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BIM-BOM and the Afanasjew Family Circus
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 07 December 2021
Extract
A number of amateur student theatres that expressed a longing for something other than drabness and conformity in art and life arose quite spontaneously in Warsaw, Cracow, and other principal Polish cities toward the end of the Stalinist period in Poland (1950-1955). They developed chiefly as a reaction against the boredom and the constraint of the official professional theatre. Of all these theatres, the group that developed in Gdansk, Bim-Bom and its later off-shoot, the Afanasjew Family Circus, was unique in its emphasis on the visual, in its combination of images from painting and sculpture with traditional forms of entertainment. Bim-Bom was essentially a nonliterary theatre that sought its inspiration both in the fine arts and in the popular arts of circus, carnival, street fair, music hall, and film. Its prime aim was to amuse. Bim-Bom was popular avant-garde.
- Type
- Popular Entertainments and The Avant-Garde
- Information
- Copyright
- Copyright © 1974 The Drama Review
References
All quotes and photographs are from Jerzy Afanasjew's Sezon Kolorowych Chmur (Gdynia, 1968), and are courtesy of Wydawnictwo Morskie.
All Rights reserved. © 1974 Daniel Gerould.