Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Introduction: Perhaps the Medium-Specificity of the Contemporary Performing Arts is Mutation?
- Theatre Between Performance and Installation: Three Contemporary Belgian Examples
- The Fourth Wall, or the Rift Between Citizen and Government: Another Attempt at a Conceptual Synthesis of Theatre and Politics
- Using Recorded Images for Political Purposes
- A Campsite for the Avant-Garde and a Church in Cyberspace: Christoph Schlingensief ’s Dialogue with Avant-Gardism
- Echoes from the Animist Past: Abattoir Fermé’s Dark Backward and Abysm of Time
- Folding Mutants or Crumbling Hybrids?: Of Looking Baroque in Contemporary Theatre and Performance
- Making UNMAKEABLELOVE: The Relocation of Theatre
- Witness Protection?: Surveillance Technologies in Theatrical Performance
- The Work of Art in the Age of Its Intermedial Reproduction: Rimini Protokoll’s Mnemopark
- Rimini Protokoll’s Theatricalization of Reality
- Digital Landscapes: The Meta-Picturesque Qualities of Kurt d’Haeseleer’s Audiovisual Sceneries
- The Productivity of the Prototype: On Julien Maire’s ‘Cinema of Contraptions’
- The Theatre of Recorded Sound and Film: Vacating Performance in Michael Curran’s Look What They Done To My Song
- Doubled Bodies and Live Loops: On Ragnar Kjartansson’s Mediatized Performances
- Between Solitaire and a Basketball Game: Dramaturgical Strategies in the Work of Antonia Baehr
- Index of Subjects
- Index of Names
Using Recorded Images for Political Purposes
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 03 February 2021
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Introduction: Perhaps the Medium-Specificity of the Contemporary Performing Arts is Mutation?
- Theatre Between Performance and Installation: Three Contemporary Belgian Examples
- The Fourth Wall, or the Rift Between Citizen and Government: Another Attempt at a Conceptual Synthesis of Theatre and Politics
- Using Recorded Images for Political Purposes
- A Campsite for the Avant-Garde and a Church in Cyberspace: Christoph Schlingensief ’s Dialogue with Avant-Gardism
- Echoes from the Animist Past: Abattoir Fermé’s Dark Backward and Abysm of Time
- Folding Mutants or Crumbling Hybrids?: Of Looking Baroque in Contemporary Theatre and Performance
- Making UNMAKEABLELOVE: The Relocation of Theatre
- Witness Protection?: Surveillance Technologies in Theatrical Performance
- The Work of Art in the Age of Its Intermedial Reproduction: Rimini Protokoll’s Mnemopark
- Rimini Protokoll’s Theatricalization of Reality
- Digital Landscapes: The Meta-Picturesque Qualities of Kurt d’Haeseleer’s Audiovisual Sceneries
- The Productivity of the Prototype: On Julien Maire’s ‘Cinema of Contraptions’
- The Theatre of Recorded Sound and Film: Vacating Performance in Michael Curran’s Look What They Done To My Song
- Doubled Bodies and Live Loops: On Ragnar Kjartansson’s Mediatized Performances
- Between Solitaire and a Basketball Game: Dramaturgical Strategies in the Work of Antonia Baehr
- Index of Subjects
- Index of Names
Summary
Today, more than ever before, the availability of recorded images and the interactive opportunities they provide have made it possible for theatre professionals to focus on form and aesthetic approach. Such artistic work with recorded images still essentially relies on the use of digital, video or film images on stage. Theatre stages are full of screens and offer countless visual experiences that may be fascinating or even aggravating. Among members of the artistic team, there are now a number of comparatively new functions such as ‘video artists’ or ‘image directors’.
This might lead us to the hasty conclusion that form takes pride of place, in some new updated version of art for art's sake. It should be recalled, though, that technical devices have always been used on stage. In the twentieth century, however, they acquired a higher degree of autonomy; they were freed from a purely functional dimension (such as lighting the actors) to achieve an artistic function of their own. They became free-standing elements of the language of theatre. In this development, recorded images powerfully contributed to the transgression of boundaries between the arts at the end of the twentieth century. This kind of transgression had actually already been experimented with by the avant-gardes in the 1920s and 1970s. No theoretical consideration on the use of media on stage can ignore the fact that as a living art, theatre is a hybrid that has always incorporated other arts and new techniques.
That said, technologies developed so fast during the twentieth century that their use on the stage resulted in the blurring of commonly recognized landmarks. When faced with performances where no actor is present, many spectators will wonder whether it is actually ‘theatre’ they are witnessing. With Stifters Dinge by Heiner Goebbels (2007) or Les Aveugles in Denis Marleau's version (2002) – to mention two examples that led to heated debate – it is difficult to determine which standards of reception should be used. Indeed, in both examples there is no actor on the stage. In Goebbels’ play, human presence is limited to that of technicians who at the start set up the device through which pianos will play on their own, shift on the stage and produce all sorts of visual and sound effects.
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- Chapter
- Information
- Bastard or Playmate?Adapting Theatre, Mutating Media and Contemporary Performing Arts, pp. 43 - 56Publisher: Amsterdam University PressPrint publication year: 2012