Elizabeth Withstandley’s “The State of Being Indivisible (I want a perfect soul)” glows through the windows of Brookline Arts Center’s gallery, awash in blue. Withstandley uses Jeopardy! (and its characteristic blue palette) as a vehicle to explore the multifaceted nature of personal identity through a combination of video, audio, and installation. A forty-two-channel composite video that aggregates contestant Amy Schneider’s historic streak on the game show from 2021 to 2022 is the basis for which Withstandley builds the remainder of the exhibition around.
In the work featuring Schneider, Withstandley extracts the “contestant chat” portion of the show, a brief intermission between game play in which the host, Ken Jennings, prompts contestants to share a detail about themselves. Over the course of her forty-one-day streak, Schneider reveals facts ranging from generic to personal: She is a sports fan, participated in spelling bees as a child, received a perfect 1600 on her SATs, was voted “most likely to appear on Jeopardy!” in eighth grade, owns a cat, and had an older sister who passed away as an infant. Though viewers hear Jennings’s disembodied voice speak to Schneider, the video focuses on the contestant. A different Schneider appears in each of the smaller screens, animating only when she speaks. Once a fact is revealed, Withstandley summarizes it like a Jeopardy! answer, such as “This individual’s go-to karaoke choice is the song ‘Creep’ by Radiohead” (a nod to the subtitle of the exhibition).
The cumulative effect of this mode of presentation is a piecemeal portrait of Schneider that, despite highlighting the peculiarity of this exchange, presents a compelling portrait of the contestant. Even for avid Jeopardy! viewers, this logical yet uncanny presentation of this segment calls into question the ways in which we present ourselves to the world. At the end, when the work asks the audience, “Who is Amy Schneider?” the viewer gains an understanding of who the contestant is—or at least, what she finds important to convey about herself.