Whitney Biennial 2022: Quiet As It's Kept

2022

Transcription: Coco Fusco, Your Eyes Will Be an Empty Word, 2021

Running Time: 00:12:00

[In the background, a mid-tone buzzing from a long note drawn from a violin persists among occasional touches of harmonic tones; the notes continue quietly beneath the narrator's voice.]

Pamela Sneed: "When death comes, it will have your eyes," he said. The fear of touching the dead has never left me. I was a child when I watched my mother pick my brother up and raise him over the edge of a coffin to kiss our father's forehead. Before she could ask me to do the same, I walked away. I thought my escape would be hidden by the rush of farewells before the closing of the casket. Buried inside me was the belief that death was contagious. So if I touched in anyone that had stopped breathing, I would stop too. I walked out into the cold and let the wind stop my tears. I walked away from the sounds of prayer. I walked away to breathe. Breathing meant I was alive.

[The mid-tone note fades away as lighter, higher tones come to the forefront before becoming quieter beneath the narrator's voice once again.]

Pamela Sneed: Breathing means something different now. Death is in the air. It invades our lungs and clouds our minds. It dictates our moves and our moods. We cannot walk away from the air. Instead, we walk back. We walk back in time. We return to our caves and stare at the shadows on our walls. We converse with specters. We rejoined the people who once knelt before an angry God. We call it a wave or a surge as if a natural disaster had ripped the roofs off our homes and tossed us out into the open sea.

We ride the waves. We steer our course with ancient safeguards. We make our shields out of cloth. We hide behind walls and flee from crowds. We isolate the damned. We find new ways to pray. Clanging pots take the place of tolling bells. We pretend to raise the dead. We learn the names of those we never knew. We watch them walk through our minds. We do not touch them.

We build memorials to fallen heroes in our heads while death does its dance. The waves break through the levies. The waves carry us away. The waves scatter their victim. The waves leave more bodies than we can name. The waves leave more bodies than we can carry. There are too many bodies to hide. There are no more beds for them to lie in. There are no more plots to bury them. There are bodies waiting on roads. There are bodies waiting in lots. There are bodies waiting in trucks. There are bodies that are unclaimed. There are bodies that are unknown.

[The instruments become more chaotic, with tremolos and vibrato destabilizing the ambient notes.]

Pamela Sneed: Two days is too little to be found for those that came from far away. Two days is too little to be found for those that have been lost for so long. The bodies lie together, alone. What our minds cannot fathom, the city will immure. The task of tending to concentrations of the living turns people into populations. Concentrations of the dead turn bodies into numbers. They were penniless. They were foreign. They were banished. They were outcast. They were miscreant. They were afflicted. They were unwanted, or they were simply un-befriended. They were herded through life as numbers, case numbers, file numbers, chart numbers, registration numbers, convict numbers, patient numbers. They are interred by men who also became numbers. They end on a small island where the numbers rise, but the counting stops. A mountain of unclaimed souls, perhaps a million, perhaps more or perhaps less. No one actually knows.

[The mid tones return as short staccato notes among the buzzing in the background.]

Pamela Sneed: "When death comes, it will have your eyes," he said. Our minds recoil from death tolls, but not from death rates. On average, there are 158 deaths per day in this city. On average, only three quarters of our 23,000 hospital beds are occupied. On average, 30% of those occupations end in death. On average, a cemetery will perform 60 cremations per week. On average, a funeral will cost $10,000. On average, a family will have 35% less than that amount saved when death comes.

When we reached 100,000 deaths last spring, we yearned for a day when less than 1000 would pass. When 4,000 deaths occurred in one day, we were reminded that 2,403 lives were lost at Pearl Harbor and 3,000 perished in 2001 on 9/11. We were told that the current death toll is higher than the losses suffered in several foreign wars. We were consoled with the thought that this is less than the 850,000 casualties from the Civil War. It is less than the six written 675,000 deaths from the Spanish Flu, but more than the number of deaths from cholera or typhoid or polio. The loss of life becomes a manageable sum. We may treat it as a debt that could be forgiven one day. Forgiven and forgotten, we will walk away.

[Ambient scattered harmonic notes play among the low buzzing in the background.]

Pamela Sneed: When death comes, it will have your eyes. This death that is always with us from morning till evening, sleepless, death like an old remorse or some senseless bad habit. Your eyes will be an empty word, a stifled cry, a silence. The way they appear to you each morning, when you lean into yourself alone in the mirror, sweet hope, that day we too shall know that you are life and you are nothingness. For each of us, death has a face. When death comes, it will have your eyes. It will be like quitting some bad habit, like seeing a dead face resurface out of the mirror, like listening to shut lips. We'll go down into the vortex in silence.

(Silence)

[The mid-tone buzzing of the violin crescendos, accompanied by the same harmonic and sliding tones layered on top of each other before fading out into silence.]

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