Dilating time for found spaces

This presentation chronicles the preparation, execution, recording, and post-event analysis of installations that undergraduate students of the course “Analysis of Practice: Theatre Workshop II” (Bachelor in Theater, Federal University of Minas Gerais, Brazil) performed in public spaces in Belo Hori...

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Main Author: Marina Marcondes Machado
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Accademia University Press 2013-12-01
Series:Mimesis Journal
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journals.openedition.org/mimesis/449
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spelling doaj-d8f38cffceb8450f9b0ac2475b18635a2020-11-24T23:11:37ZengAccademia University PressMimesis Journal2279-72032013-12-012220721510.4000/mimesis.449Dilating time for found spacesMarina Marcondes MachadoThis presentation chronicles the preparation, execution, recording, and post-event analysis of installations that undergraduate students of the course “Analysis of Practice: Theatre Workshop II” (Bachelor in Theater, Federal University of Minas Gerais, Brazil) performed in public spaces in Belo Horizonte, where the students urged passersby to get involved in the happenings, the aim of which was to reveal latent theatricalities in spaces found initially by the trainees, and then by site users. We named these installations “dramaturgies of space”, attuned to trends of contemporary theater research that melds performing arts and visual arts. To be fully comprehended and enjoyed, these installations require a dilated sense of time, with the absence of time-keeping and of how-to sets of instructions. It is an experiment in the radical emancipation of the spectator, as proposed by Rancière. Our objectives included: enabling college-level theater majors to engender their poiesis through understanding the wealth contained in the dramaturgy of space, and to return their creations to their viewers; developing in students their ability to observe the use made by “the other” of the space that they (the students) created, while refraining from manipulating the contemplative processes of the viewers, the action processes of the players, or the understanding processes of “those who do not understand”; providing users of a city park (with special emphasis on children’s perspectives) an experience of the theatric potentialities of space free from the habits and demands of school, as well the standardized classroom clock.http://journals.openedition.org/mimesis/449contemporary theaterdramaturgy of spaceemancipation of the spectatorpotential spaceinstallationwork in process
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Marina Marcondes Machado
spellingShingle Marina Marcondes Machado
Dilating time for found spaces
Mimesis Journal
contemporary theater
dramaturgy of space
emancipation of the spectator
potential space
installation
work in process
author_facet Marina Marcondes Machado
author_sort Marina Marcondes Machado
title Dilating time for found spaces
title_short Dilating time for found spaces
title_full Dilating time for found spaces
title_fullStr Dilating time for found spaces
title_full_unstemmed Dilating time for found spaces
title_sort dilating time for found spaces
publisher Accademia University Press
series Mimesis Journal
issn 2279-7203
publishDate 2013-12-01
description This presentation chronicles the preparation, execution, recording, and post-event analysis of installations that undergraduate students of the course “Analysis of Practice: Theatre Workshop II” (Bachelor in Theater, Federal University of Minas Gerais, Brazil) performed in public spaces in Belo Horizonte, where the students urged passersby to get involved in the happenings, the aim of which was to reveal latent theatricalities in spaces found initially by the trainees, and then by site users. We named these installations “dramaturgies of space”, attuned to trends of contemporary theater research that melds performing arts and visual arts. To be fully comprehended and enjoyed, these installations require a dilated sense of time, with the absence of time-keeping and of how-to sets of instructions. It is an experiment in the radical emancipation of the spectator, as proposed by Rancière. Our objectives included: enabling college-level theater majors to engender their poiesis through understanding the wealth contained in the dramaturgy of space, and to return their creations to their viewers; developing in students their ability to observe the use made by “the other” of the space that they (the students) created, while refraining from manipulating the contemplative processes of the viewers, the action processes of the players, or the understanding processes of “those who do not understand”; providing users of a city park (with special emphasis on children’s perspectives) an experience of the theatric potentialities of space free from the habits and demands of school, as well the standardized classroom clock.
topic contemporary theater
dramaturgy of space
emancipation of the spectator
potential space
installation
work in process
url http://journals.openedition.org/mimesis/449
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