Performance: Breathing Race Into the Machine
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Performance: Breathing Race Into the Machine

Join us for a special durational performance by the artist Vanessa Damilola Macaulay.

By International Museum of Surgical Science

Date and time

Location

International Museum of Surgical Science

1524 North Lake Shore Drive Chicago, IL 60610

Refund Policy

No Refunds

About this event

Breathing Race into the Machine

Performance July 24th, 12:00pm-7:00pm

Free with RSVP

Experience a compelling durational performance by artist Vanessa Damilola Macaulay, inspired by her exhibit Breathing Race Into the Machine.This 7-hour performance invites guests to come and go freely—arrive at any time, stay as long as you like, and re-enter throughout the day.

About Breathing Race Into The Machine:

Breathing Race into the Machine interrogates the racial logics encoded in medical instruments, not as corrupted deviations from a neutral standard but as systems deliberately engineered to encode inequality. Centering the spirometer, a device used to measure lung capacity, the exhibition reveals how this tool of clinical diagnosis doubled as a mechanism of racial classification. The spirometer, developed in the 19th century, helped forge and legitimise pseudoscientific claims that Black people had diminished lung capacity, reinforcing myths of biological inferiority. These claims were not discarded with time; they have been absorbed into contemporary medical protocols, algorithms, and diagnostic thresholds. The racial bias encoded in the spirometer persists, along with the ideology that justified it, as an enduring fiction that pathologises Black breath while disguising power as science.

In this exhibition, breath is not a symbol but a contested physiological threshold, a racialised site of measurement and control. For Black people, the reading of breath has long been made legible only to institutions of slavery and their afterlives in policing, medicine, environmental policy, education, and the carceral state, where the simple act of breathing remains a site of surveillance, suspicion, and control. Rather than repair or redeem the spirometer, Vanessa Damilola Macaulay unsettles its logic, reimagining its function and offering a new grammar for how breath is measured, heard, and understood. Through sculpture, sound, performance and archival excavation, she challenges the ways bodies are rendered measurable. Breathing Race into the Machine is not about outdated science; it is a powerful examination of how modern technologies continue to extract legibility from Black flesh while remaining fundamentally inadequate to comprehend the complexity of Black life in the US and beyond.

About the Artist

Vanessa Damilola Macaulay, a Black British artist based in Chicago, works across performance, video, and photography to explore how creative strategies can centre Black life in ways that resist and reimagine systems of antiblackness. Each project takes a distinct form, shaped by embodied inquiry and social urgency. Macaulay’s work, grounded in Black feminist epistemologies and speculative modes of inquiry, challenges inherited narratives and constructs new visual and performative languages for imagining Black life beyond survival. Recent works include This Way Up with Care, a performance that examines the struggles associated with crossing borders, and The Architect, an immersive performance on a double-decker bus in London shown at the Greenwich & Docklands International Festival. Macaulay’s work has been featured in theatres, exhibitions and residencies across the UK, South Africa, Europe, and the U.S.

Learn More: https://www.vanessamacaulay.com/

This project is partially supported by a grant from the City of Chicago Department of Cultural Affairs & Special Events.

The International Museum of Surgical Science acknowledges support from the Illinois Arts Council Agency.

Frequently asked questions

What are my parking or transportation options to and from the event?

Parking is validated at two nearby lots: 1350 N Lake Shore Drive and the Chicago History Museum lot at Stockton & Lasalle. You can find more info here: https://imss.org/plan-your-visit/

Is the Museum accessible?

Museum is accessible by elevator and ramps. For additional accommodations please contact info@imss.org or call 312-642-6502

More questions?

You can reach us at lisa@imss.org or 312-642-6502, ext, 3120

Organized by

The International Museum of Surgical Science, a division of the International College of Surgeons (ICS), maintains over 10,000 square feet of public galleries committed to the history of surgery, and an exquisite permanent collection of art and artifacts from the history of Medicine. The Museum supports its Mission through medically thematized exhibitions and programs, in addition to a strong contemporary art exhibition program.

 is to enrich people’s lives by enhancing their appreciation and understanding of the history, development, and advances in surgery and related subjects in health and medicine.

Free