Gislina Patterson (he/they)
Written Essay
Playing House:
Queer and Young at the End of Capitalism
Canada is in a housing crisis. Crisis comes from the Greek krinein meaning decide. In late middle english crisis meant the turning point of a disease, the point at which a patient recovers or dies. Housing itself is a kind of turning point, an axis on which the spokes of capital turn. “…not only is housing an unequally-distributed
consumer good and a globally-traded investment vehicle,” says sociologist David Madden, “it’s also a site of labor in itself. Capitalism could not exist without the constant work of maintaining workers, and much of this happens at home, unwaged.”1 Identifying this moment as a crisis in a plan released on April 12th, the Liberal minority government can imagine nothing more than increasing tax rebates and relaxing zoning laws2 to allow speculative investors to build more cramped, unsafe, overpriced housing, while the Conservative opposition leverages xenophobia, blaming immigration for the prohibitively high cost of rent and home ownership. While these two neoliberal parties trade barbs and platitudes, the unpaid, unseen labour of social reproduction is atrophying under above guideline rent increases, stagnant wages, collapsing healthcare, grocery price gouging, and over-policing, and a generation enters adulthood unsure if housing, let alone a home, is in the cards for them.
In Anaïs Bosse and Odéah Roy’s research, they dis-place contemporary dance into domestic space. In the book Musical Elaborations, Palestinian author and scholar Edward W. Said explores the gulf between private and public experiences of music. He defines public performance as an alienating extreme occasion, one that depends on the existence of unseen faculties and powers that make it possible: the performer’s training and gifts; cultural agencies like concert associations… the conjunction of various social and cultural processes (including the revolutions in capitalism and telecommunication, electronic media, jet travel).3 He contrasts this with
1 David Madden, Housing and the Crisis of Social Reproduction (https://www.e-flux.com/architecture/ housing/333718/housing-and-the-crisis-of-social-reproduction/)
2 Infrastructure Canada, Solving the Housing Crisis: Canada’s Housing Plan
3 Edward W. Said, Musical Elaborations (Columbia University Press 1991)
private experiences of classical piano music, specifically the mostly lost practice of listeners playing scores on the piano for family and friends in domestic space. Anaïs and Odéah’s research confronts the possibilities limitations of inhabiting both of these engagements simultaneously. Through this experiment both are transformed; choreography wreaks havoc on the home, the home wreaks havoc on choreography. Their first sequence sees them in a kitchen, drifting in and out of focus. The camera peers into a domestic scene, floating over two women’s shoulders as they cuddle in front of the stove, cooking chocolate chip pancakes. As the camera pulls back, one dancer gives the other her weight and spins, landing with her hands flat on the counter, her leg in the air. She climbs onto the counter, grabs a glass of a high shelf, and transfers delicately onto the other dancers shoulder. The two dancers, now one, attached crotch-to-shoulder, float across the room as the camera closes in and a thigh, an elbow, the back of a head fill the frame. In a kitchen, this definitional site of domestic labour, their lift takes on new meaning. The camera catches Odéah’s eye as Anaïs hands down her glass, the look on her face is neutral, almost bored. Anaïs, her head narrowly missing the track lights hanging from the ceiling, fills the glass with orange juice. The colliding of this acrobatic feat – two dancers in a lift, transferring the weight of liquid from one glass vessel to another, surrounded by sharp corners, knives, a hot stove – with the causally affectionate interaction of the performers makes visible the skill and craft inherent to the everyday labour of domestic care work.
Subsequent sequences see the dancers in a bedroom, a bathtub, a dining room. There’s an intense vulnerability to some scenes, a strange intimacy in seeing piles of dirty laundry on their floors, the paintings and posters tacked up above their beds. A centrepiece finds them crawling around a clawfoot tub with the shower running, their hair and matching white slips soaking wet. There’s something very indulgent about this dance, a lazy, languid quality to their movements. Odéah reaches one red-fingernailed hand out of the tub, like Carrie from her grave, and Anaïs pulls her up, reversing the dynamic of the first sequence, setting her on the edge of the tub like a rag doll. These sequences are obscurely framed, our access to the dancers tightly controlled, other shots are cropped close on hands, knees, sneakers skipping across astroturf. This voyeuristic tension is most explicit in sequences where the dancers are viewed through a frosted window at night, their silhouettes blurring together, dancer and choreographer abstracted by distance and privacy film.
There’s another tension bubbling under the surface of this research. At 20 years old the dancers find themselves navigating the precarious space between childhood and adulthood where it is important, both personally and professionally, to be taken seriously by people who might be attached to an idea of them as children. In our society children, as a class, are the poorest people. They have the least rights. They are the easiest people to hurt and kill, yes, because they are usually smaller than most adults but also because they cannot decide where they live and with whom. They can work but they cannot decide how to spend their money or their time. They can’t even vote to improve their conditions. The class of people that holds power over children, that oppresses them and benefits from that oppression, is adults. With that in mind is it any wonder that adults, even well meaning ones, struggle to admit even to themselves that someone they knew as a child has crossed that axis and become, on some level, their social equal? (Take, for example, 20 year old dance prodigy JoJo Siwa, at one point the most famous child in the world, who recently announced on a morning show that she has picked out a sperm donor and names for her first three children – Freddie for a girl, Eddie and Teddy for twin boys.4 Unable to transcend the identity of child on her own, she asserts it by creating new children to be defined in contrast to.) This is the rocky terrain Anaïs and Odéah are so gracefully dancing across. At the same time it’s important that this project is about youth, that it feels youthful, that it’s made by young people. A word that comes up again and again is professionalism. Of the chaotic marathon shoots staged in their parents homes, Roy and Bossé self-effacingly cop to being unprofessional. On the day I visit they’re filming in Odéah’s kitchen; there are small appliances stacked against one wall, baby-gates holding two huge dogs at
4 Hannah Sacks, JoJo Siwa Reveals She Got the Names of Her Three Future Children Tattooed: ‘Got a Sperm Donor Lined Up’ (https://people.com/jojo-siwa-reveals-she-got-the-names-of-her-three-future children-tattooed-8602257)
bay. Butter burns on the stove, the kitchen fills with smoke, the hood fan is so loud they have to shout. They repeat phrases over and over at each other, filling the silence as they watch back footage, wash dishes, reset props. On the day I visit this is, notably, the first few lines of JoJo Siwa’s universally derided new single Karma. Communicating in shorthand, they adapt on the fly as their studio choreography chafes against the size and shape of the kitchen. In their research, they’re not just making work about youth, they’re making work with a youthful methodology. This is clear in the way the collaborate, adaptive, elastic, completely committed to a lateral structure, neither dancer pulling rank to get their way. Edward W. Said suggests that the alienation of audience from performer and from the process of making art is due to the professionalization and rarification of musical performance. Maybe contemporary dance could benefit from a little more of this kind of “unprofessionalism”.
I was a bad girl, I did some bad things
I swear I did it all for fun and it meant nothing
Though it resulted in a beautiful, engaging, and evocative choreography, Bossé and Roy found the home a choreographic dead space, impossible to choreograph in with a hostile architecture that very literally repressed their expressions of queer love. In No Future: Queer Theory and the Death Drive, Lee Edelman proposes a radical reimagining of queer identity as separate from, and in conflict with, what he calls reproductive futurism, a futurism that he says is always purchased at our expense. In this state a figural child, but not any living child, embodies the citizen as an ideal, entitled to claim full rights to its future share in the nation’s good, though always at the cost of limiting the rights “real” citizens are allowed.6 In always imagining this future child, our needs today are dismissed in favour of a possible tomorrow. Austerity politics, border control, the carceral system and military industrial complex, all are justified by the figural child who must never grow up7 and therefore queerness must assert itself in the now. The
5 JoJo Siwa, Karma (Rock Mafia)
6 Lee Edelman, No Future: Queer Theory and the Death Drive (Duke University Press 2004) 7 Edelman, No Future
housing crisis has to continue forever or the stock market will collapse, banks will close, Gen X won’t be able to retire, the bubble just has to get bigger and bigger and bigger. The housing crisis can’t exist without capitalism, capitalism can’t exist without the family, the family can’t exist without the home. There is no future. We can bend to reproductive futurism and dream of it anyway, or we can choose to self-negate, cancel the future, and build our dream-house now.
At the end of the video, Odéah steps off of a chair into Anaïs’s arms, who carries her out of frame. The camera lingers on the empty dining room, the red taper candles burning on the mantle and the dancers step into real life, 3 dimensions in 2D domestic space. Dancing in the beam of the projector their bodies disappear into the walls. They’re real, realer than ever, but the spectre of the home negates them, turning them to shadows.
Consciously or sub-consciously, Roy and Bosse’s research embodies the moment of crisis in which they happen to be transitioning from childhood to adulthood by pushing on the accepted hierarchies of choreographic practice. Dissolving the lines between dancer/choreographer, labour/play, professionalism/unprofessionalism, work/home, the work they create is truly contemporary, almost painfully so, existing only in the moment it is danced, witnessed only by a camera, relinquishing the ironic distance of making work ‘about’ something. These researchers aren’t examining their subject, peering through a microscope at bacteria in a petri dish, they are the subject, the are the bacteria, granting us a peek at the edges of their maturation and mutation refracted through a camera lens, a mirror, a frosted window. When one observes the self, says memoirist Dodie Bellamy, if one stays true to what one sees there, the self becomes a portal for the rest of the world to rush into, a wavering point from which history past and present streams. Observing the self, one taps into the larger culture in which it is embedded.8
When I asked if they ever play characters when they dance, Anaïs and Odéah 8 Dodie Bellamy, Unbearable Intimacies, in Bee Reaved (Semiotext(e) 2021)
were quick to answer. No. Definitely not. When I’m dancing, I’m me. Even if I’m playing a tree; it’s me, as a tree.
M.A.D.
For Marie-Anne Dufosset
the wrong body was born
out of a wrong body &
a wrong body before that
the body was so wrong it spoke
french
it slept at night & rose in the morning
it got sick & got better
the body wanted it wanted
if it had not been wrong you see
it would not have wanted
anything
i was born in the wrong body
i let the devil mark it in three places
actually i asked her to
actually i begged her not to
actually i faked it
actually
i can’t remember
wrong body stands upright
needs water, nutrients,
exercise
wrong body rides the bus
or drives a car
wrong body goes to work
drinks tim hortons coffee
kicks the can down the road
the body was wrong it had to be
burned
& the body the body came from
& the bodies the body
touched
for five weeks
you sat at the window
with your head shaved
fingernails pulled out
wanting
hoping
for rain
Did You Know That There’s a Tunnel Under Portage Avenue?
Abolition Geography in Winnipeg Square
Maura García’s first impression of Winnipeg is that the ground is soft. When she digs in it with her fingers, there are no stones. Dirt here is dark in colour which she’s only seen in places near the ocean, but there’s no ocean near here. Maybe there was at one point, she doesn’t know. She claims not to know much about geology or geography. I don’t know much about geography either, in high school my geography teacher decided he could teach us anything he wanted because, as he saw it, geography was the study of the earth and everything that happens there. By this metric, I believe Maura may be the worlds foremost geographer.
In contrast to strains of contemporary dance that cling to the traditions of ballet where dancers float and feign weightlessness, Maura García’s choreography is all about the ground. Part of her research transforms adaptive movements she developed while healing from a broken bone into choreography. In one move, called the three legged bear crawl, she bounds across the studio one one leg and two hands, the other leg raised high behind her. Watching Maura share this choreography with another dancer, she specifies that this is about travelling, not about lifting your leg higher, or moving with the most grace. Watching her perform this choreography herself is awe-inspiring, partly because Maura is an incredibly skilled dancer, but also because it lives in her body as a real, motivated, everyday movement, a choreography of survival. In a practice so often resistant to difference and adaptation, Maura’s methodology rigorously incorporates body diversity as a gift, rather than an impediment, to contemporary dance. Moving in this way, with her face close to the ground, is where Maura’s curiosity about the earth and what lives beneath it comes from. She bases choreography on the routes of groundwater, the movements of centipedes as they go from walking to swimming. She wonders if centipedes walk or swim when they are under the earth, and she will never know, because
what happens underground cannot be observed without being disturbed.
In 1971, the city of Winnipeg made a deal with the Trizec Corporation for a new development at the intersection of Portage Avenue and Main Street. To start the project, Trizec required the city to acquire the dozens of buildings already on the land, demolish them, and build foundations for their planned bank, two office towers, hotel, and winter garden. After four years of demolition and construction, Trizec threatened to pull out unless the city agreed to one last condition: close the famous Portage and Main intersection to foot traffic and build an underground concourse and shopping mall that pedestrians would have to use to cross the street. The city, already down $11,000,000, agreed, commodifying not just the land, but the people walking on it, turning pedestrians on a public street to consumers in a private mall. Three years later Trizec changed their plans, and ended up constructing only one office building, aptly named the Commodity Exchange Tower. Instead of a hotel, bank, and winter garden, the tower was surrounded by a concrete plaza that sat empty as pedestrians were directed off the street and into the maze-like, windowless tunnels of Winnipeg Square.9 At the centre of the concourse is The Wall, a 127 metre long poured concrete sculpture by Bruce Hall, a University of Manitoba educated artist who passed away in 2010. The piece is beautiful, tactile, textural. It’s astonishing in its size. To get to the four corners of Portage and Main, you have to walk around it. In an interview with the CBC, art historian Patricia Bovey said, That work, for me, underlines his deep knowledge of the geology of this place, of the geography of this place, and gives us a sense of depth. In the middle of the sterile mall environment, The Wall reminds you that you’re underground, that the walls around you are holding back tonnes of moist dark earth. In 2023, a membrane between the street and the concourse began to fail. Like the indefinitely closed Arlington bridge, this failure wasn’t a surprise, the city knew from the beginning that parts of the concourse’s infrastructure had an expiration date. In March of 2024, City Council voted 11-3 to open Portage and Main to pedestrians for the
9 Doug Smith, Winnipeg: Where the buildings have no names and the streets have no crossings (https://policyfix.ca/2018/09/19/winnipeg-where-the-buildings-have-no-names-and-the-streets-have-no crossings/)
first time in 50 years, and permanently close the concourse, sealing The Wall away underground forever.10
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-Yic2zdEZ7o
In exploring local geography, García takes a photo of an excavation site11 across from the Red River College campus. The land itself is owned by descendants of Alexander Ross, a Scottish colonizer who was given the stolen land when he moved to what was then the Red River Colony to act as Sheriff.12 The site is currently under the control of Centreventure, an arms length real estate development corporation created by Winnipeg City Council in 1999. Glen Murray, mayor at the time, believed that Centreventure must have access to city assets in order to do business. His plan for Centreventure characterized Winnipeg’s busy, populated, well-utilized downtown as ‘empty’ and ‘surplus’ because its residents were primarily poor, working class, disabled, and indigenous. City council approved this plan, transferring funds to Centreventure out of affordable housing programs and selling the corporation 44 downtown properties at 1 dollar each. Centreventure then offered this land to wealthy developers who would build expensive condos whose wealthy residents would demand that the city increase police presence in the neighbourhood. If there were ever any doubts about Centreventure as a project of ongoing colonization, they made this clear themselves when, in 2010, they granted land, along with a government contribution of $6,000,000 to a white evangelical christian organization to build Youth For Christ, a ‘community centre for north end youth’.13 In the 14 years since, Centreventure has continued apace, pushing marginalized residents out of downtown to advance the gentrification of the Exchange District and Centennial neighbourhoods, giving land to private real estate developers, building
10 Cameron MacLean, Winnipeg council approves plan to open Portage and Main to pedestrians (https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/manitoba/portage-and-main-opening-to-pedestrians approved-1.7151756)
11 Maura García, What The Hell Am I Going To Do? (https://maurathedancer.substack.com/p/what the-hell-am-i-going-to-do)
12 Dictionary of Canadian Biography, Ross, Alexander (http://www.biographi.ca/en/bio/ ross_alexander_8E.html)
13 Owen Toews, Stolen City: Racial Capitalism and the Making of Winnipeg (ARP Books, 2018)
expensive condos, and occasionally offering the ground floors of those condo buildings at below market rental rates to arts organizations.14 The excavation site Maura García photographed is part of an ambitious development project: Market Lands, a hub of cultural production, mixed affordable and market rate housing (I’ve heard that one before), and an unspecified ‘community zone’.15 Before demolition in 2020, it was the site of the euphemistically named Public Safety Building,16 which served as the headquarters of the Winnipeg Police Service from 1966 to 2016. From the Winnipeg Architecture Foundation: The Brutalist monumentality of the building, with its insular, fortress-like appearance, is directly related to the function of the building as a jail and police headquarters… Officers of the police force worked closely with the architects in the planning of the complex… The Public Safety Building contained courtrooms, a small detention area, communication and crime detection facilities… the clerk of the court, the police traffic division, station duty office… the detective division, crime laboratory, morality division, juvenile division… female detention [and] male detention quarters.17 The Public Safety Building was designed by Leslie J. Stechesen, who also designed the Royal Winnipeg Ballet School.
In Abolition Geography and the Problem of Innocence, Earth and Environmental Science professor Ruth Wilson Gilmore describes prisons as extracting the force of life, time, from incarcerated people. The extraction of time from each territory-body specifically and viscerally changes lives elsewhere—partners, children, communities, movements, the possibility of freedom.18 In her research proposal, Maura refers to the rhizome, the underground network of roots that form complex unobserved communities under our feet. This network is diverse but connected. In her choreography, she has dancers perform the same movement at different paces,
14 Centreventure, Art breathes life into heritage building (https://www.centreventure.com/news/art breathes-life-into-heritage-building)
15 The Winnipeg Foundation, Market Lands Creative Hub (https://www.wpgfdn.org/arts/market-lands creative-hub/)
16 Unlike most brutalist architecture, the Public Safety Building was not made of concrete but of tyndall stone, which has a mottled appearance that comes from the burrowing of marine creatures into limestone deposits.
17 Winnipeg Architecture Foundation (https://winnipegarchitecture.ca/151-princess-street/) 18 Ruth Wilson Gilmore, Abolition Geography: Essays Toward Liberation (Verso Books, 2022)
falling in and out of synch, calling to mind the interactions of plant life in the rhizome. Gilmore goes on, connecting carceral extraction to resource extraction: At the same time, the particular also implies entire historical geographies in constant churn. For some examples, think: Gentrification. Auto or steel manufacturing. Coal mining. Gold mining. Conflict minerals. Fracking.19 Compare this list to the list in Maura’s research proposal: We empty our lungs. We release our bladders and bowels. We sweat from our pores. We cut our nails and style our hair. We exfoliate our skin and clean our teeth. All are mundane, all are elevated moments of spirituality. Each gesture delays our decay and creates nourishment for the rhizome. Our rituals produce co2, water, and fertilizers for the rhizome. The rhizome graciously receives these offerings.20 Describing her dance training, she recalls a period spent in a community garden, planting food in the soil, harvesting, cooking, sharing, feasting, a free give and take. Her dance transcends the stage, becomes a way of place-making, of being in the world.
Gilmore ends her essay with a story: In 1989, in reaction to rising solidarity among male prisoners, the California Department of Corrections built the Pelican Bay State Prison Security Housing Unit; The history of SHUs has yet to be fully told;
it is indisputable that they induce mental and physical illness, which can lead to suicide or other forms of premature, preventable death. The first strike, whose organizers represented all of the alleged prison gangs, sent its demands upward to the department of corrections, asking for modest improvements for all SHU dweller’s experience and fate: better food, improved visitation, and some way to contest SHU sentences… People in many non-SHU prisons joined the strike in solidarity, and one died. …
The Pelican Bay State Prison Collective, hidden from one another, experiencing at once the torture of isolation and the extraction of time, refigured their world, however tentatively, into an abolition geography by finding an infrastructure of feeling on which they could rework their experience and understanding of possibility by way of renovated consciousness.21 Maura Garía’s research proposal ends: What does the process of the
19 Gilmore, Abolition Geography
20 Maura García, Beginnings (https://maurathedancer.substack.com/p/beginnings) 21 Gilmore, Abolition Geography
receipt sound like? What likely unperceivable to us movements does the rhizome make, each and every root, depending on what it is receiving? Can we even begin to perceive the depth of its way of sensing, sounding and dancing?22
Infrastructure fails, the ground pulls us closer to it. It opens up and invites us inside. It recalls our deaths and the endings of things- days, cities, empires, prisons. We can’t know what it’s like under the earth until after death but Maura García’s choreography, rooted in the earth, skipping across it, wriggling under it, reminds us how much life there is underfoot. It’s not lonely down there.
22 García, Beginnings