Gesture, 2006
Statement + work by Jolanta Lapiak
"Gesture" (2006). Audio, 3mins 20secs 720x480px NTSC.
Occasionally one sees a title, "Gesture," that accompanies a work of art in a gallery, where typically the term "gesture" associates with "hand." To disclaim the fallacy that gesture tends to be equated with the hand, my video-audio Gesture deconstructs this tendency.
"This work Gesture contains nothing but a blank screen and the audio of auditory gesture. It plays sounds which were emitted from my hands, breaths, and vocalized gesture under the mask, when manually speaking in my expressive poetry performance, Ameslan, coughing English, Ameslan. My breaths became heavy and deep as they echoed inside the mask which amplified my vocalizations. My body moved in synchronization with my vocal gestures." -- thesis statement
Gesture in audio with blank screen.
"Logocentrism asserts that speech has a quality of interiority, and that writing has a quality of exteriority. Derrida, however, argues that the play of difference between speech and writing is the play of difference between interiority and exteriority." (Alex Scott, 2002) Vocal-auditory utterance is seen as interiority, whereas visual-manual utterance is regarded as exteriority. Visual-manual language is seen as an outer projectile – metaphorically a phallic convex. It is clearly visible, whereas speech language is an inner projectile, a female concave, which is hollowed inward, not completely visible from the outside.
Thus, according to Derrida, "the play of difference between interiority and exteriority means that writing is both exterior and interior to speech and that speech is both interior and exterior to writing. This means the difference is erased." If the inside body were the outside, we would observe that the diaphragm, the vocal tract, the tongue, the glottis and the lips are as actively gestural as the external body is when signing. The play of difference between the outside and inside of speech and sign then disappears. -- thesis