Genre-evading performance artist Ryan McNamara explores our social—and social media-driven—attention-deficit malaise, and his spectacles serve as a kind of live-action Adderall. His latest immersive jolt, “Score,” captured by the street culture magazine Hypebeast, was delivered last month during Art Basel Hong Kong, and represents the Arizona-born maverick’s first Asian foray. The concept was deceptively simple: 20 dancers, 20 minutes, 20 moves. McNamara enlisted performers from both his current hometown of New York City and Hong Kong to interpret 20 commandments, including “fist your mouth with alcohol-lubricated hand,” “text and judge” (i.e. pass judgement on a nearby audience member), and “Beyoncé while Rihanna, Rihanna while Beyoncé,” a mash-up of pop choreography. Yana Peel, an art sponsor and entrepreneur who, along with her husband Stephen, commissioned “Score,” believes McNamara expertly captures the zeitgeist and acts as something of a cultural prophet. “He was able to tap into the hyper-pace of the city and slow everyone down enough to be in the moment,” she notes of the Hong Kong intervention. “But also speed everyone up in terms of appreciating performance, which is so important for this region.” McNamara’s interactive mission fast-forwards Marina Abramovic’s principles and plays them to Instagram junkies. In the past, his situation-specific blend of theater, pop culture and history has seen him conduct a production line of 30 male show-boys in a Louis Vuitton flagship store and bury himself neck-high in a forest singing Dolly Parton classics as people trample on his head.