Blue Monologue is a video triptych. In it, an “American” and a “Negro” dispassionately observe a third, centered, figure. The outermost two are differentiated only by their apparel—one dressed as a lay person, the other in an ambiguous blue uniform.
Both attempt to “place” the center figure, also in uniform, who grooves soulfully to inaudible music. Together, they consider: is she insufficiently identifying as “blue” (American) by over identifying as black? Or does the blue uniform thwart her claim on the darker color?
Although alone in her unadorned room, the center figure moves self-consciously into and out of the frame, seemingly captured by the unrelenting double gaze. By dancing, she investigates her sovereignty—as a diasporic black woman and an American—while the adjacent two look on, their frames spliced intermittently with inter-titles, chronicling and scrutinizing every facet of her form.
Throughout, all three figures are illuminated by a television’s blue light. The blinking glow reminds the audience of a network of audiences; those two adjacent surveyors are now, also, subjects of surveillance.
In image, movement, and text, Blue Monologue asks: how do we use intersections of race, gender, class, and nationality to better see one another without reinforcing prisons of identity?