New Value Institute

Work

JUDGE ME

Conceptual KeywordsSelf-AdjudicationSocial JudgmentLegitimacy under TrialEvidence of WorthInternalized AuthorityInstitutional GazeJudgment as PerformanceValue and Verdict

A courtroom performance that stages value conflict through accusation, evidence, testimony, jury, and the procedure of verdict.

2021Bergen / public performance contextsRealised
JUDGE ME documentation image 1
JUDGE ME performance documentation. Credit: Photo: Nayara Leite

Research Question

How does value get judged, how is legitimacy assigned, and how do those judgments become internalized inside subjects and institutions?

Format

Scripted performance, courtroom trial, audience participation

Watch trailer

JUDGE ME is a 105-minute performance structured as a court trial in which the artist appears simultaneously as plaintiff and defendant. The work investigates how systems of social value and legitimacy become internalized as structures of self-judgment.

Six witnesses from different professions testify on both sides, while the audience functions as the jury, casting votes through specially developed software throughout the performance. Developed through surveys, street interviews, workshops, and extensive conversations, the testimonies were transformed into a script governed by the logic of the courtroom itself.

Rather than treating judgment as a private psychological process, the work places questions of self-worth, recognition, and legitimacy within a public institutional framework. By appropriating the legal apparatus of testimony, evidence, deliberation, and verdict, JUDGE ME examines how individuals come to measure themselves through systems of value inherited from society. The project premiered at Meteor Festival in Bergen in 2021, was selected for ISPA’s 2023 New Works program, and received the Arte Laguna Prize in 2024.

The work combines field mapping, surveys and street interviews, witness workshops, expert contextualization, script recomposition, and dynamic jury voting. Real speech and public assumptions are transformed into a courtroom-like performance structure.

Outcomes

  • Public adjudication
  • Claimant-defendant structure
  • Witness system
  • Expert testimony
  • Dynamic jury
  • Authorial rupture
  • Modular dispute frame
  • Unresolved closure

Documentation Gallery

Jingyi Wang standing at the claimant podium during JUDGE ME, facing the judge in a courtroom setting.
JUDGE ME performance documentation.
JUDGE ME performance documentation.
JUDGE ME performance documentation.
JUDGE ME performance documentation.
JUDGE ME performance documentation.

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