Sunday, 22 April 2012

Evaluation. . .

Once I had managed to form an idea of my chosen setting to execute a fantasy exhibition, settling on the concept of using a stage for a performance, I considered several different staging areas and possibilities, I felt the stage of the RSC Theatre would be best for rein-acting my performance exhibition. Deciding on Waiting for Godot was based around the simplicity in characters, plot, staging and set, but also in terms of the ideas it presents; the themes of time/reality/relationships/search for meaning are all intriguing ideas for works of art I could potentially use, opening up several branches of investigation.

I collaborated four artworks with the performance, allocating specific actors and mapping out the exact location of each piece within my space, considering the effect the set will have upon the audience. Other than the visual aesthetic appearance, I thought about using sound art, although dismissed the idea by the outcome. I also reviewed the effects of lighting, hence Parker's piece that projects shadows onto the stage making it eerie and melancholic, further alluding to the sense of an evening country road.

The intention of my performance exhibition is to collaborate performance within the theatre with various contemporary artworks to convey this theme of an ongoing search for meaning and the human struggle. Notions of the passing of time and the waiting for something better are suggested in the performance and in the artworks; both reinforce the ideas of the other.

I found some areas of difficulty in considering where to locate the artworks amongst the set design as I was working with large scale works on a small stage, but worked around any issues that I had by moving Parker's sculpture off of the stage and into the space above, making full use of the area. Another issue I encountered was the labelling of works; obviously I couldn't do this directly on the stage. Instead of labelling the works themselves, I placed the titles/names/descriptions/dates, etc. in a performance programme that would be distributed to the audience members on entering the theatre.

The concept behind the performance exhibition was an endeavour to curate sculptural/installation works in parallel with a live performance experience so the artistic set design is acknowledged. Furthermore, the artworks that act as props on the stage echo the themes that run throughout the continuous play being acted out on the stage. I have made another point of interest by including myself, as the curator/director, to  play a character onstage. By allocating the other actors specifically, I was free to choose whomever I wanted in my fantasy cast, so chose the people who I felt would rein-act the characters as I imagine they should be. After looking at all female casts/productions in context etc. I endeavoured to encompass a variety of different actors and actresses.

To improve on my virtual exhibition I would consider the possibility of having the sound of a ticking clock in the background of even artworks upon the balconies (i.e. paintings hanging up so the audience experiences that type of medium before seeing the play). The overall experience of the collaboration of performance/sculpture/installation would be one of interest in any space; I could perhaps take this further by putting the performance in public spaces or in specific meaningful places (i.e. the performance in Sarajevo, etc.). 



Exhibition Programme. . .





Exhibition Programme - Here I have made an Exhibition Programme to distribute to people who come to the show so the audience knows a) who is in the play and b) the information on artworks within the set

(Also see sketchbook for printed copy)

Leaflet/Poster for Exhibition. . .




Here I have photoshopped an image of my leaflet for my virtual exhibition.

I wanted the image to look as though it is from the perspective of the front of the stage, looking at Gallaccio's sculpture in the foreground and seeing the blurred Death Counter in the background.

I blurred the death counter image on photoshop and adjusted the levels, then applied a new layer of which I pasted the sculpture (cutting it out of its previous context and moving it within the frame of the new image) to look as though it was in focus, with the death counter out of focus, creating a sense of a long depth of field. I added highlights to the tree sculpture branches to look as though the spotlight (from above) is shining upon it.

I wanted to evoke a feeling of montage, so applied the text on top as though cut out from a newspaper. I also placed the fundamental quote 'They do not move' - the final stage direction used by Beckett at the end of both acts.

PRESS RELEASE. . .


THE WAIT.

PRESS RELEASE                            FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Monday April 23rd-24th 2012
                Marianne.edwards@mail.bcu.ac.uk
Tel: 07914539791

            VLADIMIR: We can still part, if you think it would be better.
            ESTRAGON: It’s not worth while now.
                                  Silence.  
            VLADIMIR: No, it’s not worth while now.
                                  Silence.
            ESTRAGON: Well, shall we go?
            VLADIMIR: Yes, let’s go.
                                 They do not move.

     Samuel Beckett, Waiting for Godot

This exhibition bridges the gulf between the theatre and the arts, collaborating performance with sculpture to present an audience with a play interweaved with an artistic set design in the true sense of the phrase; the stage is composed of several artworks that, upon closer inspection mirror the concurrent themes within the play itself. The play presented is Samuel Beckett’s Waiting for Godot, a tragicomedy in two acts that is performed in a continuous loop on the stage.

The audience is automatically made aware of the intentions of the exhibition on entering the space; we are confronted with the huge, ever-ascending digital numbers of Santiago Sierra's Death Counter (2009) that has been placed upon the back wall of the stage. The installation piece marks the exact number of deaths worldwide each second. It is an imposing juxtaposition upon the almost-bare stage giving us the continuous reminder of the increasing proximity of our own fatal outcome. Beneath this lies the solitary work of Anya Gallaccio’s Because I Could Not Stop (2002), marking the centre of the stage, evoking notions of the passing of time as central metaphor to the performance acted around the sculpture, symbolized with the gradual natural decay of the real fruit that adorns the bronze frame.

The Wait. combines contemporary installation and sculpture with a production of one of the most influential post-war plays of the 20th century foregrounding melancholic themes of futility and a desperation to find meaning in life that a present-day audience can relate to.

“I wanted to present a contemporary audience with notions of the human search for meaning and the inevitable realization that all we can do is hope. Where better to exhibit this than upon a stage?” says Marianne Edwards, curator of the exhibition.


         -  MORE  -


“The stage functions as landscape for the artistic wasteland; it foregrounds the awareness that the erratic characters that act upon it are not real, they are merely metaphors for the human condition that demonstrate a universal suffering.

Humanity is stripped to its core, revealing the gravity of the deepest and darkest human emotions and needs, leaving you to face the inevitable truth – there is no escape, only perseverance. The only act is that of holding on.”

- END - 

Saturday, 21 April 2012

Allocating actors. . .

My Virtual Cast

Morgan Freeman - Vladimir

Sir Ian Mckellen - Estragon

Dame Judi Dench - Pozzo

Kevin Spacey - Lucky

Me - Boy

Friday, 20 April 2012

Perspective from Right Upper Circle (Balcony). . .



1. = Cold Dark Matter

The * marks the shadow impression that would occur upon the stage.

Light would come from above, shining through the suspended sculpture. Mimics the appearance of a huge chandelier, suspended from hundreds of strings of invisible thread/fishing wire.

Issues with arrangement of artworks. . .

My initial idea of where to locate Parker's Cold Dark Matter was to place it at the forefront of the stage. However, in considering the viewpoint of the audience, those seated front-on would be experiencing a block of vision towards the centre of the stage.

Thus, I would relocate Parker's sculpture to a much higher level; those seated at the circle and/or upper circle would  be able to see it at eye level, then look down to the stage where the projection of the sculptures exploded parts would create shadows on the floor of the stage. I would place a spotlight above the sculpture so the lighting is limited to the stage itself, giving it the impression of an evening setting that Beckett wanted, while allowing the shadows to shine through. Those looking up from the stalls would also be able to see the work, as it would be above the stage itself and within eyesight.