Dexter Sinister presents Write About the Back of Your Thumb for an Hour

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Sat Jan 30 13:22:04 EST 2010


Dexter Sinister presents ``Write About the Back of Your Thumb for an
Hour'' tomorrow SATURDAY JANUARY 29, 7 PM at the Contemporary Art Gallery,
555 Nelson Street, as part of the exhibition An Invitation to An
Infiltration at the Contemporary Art Gallery, Vancouver. A
lecture-demonstration called ``Naive Set Theory'' will be delivered in the
gallery. This is the fifth of five consecutive evening events. No further
details will be announced, save this brief preparatory text:

Phaedrus, the autobiographical protagonist of Pirsig's Zen, is assigned to
teach rhetoric to a class of undergraduates. Confused by the
straightforward problem of how to activate a bunch of apparently lazy and
uninterested students, his anger and puzzlement lead him instinctively to
devise a ``demonstrator'' --- a task performed in front of the class in
which the method of teaching embodies what is being taught. In line with
the Werkplaats' maxim Only real work has the correct sense of
requiredness, Phaedrus enacts his bald reconsideration of the question
``how to teach?'' in front of the students he is trying to teach.

In one particular passage, Phaedrus assigns his class a broad,
straightforward task --- to write an essay on an aspect of the United
States --- and becomes preoccupied with one particular girl who, despite a
reputation for being serious and hardworking, is in a state of perpetual
crisis through not being able to think of ``anything to say.'' He
obliquely recognizes in her block something of his own paralysis in not
being able to think of ``anything to say'' back to her by way of advice,
and is baffled by his own eventual stroke of insight: ``Narrow it down to
one street.'' This advice doesn't work either, but after subsequently
suggesting, ``Narrow it down further to one building,'' then out of sheer
frustration ``one brick,'' something gives and the student produces a
long, substantial essay about the front of the local opera house. From
this unwitting experiment Phaedrus reasons that she was blocked by the
expectation that she ought to be repeating something already stated
elsewhere, and that she was freed by the comic extremity of his suggestion
to write about a single brick --- for which there was no obvious
precedent, therefore no right or wrong way to go about it, and therefore
no phantom standard to have to measure up to. By this curious yet
perfectly logical method, the student was liberated to see for herself,
and to act independently. He performs variations on the exercise with the
rest of his class --- ``Write about the back of your thumb for an hour''
--- which yield similar results, and lead him to conclude that this
implied expectation of imitation is the real barrier to free engagement,
active participation and actual learning.

See http://www.contemporaryartgallery.ca
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