUATE WEBSITE
The Future of Our Plans: SAIC Graduate Class of 2020
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The Future of Our Plans: SAIC Graduate Class of 2020

Chloe Munkenbeck


Master of Fine Arts in Studio, Architecture, Interior Architecture, and Designed Objects
cmunkenbeck@saic.edu

In The Movements of Speech, I use the lens of performance to examine the social conditions underpinning freedom of speech. The work focuses on the orators at Speaker’s Corner, a public space in London designated for enacting one’s freedom of speech. The act of speech is put through a process of abstraction and translation, bringing to the fore crucial, ancillary factors such as gender performativity, public/private contexts and authoritative relationships. 

An abstracted score is developed outlining the spatial, legal and performative components of Speaker’s Corner. In the performance, the score is co-opted and the confident movements of the speakers are appropriated to conduct an improvised music ensemble. Bookended with intimate rehearsal footage, the process is chaotic and ultimately futile, as the protagonist plays out an abstracted fantasy of authoritative performance. The act of speech – stated in western legal constitutions as a freedom equally accessible to everyone – is examined as part of an interwoven network of social conditions that ultimately determine its delivery.

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The Movements of Speech
May 2020, 2-channel video, found footage
Sarah Clausen, Alto Saxophone
Molly Jones, Soprano Saxophone
Lia Kohl, Cello
Whitney Johnson, Viola

Speaker’s Corner Stage Score
May 2020, matte white vinyl on black wall, 1 1/2 x 30 ft
Graphic notations by Lia Kohl, Molly Jones and Whitney Johnson

Chloe Munkenbeck - Choreographic Podium
Choreographic Podium,
December 2019, steel and matte white vinyl, 36 x 12 x 12 in

My practice draws parallels between mediums of performance and the socio-cultural dynamics of institutional space. I observe and research typologies which uphold constructs of order and hierarchy in Western society, such as airport security, platforms for public speech or the suburban household. Qualities which dictate public behaviors are amplified and translated into tropes of performance, such as theater, music and choreography.

My formal training in Architecture affords me an understanding of the elemental forms and thought processes inherent in the construction of public space. As an artist, I reverse engineer this process by breaking them down into their foundational components. Components such as legal regulations, spatial distributions and social behaviors are used to generate live performances, sets, scripts and plans. The work uses the earnest aesthetics and rules of the establishment to generate absurd, humorous or chaotic outcomes, which reveal and present into question the structural underpinnings of public space.

The notion of the public image drives key thought processes behind my work. It is a phrasing which implies the existence of a private backstage process. In presenting the work, I deploy elaborate stage cues, choreographic scripts and evidence of rehearsal to parse out the thin threshold between public image and private life.





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