Tuesday, 7 May 2013

SELF REVIEW OF OUR PERFORMANCE

All in all i think the performance went well, the first half was very unrepresentative as we wanted and the second part was very expressive as the ideas of possession and the newspapers really came into fruition.
We had some rehearsal issues as a member of our group was on holiday for the week before the performance which is when we needed to rehearse the most as this time period was pretty much when we had got both the routines fully clarified and formed into the final product.
I feel like we managed to gather a lot from the research with very little actual archival evidence available to us                   Everyone in our group had a lot of fantastic ideas, and even though at times it was hard to please everyone and incorporate all the ideas we managed to gather a bit of everyone's ideas we used a trial and error approach that meant we threw out a lot of scenes and crafted quite a few new ones last minute.
I'm very pleased to work with the ideas of possession and geometry as this is the first time I've had the opportunity to do so.

PRECIS FROM THE READINGS




Reading #12 
Dixon, S “Digits, Discourse and Documentation: Performance Research and Hypermedia

This reading began detailing a CD with the footage of a production of Chameleons 2: in dreamtime on it in which the CD-ROM allows the viewer to select the chapter they wish to watch. The disc also allows the viewer to choose to have audio commentary. Dixon uses this reading to explain the success of this CD (and of this form of multimedia). As this reading looks on at this CD and its possibilities 

Reading #11
Barthes, R., “Camera Lucida”.


Focusing this reading mainly on photography, Barthes starts by explaining the surprises that a photographer has to face when taking images for a theatrical purposes:
  
  • How original is the content? is it something regular that which we could come into contact with on a daily basis. 
  • Capturing a movement in a 'moment' which painting cannot.
  • Ability to capture the finest of details, so for example the moment a flea jumps off a dogs back.  
  • Technique that the artist chooses to use in their photograph 
  • The luck of finding something unusual.

Barthes then moves on to explain a 'Punctum' - where the hidden meaning or details within a photograph are displayed, this could materialise as words on the t-shirt of a person in the photograph or a gesture. Barthes explains that for him the Punctum is the most interesting thing about photography as many times the things he discovers are not actually placed there on purpose or for a reason but have accidentally become the meaning of the picture.
This reading has made me aware of the hidden details in the photographs. 

Reading #10
 Phelan, P. “Unmarked: the Politics of Performance”

Phelan argues that Theatre pieces can never be repeated as they are are an event that go hand in hand with time and place, two elements which cannot be re-lived, so they can only be re-performed with differences occurring every time. Re-performing a piece means taking the piece and reenacting it with the political direction of the current director. It then looks into more detail at how a performance piece is heavily depended on the memory they leave in the spectator. Phelan then went on to talk of the power of not being able to make eye contact with an artist, gaving many examples of work through the past years that have had the artist either disappearing as part of the performance or that had the face of the artist obscured.
Reading #9
Rebecca Schneider, “Performing Remains: Art and War in the Times of Theatrical Re-enactment”
This reading from Rebecca Schneider explored historical war and mass death catastrophes such as 9/11, from the perspective of the archive. The reading spoke of how archives can resurrect events concealed in the past that are not always for the better. Most wars in general have their facts and figures locked in a secret government archive never to be fully released to the public. The reading spoke of how facts can be changed and altered to alter a countries vulnerability, meaning that certain governments may chose to only release part of the truth to their public. Having wars truthly archived can benefit society as it allows members of the public to engage with their uncensored cultural history.

Reading #8
 Jacques Derrida “Archive Fever”


This reading gave insight into the practitioner Freud and his views on archives and the way a performance is expressed within said archive. From the reading Freud has explored that archives are made possible by death and destruction giving form to new life, as an artist passes away their work becomes even more important in the creative industry. This is because with their absence they are no longer available to answer questions regarding their work and so the only things left to the world is what has been archived and is accessible to future researchers.

Reading 7: Archive or Memory? The Detritus of Live Performance


This reading began by looking at just how we archive a performance and the fears that an artist faces when creating a performance. Many people are concerned when creating a performance as to how long will it last or be remembered and if it can be immortalised, implying that there is no better way to archive a performance than in the memories of its audience.
Reason goes on to discuss that the archive is not concerned with the generating of new work, simply the collection, collation and classification and safe keeping of work already made. The image of the archive is that of accuracy and objectivity. The archive is therefore not necessarily the bastion of neutrality that it has claimed, as this view goes on the affect that new live performances being generated have on the spectator.
Reading #6

Eugenio Barba, “Eftermaele: That which will be said afterwards.”


This was a very short reading centered around the query of how an artist speaks to their future audience members. The reading addresses that a performance should be able to engage its current spectators and it is also the responsibility of the men and women behind the piece to find a way to make this piece travel to its futures viewers, this could be through documentation or personal memory of those there in its original staging.

Reading #5
Auslander, P., “The Performativity of Performance Documentation”


Auslander shows the use of photographs as a form of documentation and how a performance should not be classified so if the only interaction with the audience is through photographs. Auslander utilizes the reading to explain two main performances, the first one is called “Shoot” where an artist got another artist to shoot him in the arm and he photographed the moments during and after. The other one was of an artist who jumped out of a second floor window and had photographs taken but edited them to remove the safety net below.
Auslander details that in “Shoot” the photographs are a form of performance because they capture what really happened and allows the audience the chance to see it for themselves. Whereas in “Jump” the photographs have been tampered with to show something that is not real, the only people that will see the performance in its reality are were those present at the time of the jump.
Auslander gives the reader a few questions to think about, What is to be said on the truth of digital media? Do the eyes deceive? How do we know what we are seeing is really what happened?


Reading #3
Cook “What is past is prologue: History of archival ideas since 1898, and the future paradigm shift”. Archivaria 43 pp. 17-63


Cook begins by explaining that Archives started as 'Houses of Memory' in the year 1898. They were designed to be a sort of acces to the collective cultural memory of the times, where anything that is worth remembering is stored.  However, in this time period the things that had been forgotten suggest they were deliberately removed. Across this time there was a lot of power endowed to government control, where people of authority could depict who can and can not speak within the public and the archive.
As the years have progressed and the creation and evolution of the computer and telecommunications industry there has been a call for new ways to keep archives, using organised unfallable systems and websites.

Reading#2
 A’ness, F.(2004) “Resisting Amnesia: Yuyachani, Performance, and the post-war Reconstruction of Peru”, Theatre journal, 56, pp. 395-414


In this reading A’ness talks about the Peru internal war (1980-2000). Four years after and with a new government, they have decided to revisit the war and trials are being held where testimonies from those involved are used as the body of the argument.
The Truth and Reconciliation Committee works towards exposing the stories or war hidden within the country and face the hard truth so that the country can move on and start to rebuild itself, however in this case the government of peru played a strong part in the destruction of many lives and therefore trust in the TRC is minimal.
In order to balance this they appointed a company called Yuyachkani, a theatre company who has been working within Peru for many years before this war and during it. The company’s job was to tour around peru performing works that try to improve the image of the TRC and explain why they are here, encouraging people to come forward and reveal their story.
After the trails were done the Yuyachkani compiled all their work together and a few new pieces to create a festival “never again” that raised awareness of the evils that faced Peru in the hope that it will never happen again.

Reading#1
Taylor, D. “The archive and the repertoire”

This reading began by explaining the differences of 'writing' archival sources and 'repertoire' archival sources and explaining that we cant have one without the other.

EXAMPLES OF WRITTEN SOURCES:

Written sources include things like:

  • Newspaper articles
  • Books
  • Scripts
  • Written Statements
  • Written law

So basically anything that contains the spoken word on paper.


EXAMPLES OF REPERTOIRE SOURCES:

Repertoire sources are:

  • Visual
  • Audio
  • Sensory 
  • dance

Repertoire is passed on through teaching and memory, unlike written where the skill was limited to one single format, by using repertoire anyone could gain the knowledge by experiencing the performance for themselves and then mimic this back over time gradually incorporating their own interpretations.
Taylor also addresses that both forms of information are important in the modern archive and that they work together. The example she gives is of a wedding and how you can not have a wedding without the spoken words of “I Do” and the signed contract of marriage. And this is of course, the same for live performance, to archive a live performance we would record it and store the program and the footage. However this cannot relay the first hand experience of the audience member.

Monday, 6 May 2013

SOPHIE CALLE

“Sophie Calle was born in 1953 and is a French writer, photographer, installation artist, and conceptual artist. Calle’s work is distinguished by its use of arbitrary sets of constraints, and evokes the French literary movement of the 1960s known as Oulipo. Her work frequently depicts human vulnerability, and examines identity and intimacy. She is recognized for her detective-like ability to follow strangers and investigate their private lives. Her photographic work often includes panels of text of her own writing.” http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sophie_Calle

We looked the artist sophie and her piece called The Shadow


The shadow (April 1981) was a piece that was largely of photographs taken by a private investigator. Sophie Calle asked her mother to hire a investigator to follow her around all day and document her doings, these photographs were then displayed with both her and the investigators observations from the day. 
Throughout all the pictures Sophie appears more as a shadow or distant figure then a being which made this piece quite dark. 


Sophie’s art is uniquely archival as part of the process to create her work is documenting the project, it’s the taking of pictures and the recording of observations which are to be displayed in future performances. Following her work method of capturing the objects and feelings as we continue through the project would be a creative way of archiving our project as we go.

SCENE-BY-SCENE


 Scene 1 - Geometrical Movement Sequence 

We noticed that in Theatre La Gaia Scienza, the players became part of the set, they use the set to physically move and become as one with it. We decided to use chairs, so that we could become part of our set, we started on the floor, laying on the floor behind our chairs, we then pushed our chair forwards and started our routine in cannon.  
Scene 2 - ‘The Force’
In an image we found from Teatr Nowy, there was a man using an imaginary force to push a woman backwards, we liked the idea of this force and decided to use it in a sequence whilst still using our chairs, our chairs were left in interesting positions after the last sequence and we got into diffeerent shapes using our chairs we then leant from one side to the other then backwards and forwards like a gravitational force was pulling us.  
Scene 3 - Chair Sequence
We then repeated our initial Geometrical Movement Sequence,  except from different directions,  this added more depth to the geometry used in out piece. We then left the stage covering our faces with our chairs.  
Scene 4 - Me in the box, gravitational force.
In rehearsals we played a lot with boxes, as in both Teatr Nowy and La Gaia Scienza there was prominent use of boxes. Not only did we like the geometrical aspect of the boxes, but also the idea of illusion that it created. The three companies I researched into all had illusive aspects to there work.

Scene 5 - Media
We were drawn into a circle, we moved robitically using different heights and shapes, ‘the illusionist’ then tries to force us to take newspapers from him, we refuse by leaning our bodies as far from him as possible, still in a circle wuth our arms linked, as he walks around us we lean away from him.

Scene 6 - Electrons
The papers are then forced upon Soraya, a force then surrounds her, as Dasha, Leanne and I try to get to the papers we are repelled back, using different hights and shapes with our bodies.  
Scene 7 - Geometrical Newspaper Sequence
We then did a synchronised sequence with our newspapers, opening them at the same time and moving them left, middle, right, middle, in, out.  
Scene 8 - The Box
We made a rotating box, there was 4 of us, each holding our paper at the sides with one person in the middle, we then rotated so each person was in a diffrent place of the box, we repeated this four times. This was both geometrical and once again had the use of box.  
Scene 9 - Newspaper Movement in Line
We had a height ascending line, each of us held our newspapers in front of our faces, then did synchronised movements with our newspapers.  
Scene 10 - Running After Papers
Suggessting the papers are almost possessing us, from not taking them, to not being able to resist them, We then used a geometric inspired circle, opening our newspapers at the same time to create a pattern. This also expressed how the media can brain wash people. (Going back to the idea of posession).  
Scene 11 - Illusion
Lloyd (the illusionist) enters the circle, as he goes down, the people creating the circle stand up, we hold our paoers over the illusionist and he disappears, his force still pulls us buck to where he disappeared and then throws us forward, his arm reappears and drags us from left to right.

Practical Ideas From Our Research

Possession
Teatr Nowy and Complicite both had such big themes of possession in their performances that we decided possession would be a good theme to us follow also. I had the idea to have someone in a huge dice, and the dice being rolled by by 'spirit bailiffs' (otherworldly bouncer types), the dice lands on a number corresponding to the player sitting opposite the audience and behind the dice and the demon inside gets birthed from the dice sprawling out onto the floor. The ‘demon’ then begins to posses the player on stage by laying itself on top of the player. This idea was really exciting but we could not find a cardboard box big enough to fit a person in and use as a dice.

Being present, whilst representing nothing

Researching into the company La Gaia Scienza we found out that they used the concept of ‘being present but representing nothing’. We found this idea interesting and decided to use it in our final piece  As our movement’s were big it was hard to keep our faces expressionless so we decided on the idea of using white expressionless masks

Geometry

There was a;ot of geometry used in our research companies, especially in La Gaia Scienza one that managed to get my attention was where the performers were using each others weight to balance and make an interesting geometric position. We tried to re-create this by laying in a square with our arms pushing our bodies up, and our feet on the floor with our knees bent. We then, one at a time put our heads on the knees of the person closest to us and took our arms off the floor and created a balance. This was really fun to create and practice, however it proved challenging holding the balance for even a short period of time, so we decided not to use it in our final piece, we did however gather inspiration from this, and created a bicycle running scene between Talia and Dasha using the same properties of geometry and leaning.

MY DISCOVERY AT THE GOLDSMITH ARCHIVES

After browsing through the archive for a few hours i found something that immediately attracted me. It was dark, surreal and not your regular theater art.

TEATR NOWY - END OF EUROPE

Teatr  Nowy is a polish production created by Janus Wisniewski in 1983 the show was a surrealist view of the political and social climate of eastern Europe leading up to, and after the two world wars. 
Being a polish company it was very hard to find anything on the show or the company in the English language aside from the images we found in the lift archive. 






In the performance they used things like; 
  • Masks 
  • Face paint 
  • Blood 
  • Lighting 
  • Rasa (they often just made expressions with no words, conveying meaning through expression) 
  • Costumes 
  • Fear
In the Lift archive is at next to Dasha who's findings were a theater group called La gaia scienza,  this theater group although not doing conventional theater shows like the company i had found, was very similar in style and we decided to group together for the final performance group, also including Talia, Soriyah and Leanne who did not visit the archives.



La gaia scienza



La gaia scienza is a production company that uses geometery and 


shapes in their work and they also have a heavy focus on site specific work.













Complicite

After researching Teatr Nowy and La Gaia Scienza Talia linked in her research from complicite , a British Theatre Company. Complicite was founded in 1983, and was originally called Theatre de Complicite. They use technology as a focal point, through projection and cameras they express themselves using movement in relation to objects and light, and there is a strong surrealism aspect to the company which links in with mine and Dasha's artists.





THE LIFT ARCHIVE AT GOLDSMITHS



''Having staged pioneering theatre events in London for over a quarter of a century, LIFT has amassed a wealth of material now housed in the Special Collections Library at Goldsmiths, University of London, and online at www.liftlivingarchive.com/lla just waiting to be explored.
Within the LIFT Living Archive are documents, photographs, objects and recordings which provide an extensive learning source and an insight into not just the performances seen at LIFT, but also the negotiations and planning which makes the festival happen.
Stretching all the way from LIFT's inception in 1981 to 2001, LIFT Living Archive is a treasure trove for academics, artists and anyone with an interest in how LIFT and contemporary theatre has developed. Yet the LIFT Living Archive aims not to bury this illustrious past in boxes or databases for posterity, but to unearth fresh forms of thinking from what has gone before.''


On my 4th week, after finally finding my class stationed at the goldsmiths university archives i join to find everyone wearing white glove and rummaging though stacks of folders, i was told to look through it until i found something that interested me, something i could relate to and that i would be able to draw inspiration from.





DIGGING UP THE PAST


Practitioners we looked at in reference for our performance:


Sarah Kane 



Sarah Kane was an English playright who lived from 1971 - 1999. Her plays deal with very little emphasis on charachter but a high focus on emotion such as trust, love, hate, fear. And after looking at the Rasa boxes and the Theatr Nowy production i decided to look back on some Kane as i felt the emotions that were delivered in her plays provided the right level of atmosphere that we needed to gain.

Richard Schechner

Richard  Schechner wrote a book called ‘The Future of Ritual’. In this Schechner looks into ritualistic behavior and how it relates to performance and politics which fists in nicely with my archive research on Theatr Nowy . He questions the meaning of culture in today's multicultural society. He uses archival research to make statements and to answer questions.

Graeme Miller - LinkedM1


In 1999 the M11 Link Road was completed. gong through east London and consequently destroying over four hundred. Miller decided to go and speak to the people who either lived or worked in this three mile demolition zone, he recorded some of the interviews and placed transmitters all along the M1 link road where the houses were destroyed  and holds walks where people go and pick a receiver from their local library and can go walk along the 4 mile stretch hearing the stories of the people or 'hidden voices'.







“I am an emotional plagiarist, stealing other people's pain, subsuming it into my own until I can't remember whose it is any more.” 
― Sarah Kane

Saturday, 4 May 2013

Masks

The 9th rasas ambigious nature promted the idea of wearing masks, black expressionless masks for the performance.

RASA BOXES



The Eight Rasas:

  • Śṛngāram (शृङ्गारं) Love, Attractiveness. Presiding deity: Vishnu. Color: light green.
  • Hāsyam (हास्यं) Laughter, Mirth, Comedy. Presiding deity: Pramata. Color: white.
  • Raudram (रौद्रं) Fury. Presiding deity: Rudra. Colour: red.
  • Kāruṇyam (कारुण्यं) Compassion, Tragedy. Presiding deity: Yama. Color: grey.
  • Bībhatsam (बीभत्सं) Disgust, Aversion. Presiding deity: Shiva. Color: blue
  • Bhayānakam (भयानकं) Horror, Terror. Presiding deity: Kala. Color: black
  • Vīram (वीरं) Heroic mood. Presiding deity: Indra. Color: yellowish
  • Adbhutam (अद्भुतं) Wonder, Amazement. Presiding deity: Brahma. Color: yellow

Rasa is an ancient indian art written during the period between 200 BC and 200 AD. The Rasa would have tried to cover all of the feelings within life. The object of the Rasa is to create emotions in the audience, to express a knowledge that can not be communicated through words.


THE 9TH RASA....


In our discovery of what the rasa boxes were we found that none of the rasas were really what were were looking for, we wanted to really stick with one rasa for the whole of our performance but these emotions were so specific that we knew it would effect our performance in a way that would not be favorable. 
It was then we came across  the 9th rasa 

Santa - Peace, bliss, a perfectly balanced combination of the other eight rasas

We wanted to present ambiguous characters in our performance, ones that didn't really have any emotion and after looking into this rasa we managed to get one step further in our planning.

Archive or Memory

''Theatre is by its nature an art of the present moment, and the theatre artist focus their energies on the present of the lived experience. Performance is unrepeatable and it is fascinating because it is unique and ephemeral...  Theatre is by its nature an art of the present moment, and the theatre artist focus their energies on the present of the lived experience. Performance is unrepeatable and it is fascinating because it is unique and ephemeral''

Gay McAuley, ‘The Video Documentation of
Theatrical Performance’, New Theatre Quarterly, X, No. 38
(1994), p. 183–94 (p. 184).

What McAuley is saying here is that every time you do a performance certain things will happen differently each time that are completely out of your control, for example is could be something as small as the temperature of the space being warmer or colder which wold give he audience (and the performer) a different experience, therefore theater is in the present moment being that it is in the now not in the future (you cannot plan it) or in the past (you cannot replicate it).


QUESTIONING THE ARCHIVE


Is evidence gathered from the archive actually 'evidence' at all? this is a big topic in the world of history and the question of how and where information is gathered and what were the sources is commonly asked.
We usually look at the collection of things kept in the archives of the world as 'facts' from the past kept to sow people how it was back then. 
But in may cases the archival evidence has been altered to meet the desires of the rulers of the time or controllers of the archive/evidence. For example, the bible and most of the holy books of the world have been rewritten many times to adjust for the socio-political zeitgeist of the time.

BREAKING IT DOWN

Here i have listed some of the definitions hat members from our group had wrote down for future reference and to help us with and that relate to our project.

What is?.......


  • Performance
Perfomance has been defined by many different practitioners and artists in a variety of subjective interpretations.
One interpretation that can generally hold its weight in many circumstances is that Performances is the act of presenting a piece of art in which the artist or his/her subjects carry out something that may or may not have been previously rehearsed, usually presenting it to an audience.
  • An Archive
An Archive is a collection of historical documents or records providing information about a place, institution, or group of people. An archive can contain evidence in a variety of different  formats these are further explained in the next section.
  • A Document
A document is an item from that past that stands as a record of proof for an act it can also be used in the verbial sense 'to document'. Documenting creates evidence so that memories from the past wil not be forgotten easily and can be referred to in the future if needed.
there are many different media used to document things such as: Letters, Photos and Videos and all subgenres that fit in between. 
  • Embodiment
Embodiment is a an idea that has  direct relation to a feeling, as if something were to become something else so that their perceivable self is no longer apparent ‘he was the embodiment of rage’.
  • Possession
Possession is when you have ownership over somethiing that grants you complete controll

UEL YEAR 2: PERFORMING THE ARCHIVE BLOG



Fom the Module Guide: ''Performing the Archive will explore representation and performance, investigating the use of archival research to document and inform performance practices using the Online Theatre Histories Archive (OTHA). OTHA will generate historical analysis to examine the affect of archiving upon performance practice and reception. The module includes a ‘mapping’ of theatre institutions in East London, conducting field visits to theatres featured in OTHA.''

''Questions to be addressed include: How can archival materials be used to deepen historical and cultural perspectives of theatre in East London? What materials have been archived? What materials have been left out? What narratives are being curated, and how will students create their own histories and performances based on archival study?''

WHAT IS PERFORMANCE?

Perfomance has been defined by many different practitioners and artists in a variety of subjective interpretations.
One interpretation that can generally hold its weight in many circumstances is that Performances is the act of presenting a piece of art in which the artist or his/her subjects carry out something that may or may not have been previously rehearsed, usually presenting it to an audience.

      WHAT IS AN ARCHIVE?


Before i went the the archive i thought that an archive was a sort of big library that was organised on the most anal of levels known to man. Where all that was stored was kept in an isolated vacum where dust and fingerprints dont exist, and i thought the doors to the archive would be made of some sort of aircraft grade steel with a tiny bulletproof glass window to one side where a guard sits inside drinking coffe and polishing his automatic weapon in the case that some 'Dillinger' type character may break in and muddy up the second draft of Winston Churchill birth certificate.

This was not the case 


The Archives Available to us were:

  • LIFT - Archive based at Goldsmiths university the online archive can be found at: http://www.liftfest.com/living-archive
  • The Women’s Art library - Also based at Goldsmiths university can be found at :http://www.gold.ac.uk/make/  The women’s arts library looks at feminism, women’s rights and the role of women though theatre.
  • Hackney empire Archives based the University of East London can be found online at: http://www.eltaproject.org/hackney.html



I entered the goldsmiths archives to find my colleges sitting around an old library table with some old looking folders in dusty boxes in the center  The assistant asked that i wear gloves similar to those worn my mickey mouse in order to protect the pages of the archive materials from getting smudged by my apparent dirty fingers, inside the folders were not just paper scripts but also recordings  photos, invoices and a whole plethora of other things that have and can be used to track time and events.

How Will We Make Use Of The Archive?

Having the archive available to us means we can find out about practitioners before us and see some evidence of the processes they went through to develop their art, this means that when studying work of the past we can manage to make it informative to the audience member and to ourselves.




ABSENCES, ABSENCES, ABSENCES.

WEEK 1

I missed my first lecture largely due to the fact that the university of east london is the most unorganised 'organisation' i've ever dealt with. Term started yesterday (which was this class's first lesson) and my timetable was not updated letting me know.


WEEK 2

Missed my second lesson, this time they fixed mt timetable but it sais my class is in ''Docklands - WB.201'', was the class in WB.201 when i got there???

No!

Was the class even in docklands????????

No!!!

But im sure the uni will find some way to pin this on me as being an irresponsible student....

Where the hell is everyone?

Called up the uni to find out what  is going on and apparently my class WAS in WB.201 i just couldn't see anyone because they had been rendered INVISIBLE.

WEEK  3

After speaking to uni last week and being assured my class was definitely in WB.201 i returned only to my surprise no one was there again. this time head down to the information center to find out who my course leader is and how to get their number, it takes the SED  about a half hour to get the number for Ananda who i call and she promptly directs me to goldsmiths university where my class is.