Shower Party (2014), an interactive installation by Australian collective Golden Solution, incorporated participants into a system where they became collectively responsible for the life or death of a goldfish. Self-serve alcoholic cocktail dispensers were programmed so that every drink requested would drain an equivalent volume of water from a goldfish bowl. In ‘Dispensing with the Law: Measuring alcohol and its effects in Shower Party’, Asher Warren focuses on the way these alcoholic cocktails were attributed agency metonymically, metabolically and mechanically throughout the four-hour event. Through interrogating the tendency to read the event through what might be termed an alcohol-oriented-ontology, Warren argues that the agency of alcohol in Shower Party was structured through two quite different assemblages. The first, a technological assemblage, dispensed the alcohol and produces quantified metrics from which the effects of alcohol at a ‘population level’ are inferred. The second, a more concealed legal assemblage, governed the service of alcohol through attendants with ‘Responsible Service of Alcohol’ certificates, required to make qualitative judgements based on the behaviour of individuals, according to a legally defined ‘poetics’ of intoxication. These assemblages, Warren contends, not only influenced participants, but also shaped critical engagements with the work that obscure the fluidity of meaning and agency that alcohol might take on when deployed as an aesthetic medium.
History
Publication title
Performance Research
Volume
22
Issue
6
Pagination
13-19
ISSN
1352-8165
Department/School
School of Creative Arts and Media
Publisher
Taylor & Francis Ltd
Place of publication
4 Park Square, Milton Park, Abingdon, England, Oxon, Ox14 4Rn
Rights statement
Copyright 2017 Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group