Deeper - Ameena Green - No Noise -18.07.2024- Instant
18.07.2024
The room is half-empty, but not in the way that suggests failure. It is half-empty by design. On the evening of July 18th, 2024, at an unmarked warehouse space in East London, thirty-seven people sit on simple grey cushions. They have signed a waiver. Not for physical harm, but for something far more unsettling: they have agreed to no noise . Deeper - Ameena Green - No Noise -18.07.2024-
“I’m not anti-music,” she clarifies, wrapping her hands around a lukewarm tea. “I’m anti-sedation. We use noise to fill the void. ‘Deeper’ is about jumping into the void and realizing the void isn’t empty. It’s full of you . And most people are terrified of that.” They have signed a waiver
The physical toll is evident. Her knees are bruised. Her right index finger is taped where she dragged it against the concrete for a sustained thirty-second note—the only “melody” in the entire piece. She trains for this like a free diver. “Holding your breath is easy,” she says. “Holding your noise is harder. It’s a muscle. You have to learn not to fill the space.” “I’m anti-sedation
In a world screaming for our attention, Ameena Green asks us to turn it off. Her latest piece, Deeper , isn’t a performance. It’s a confrontation with silence.
The Quiet Unraveling: Ameena Green’s ‘Deeper’ and the Art of No Noise
To call it a dance would be a lie. To call it theater feels too loud. What Green has constructed is a 47-minute excavation of the self using the absence of music as its primary instrument. There is no score. No found sound. No breathing looped through a subwoofer. There is only the rustle of her tendons, the soft percussive thud of her heel meeting the floor, and the terrifying, intimate sound of her own heartbeat amplified by a contact microphone taped to her sternum.