Pharmacophore: Architectural Placebo by Harrison Atelier and Silas Reiner

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Uploaded by on Nov 28, 2011

Storefront for Art and Architecture presents Pharmacophore: Architectural Placebo, the latest in a growing body of Harrison Atelier (HAt) collaborations bridging design with performance. The new dance-installation work is conceived, dramaturged and directed by HAt founder Seth Harrison, designed by his partner, Ariane Lourie Harrison, choreographed by Silas Riener and performed by Merce Cunningham Dance Company members Riener, Rashaun Mitchell, Jamie Scott and Melissa Toogood.

The installation will be on view November 22-December 3. The opening event, from 7:00 to 9:00 P.M. on November 22, will include a brief "teaser" performance. Full performances will take place nightly, November 25-30, at 7:00 P.M. and 8:30 P.M. Tickets are free but reservations should be made in advance.
About the Installation
The very ideas underlying Pharmacophore: Architectural Placebo epitomize the unique intersection HAt occupies-where art meets science, technology and medicine, and the real and the imagined become a highly nuanced blend. The title of the project represents the composite figure of two medical terms. Pharmacophore is used by doctors and drug researchers to describe any family of similarly-shaped molecular structures that interact predictably with a particular biological target. Placebo effect is a beneficial change in a biochemical state, temporary and unreliable, produced in anticipation of therapy. The interaction of the two assumes a beguiling complexity. Placebo effects are augmented by marketing campaigns, social ambition, quests for scientific success as well as the institutional apparatus of white coats, prescription labels and medical instrumentation. Often the appearance of side effects can trigger the placebo effect of an otherwise inefficacious drug. Sometimes a placebo effect can be caused by a diagnosis. Where, then, is the line between pharmacophore and placebo? What are our cultural placebos, the conventions and assumptions on which we rely every day? Is medicine itself one such placebo-pharmacophore? Taking these questions as conceptual touchstones, Pharmacophore: Architectural Placebo is HAt's exploration of the cultural and philosophical economy that surrounds medicine, technology, and the human prospect in the 21st century.


Referencing the pharmaceutical company façade and the radiological suite, the installation consists of 24 eight-foot-tall, tempered glass plates, supported by stainless steel framing and backlit blue, placed against along the back wall of the gallery. Contoured seats, suggestive of medical apparatus, are integrated into the installation pieces, which are dotted with inflatable forms that when unfurled become spatializations of pharmacophores. The inflatable set pieces are used as costumes and props; audience members use them as cushions. In the interaction among design objects, dancers, spectators and set, the performance, following Riener's choreography, highlights the shared desires that prompt our cultural placebos-even as the set pieces are contorted into placebo-effects as specific and numerous as the audience members themselves.

The piece is the third installment in HAt's Pharmacophore series of design-dance hybrids. Catherine Miller choreographed the previous iterations in late 2010. In this version of Pharmacophore, Ariane Lourie Harrison's installation incorporates set and costumes and transforms the entirety of the Storefront gallery into a pharma-cultural landscape. The project contains an original lighting design by Aaron Copp and Nick Houfek and an original score by Loren Dempster.

About the Performance
Direction & Dramaturgy: Seth Harrison, Harrison Atelier (HAt)
Visual Design: Ariane Lourie Harrison, Harrison Atelier (HAt)
Choreography: Silas Riener
Performers : Rashaun Mitchell, Silas Riener, Jamie Scott, Melissa Toogood
Sound Design and Composer: Loren Dempster
Lighting Design: Aaron Copp, Nick Houfek
HAt production: Craig Shillitto ,Carmen Fanzone, Jacob Dugopolski, Juliet Gamarci, Gabriel Harrison, Matthew Persinger, Karl Schmeck

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Entertainment

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