THE BODY IS A BIG PLACE
The Body is a Big Place is a large-scale, immersive
installation developed through collaboration between artists, scientists and clinicians. The work explores organ transplantation and the ambiguous thresholds between life and death, revealing the process of death as an extended durational process, rather than an event that occurs in a single moment in time. The work’s title refers to the capacity for parts of the body to traverse vast geographic, temporal and interpersonal distances during organ transplantation processes. The project was underscored by risk and uncertainty, mirroring the uncertainties lying at the heart of organ transplantation itself. As part of the installation a fully functioning heart perfusion system is used to reanimate to a beating state a pair of fresh pig hearts during a live performance.
Rather than sensationalising this performative event, the artists hope to encourage empathic responses from viewers, appealing to their somatic senses and fostering their identification with the hearts they are watching. This opens up the possibility of a deeper awareness and connection with viewers’ own interiors.The performance makes apparent the heart’s status as a highly contractile and unusual oscillator. The heart has its own ‘mini’ oscillator; a bundle of nerve cells called the sinus node, which can initiate the heart’s muscular contractions independently of the central nervous system.
This trait allows transplanted hearts to continue to beat for years without connection to the central nervous system, and the hearts in this performance to beat without external mechanical or electrical stimulation.The heart perfusion performance is accompanied by an underwater video sequence. Performers in this work are members of the organ transplant community in Melbourne, individuals who have traversed extraordinary experiences in the form of receiving, donating, or standing closely by loved ones as they receive or posthumously donate human organs.
The Body is a Big Place is a large-scale, immersive installation developed through collaboration between artists, scientists and clinicians. The work explores organ transplantation and the ambiguous thresholds between life and death, revealing the process of death as an extended durational process, rather than an event that occurs in a single moment in time. The work’s title refers to the capacity for parts of the body to traverse vast geographic, temporal and interpersonal distances during organ transplantation processes. The project was underscored by risk and uncertainty, mirroring the uncertainties lying at the heart of organ transplantation itself. As part of the installation a fully functioning heart perfusion system is used to reanimate to a beating state a pair of fresh pig hearts during a live performance. Rather than sensationalising this performative event, the artists hope to encourage empathic responses from viewers, appealing to their somatic senses and fostering their identification with the hearts they are watching. This opens up the possibility of a deeper awareness and connection with viewers’ own interiors. The performance makes apparent the heart’s status as a highly contractile and unusual oscillator. The heart has its own ‘mini’ oscillator; a bundle of nerve cells called the sinus node, which can initiate the heart’s muscular contractions independently of the central nervous system. This trait allows transplanted hearts to continue to beat for years without connection to the central nervous system, and the hearts in this performance to beat without external mechanical or electrical stimulation. The heart perfusion performance is accompanied by an underwater video sequence. Performers in this work are members of the organ transplant community in Melbourne, individuals who have traversed extraordinary experiences in the form of receiving, donating, or standing closely by loved ones as they receive or posthumously donate human organs.