DATA OCEAN THEATRE
Tragedy and the Goddexxes
IV. STASIMON
Twelve 'fake-ceramic' pieces (direct prints on paper, tape, leather belts)
One-minute soundscape loop (every five minutes) / Four speakers
Video-GIF on 43' LCD screen
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The stasimon στάσιμον is a part of ancient Greek tragedies during which the chorus sings alone in the orchestra, the actors being off-stage. Stasimon describes the background to the story being staged, adding details or context, and setting the affective tonality of the play.
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Etymologically, stasimon (στάσιμον) refers to "something that stays in place, stationary, stable." It describes the regular songs of the chorus, named as such because they were sung once the chorus had taken their place, ready to perform a dance in the orchestra. Although there is no archaeological evidence of the choreographic parameters, specialists speculate that the members of the chorus would line up in a rectangular formation, like a squad of soldiers: in three rows of four when the chorus consisted of 12 members (Aeschylus), and in three rows of five when it increased to 15 (Sophocles and Euripides).
STASIMON is the fourth episode of Tragedy and the Goddexxes. A coral-like (or garbage patch-like) chorus of twelve XL fake-ceramic masks—inspired by ancient Greek tragedy headpieces and made from altered prints of contemporary scientific data from marine research—chants a polyphonic Lamento composed using recordings of various failed computer hard drives.