In Disco (2016), performance artist Haiiileen reimagines the dance floor as a site of artistic transformation. Blurring the boundaries between movement, sound, and light, she constructs an immersive environment where vibration becomes visible and rhythm becomes sculpture. As part of her Study of Sound and Movement series, Disco explores how color and frequency shape human emotion, turning the act of dancing into a synesthetic ritual of collective energy.
- title: Disco (2016)
- Artist: Haiiileen
- Medium: Live performance — sound, movement, light interaction
- Duration: Approx. 9 minutes
- Location: Miami, FL
Description
Disco (2016) is a performance-based installation by Haiiileen, developed as part of her ongoing Study of Sound and Movement series. This work transforms the archetypal disco environment into a synesthetic experiment of light, sound, and embodied rhythm.
Within the installation, the artist constructs an atmosphere of sensory overload—mirrors, strobes, and reflective surfaces multiply motion into infinity. Dressed in sculptural costume and illuminated by shifting chromatic light, Haiiileen performs within a field of prismatic reflections, merging herself with the architecture of sound and vibration.
The performance explores how color frequencies and sonic rhythms can shape emotion, perception, and collective energy. The result is a living, breathing light sculpture that reinterprets the “disco” not as entertainment, but as a study of energetic transformation and human resonance.
Conceptual Framework
- Explores the relationship between light, vibration, and rhythm as emotional frequencies.
- Reimagines disco culture as ritualistic and meditative performance art, beyond nightlife aesthetics.
- Bridges synesthesia, optical phenomena, and movement theory through real-time performance.
- Integrates fashion, choreography, and immersive lighting to create a sensory unity of sight and sound.
- The title Disco refers not simply to the music genre but to the cultural phenomenon of the disco as a space of release, identity, and collective rhythm. Here, Haiiileen abstracts disco’s language — beats, lights, ecstatic repetition — into a minimalist, embodied performance.
- The work explores synesthesia and psycho-social resonance, using light and sound to guide the body into states of transformation. As in meki and Acid Trees, the artist’s body functions as both medium and transmitter, channeling vibrations into gesture.
Archival Significance
- Part of Haiiileen’s foundational Study of Sound and Movement series (2016).
- Marks the artist’s early use of mirrored and reflective materials that later appear in LightScapes and Rainbow Castle.
- Represents the fusion of nightclub culture, spiritual frequency, and art installation.
- Serves as a key early performance exploring color-sound translation and immersive motion environments.
Archival ID: HQ-2016-DSCO-01