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PHILHARMONICA. International Music Journal
Reference:
Petrov V.O. —
Performance Art: Genesis and Evolution
// PHILHARMONICA. International Music Journal.
– 2016. – ¹ 1.
– P. 17 - 28.
DOI: 10.7256/2453-613X.2016.1.40207 URL: https://aurora-journals.com/library_read_article.php?id=40207
Performance Art: Genesis and Evolution
Petrov Vladislav Olegovich
Doctor of Art History
Docent, department of Theory and History of Music, Astrakhan State Conservatory
414000, Russia, Astrakhan, Sovetskaya Street 23
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petrovagk@yandex.ru
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Other publications by this author |
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DOI: 10.7256/2453-613X.2016.1.40207
Review date:
Publish date:
11-04-2016
Abstract: This article is devoted to one of the most common phenomena in contemporary art – the actual performance of the work of art. The article deals with the issues of its origin. In this respect, it covers different forms of art of the past, such as syncretic ritual, medieval street theater, commedia dell'arte, and some synthesized works of the Renaissance and the Baroque period, and their modifications in the XXth – early XXIst century. Some common features in the well-known performance pieces of the past and the present are compared. The works by Tan Dun, L. Lipkis, K. Stockhausen, I. Xenakis, J. Cage and others are given as an example. Performance is considered as a single phenomenon of modern culture that reveals the main constant of postmodernism - a synthesis of the arts. In this connection, a method of holistic analysis is used in addition to the analytical method of presentation. The conclusions demonstrate the main genre features of performance, which appeared in the past eras (works by da Vinci, L. Bernini, etc.), and represent performance as a genre in the twentieth century.
Keywords:
music, ritual, theatricality, genre, art history, performance art, performance, synthesizing, postmodernism, Synthesis of arts
Performance is one of the leading forms of art expression in the XXth - XXIst centuries. Its attractiveness for composers, artists,
directors, writers, and representatives of other creative professions in the
specified time period can be explained by the specific nature of this
phenomenon. The fact is that performance involves the synthesis of the arts in
one particular work, and, as we know, the synthesis of the arts is the main
feature of postmodernism that embodies the modern society. As R. Goldberg stated,
‘Performance has been considered as a way of bringing to life the many formal
and conceptual ideas on which the making of art is based. Live gestures have constantly
been used as a weapon against the conventions of the established art.’ [1, 7] Indeed,
postmodernism by all its manifestations negates all art forms known up to the
middle of the twentieth century, while the synthesis of the arts contributes to
a more conceptual implementation of the author's ideas. The most appropriate
form of such a synthesis is, in a general sense, the– ‘art in action’ or ‘performance art’– a macro-notion, or a
macro-genre, the idea of which is a deliberate emphasizing of a certain concept
by any means.
In turn, the ‘art in action’ has two main types that are opposite in terms
of the characteristics of their implementation being associated with a degree
of freedom given to performers — a ‘happening’ based on the principle of randomness (the development
of a specific concept through improvised actions of both performers and all the
people present at the time of its implementation, for example the audience) [6,
28-35; 10, 212-215], and performance
itself based on the consistent pattern (the development of a specific concept
by performing all the actions prescribed by the author with no improvisation
and involvement of the audience in the process of implementation). Happenings
and performances – as art synthesis phenomena – can involve different artists,
including musicians, representatives of fine arts, dancers, actors, writers,
etc. Note that both a happening and a performance each has their own division
into subtypes. Of course, they are divided according to the degree of dominance
of one or another art form – thus, you can single out a musical happening /
performance, literary happening / performance, theater happening / performance,
etc. In addition, for example, a musical performance can also have a number of
subtypes - instrumental theater, choral theater, vocal and instrumental
theater, etc. (These varieties are often ignored, and all the
performance works are called ‘an instrumental theater’, though that is not the
right term. For example, A. Papenina makes a number
of mistakes, when calling the opera From Germany (1977) by M. Kagel performed by soloists, chorus and orchestra ‘an
instrumental theater’ (Papenina, A.N. Musical Avant-Garde of the Middle of the XXth Century and
Issues of Art Perception. - SPb.: Publishing House SPbGUP, 2008. P. 63). This view is shared by other
researchers as well. S. Sigida notes that an instrumental
theater is a ‘theatricalization of most vocal and
instrumental works’ (Sigida, S.Y. Musical Culture of
Europe. The Second Half of the Twentieth Century. Great Britain // The History
of Foreign Music. XX Century: Textbook / Ex. Ed. N.A. Gavrilova.
- M.: Music, 2005. P. 435). And in the book Signs of Sounds. About Modern
Musical Notation by Y. Dubinets, a genre of
instrumental theater includes a number of works expressing happening which, on
the one hand, matches the ideas of conceptualism and musical actionism and, on the other hand, does not embody a genre
of instrumental theater due to the ‘extended’ number of performers, as well as
some opera works. For example, the heptalogy Light by
K. Stockhausen (Dubinets, Y.A. Signs of Sounds. About
Modern Musical Notation. — Kiev: Gamayun, 1999. P.
107). In this regard, we can talk about a trend in the domestic musicology of
referring any work, in which instrumentalists are prescribed to perform on
stage (in their operas, Stockhausen and Kagel suggest
the movement of musicians on the stage), to the genre of instrumental theater
conceptualism and musical actionism and, on the other hand, does not embody a genre
of instrumental theater due to the ‘extended’ number of performers, as well as
some opera works. For example, the heptalogy Light by
K. Stockhausen (Dubinets, Y.A. Signs of Sounds. About
Modern Musical Notation. — Kiev: Gamayun, 1999. P.
107). In this regard, we can talk about a trend in the domestic musicology of
referring any work, in which instrumentalists are prescribed to perform on
stage (in their operas, Stockhausen and Kagel suggest
the movement of musicians on the stage), to the genre of instrumental theater..) Therefore, a happening and a performance (in a broader sense –art in
action/performance art as a whole) are complex and multifaceted phenomena that
have their own specific features, and a number of varieties.
Referring back to performance as the main subject of this article, it is
necessary to point out that despite its leading position only in the era of
postmodernism its formation lasted
throughout the whole period of the evolution of art. The origins of performance
can be found, of course, in a syncretic ritual, in the street theater of the
Middle Ages, as well as in some theatrical performances of the XVth –XVIIth centuries - the Italian Renaissance and the Baroque
Period.
Let us examine these origins in more detail:
Syncretic ritual existed
in primitive society, and combined different forms of human life. For example,
when casting spells and evoking spirits, an ancient shaman was dancing,
singing, playing a musical instrument, saying some texts, and wearing a special
kind of costume. ‘Syncretic ritual’, a ritual combining of different traditions
was also implemented in a number of performances in the twentieth century.
Here is an example of an instrumental performance (instrumental theater
[5, 40-45; 8, 9-14; 9, 123-127]) - Ghost
Opera (1995) by Tan Dun for the
Chinese lute and string quartet. The composer suggested that five artists should
make a spectacle, using five
instruments and voices, which, on the one hand, should resemble an opera, and
on the other hand - a ritual. In the context of instrumental music, these
genres turned out to be similar: when playing an opera and creating a ritual,
the instrumentalists needed to use the entire range of sound-reproducing means,
including their voices. Ghost Opera
embodies Tan Dun’s childhood feelings about shamanic rituals from the Chinese
culture. In his note to Ghost Opera,
Tan Dun said, “My whole village was crazy. We had a professional crying team
available for hire at funerals and deaths...a shamanistic choir to set the
mournful tone. In Hunan,
where I grew up, people believed they would be rewarded after death for their
sufferings. Death was the ‘white happiness’, and musical rituals launched the
spirit into the territory of the new life.” Tan Dun's idea is a reflection on the
spirituality of a human, whose positions in life can be destroyed by disasters
that terrify modern society. This idea is implemented through the sound of
music, the value of which is reduced within the shamanic ritual to a method of
communication between the people and the gods: as a rule, the sound of music
has no shape - it reflects ‘the progress’ of the rite. Thus, in addition to the
fact that the composer matches a lute and a string quartet, each
instrumentalist is endowed with his/her own musical material and behavior, due
to which a dramatic matching of a number
of musical and behavioral layers is achieved. This matching suggest, late in Act I (Bach,
Monks and Shakespeare Meet in Water) that begins with an instrumental
introduction – the ‘sound’ of water (the lute player pours water from one
vessel to another - the rhythm is highlighted in the score), against which a
Bach melody (from The Well-Tempered
Clavier, Book II, Prelude in C Sharp Minor) is played by the quartet. The
lute player who is associated with a shaman has his own musical material based
on the imitation of the background noise. In the context of the composition,
the Bach theme is a leading image
that symbolizes human spirituality. Later, in the same act, the composer uses
the melody of the Chinese folk song The Little
Cabbage that becomes a bearer of the light and good origin. The actions on
the stage are emphasized by the light range: first, the lamp aimed at the
performers is lighted, and vessels with water standing on the stage become
"iridescent" in the light. First played against the background of
dripping water, the Bach’s theme is then matched with various accords. Within a
few minutes, a voice is heard on the background of a solo violin – first, it is
the text of one of the ancient Chinese poems (Di Li Huang Ya
San liang), and then – a scream based on the phonemes
‘uya-uya-uya!’
and ‘ya-o-ya-o!’ (Note that such a phoneme is used in ritual dances of
success in Jordanian tribes )
In addition to the shamanic ritual, composers can reproduce other types
of the ritual by means of an instrumental ensemble: an autumn labor rite (Autumn
Music (1975) by K. Stockhausen for four performers), a pagan rite (Last Pagan
Rites (1978) by B. Kutavičius), a ritual seduction act (The Last Stone Idol from Easter Island
(2000) for violin written by V. Yekimovskiy), and a funeral procession (Echoes of Time and the River (1967) for
orchestra written by G. Crumb). In all these works, a key dramatic moment is
actions performed on the stage by the performers, whether it is a funeral
procession, as in the work by G. Crumb, or actions typical for autumn work, as
in the composition by Stockhausen.
Since the Middle Ages, street theater that was dominant
throughout Europe (commedia dell'arte
based on the carnival festivities - in Italy, mystery play - in France, Italy
and England, farce, improvised comedy and fairground performances - in France, and
buffoonery - in Russia) has had a repertoire of simple and topical sketches
played by the participants, often - by non-professional actors. Each of them
represented a particular character - Pantalone, Harlequin, Pierrot,
Columbine, Petrushka, etc. According to M. Bakhtin, the main forms of the street theater are ‘ritual
spectacles (carnival pageants, comic shows of the marketplace, etc.); comic
verbal compositions (including parodies)…; and various genres of billingsgate
(curses, oaths, popular blazons, etc.)’. [13, 241] Moreover, the functions of
an actor, narrator, singer and player of musical instruments were performed by
one person (both in solo performances of, for example, troubadours, and in
genres such as farce and mystery that were performed on stage and referred to
as an ‘ensemble’ depending on the number of performers involved). Movement,
plastics and other peculiarities of the street theater would become typical features
of performance in the twentieth century. That is why the marketplace theater
can be considered one of its prototypes (Note that theatricalization
is a prerequisite of any instrumental and performance process in the field of
folk music. A striking example is the abovementioned instrumental tunes which,
in addition to the playback of music, allow a number of additional means of
emotional expression – movements, dancing, etc. Since instrumental tunes are
often used in more global actions (for example, in the rites), this synthesis
is quite natural).
The theater characters can be
logically embodied in the instrumental theater, which is a form of musical
performance that combines playing an instrument and stage acting. Thus, the commedia dell'arte characters were
portrayed in the instrumental trilogy by the American composer L. Lipkis: in
1989, he wrote the Concerto for Cello & Orchestra Scaramouche, in 1997 -
Concerto for Bass Trombone & Orchestra Harlequin, and in 2002 - Concerto
for Bassoon & Orchestra Pierrot. In all
concerts, a soloist depicts the character, and the orchestra either complements
his characteristics or enters into conflict with him. Scaramouche and Pierrot are treated by the composer in a general sense. Thus, both in the Italian comedy and in the
work by Lipkis, Scaramouche is a coward and boaster -
no wonder he was called a ‘ghost knight’. In all seven parts of the concerto,
his musical material barely stands out from the overall atmosphere of the
orchestral sound. The most distinctive features of Scaramouche are pantomime and choreography: the cellist needs to
express the condition of the character by movements and postures that describe
the boastfulness and cowardice. Pierrot by Lipkis is a victim of his own feelings, and due to it the
musical material of the bassoonist is lyrical and tragic, which makes (as does
the appearance of the character, who is dressed in the famous white costume)
the audience feel pity. When playing, the bassoonist is instructed to strike compassionate
postures. In Scaramouche and Pierrot, solo
parts of the instrumentalists match
with the orchestra: all sounds make up a solid musical composition, which
indicates a non-conflict drama.
However, the question / answer system between the soloist and the orchestra
performing an accompanying function is a distinctive feature of the biggest
part of the Lipkis’ trilogy - Harlequin; there is clearly a conflict,
in which Harlequin is a convincing ‘debater’ in relation to the orchestra. And
the trombone player has a number of dramatic monologues. A characteristic
element of theatricality is movements of both the soloist and members of the
orchestra (this method is not used in Scaramouche
and Pierrot),
and the complications in the trombone part (leaps over more than two octaves in
the variable metrics and rhythmics) make the music ‘active’.
Unlike Scaramouche and Pierrot, Harlequin is portrayed
by Lipkis with various details: the trombonist interchanges
simple lyrical melodies and sharply atonal phrases separated with pauses that
are associated with the expressionist style in music. The expressionistic features
of Harlequin can be seen most clearly
in the cadence.
A more detailed description of one of the brightest characters of
Italian commedia dell'arte Harlequin is given in the through-composed one-man
show Harlequin
(1975) – a 15-minute ‘instrumental choreography’ written for K. Stockhausen’s clarinetist and dancer
S. Stevens. In addition to the thematic material, the performer’s task includes
stage acting, including various types of movements, plastic sketches, etc. The
score is a musical formula that has pitch and rhythm. The variability of the
formula is random. The only condition -is that it has to change constantly, and
these changes must reflect the events taking place on the stage. The story written by Stockhausen (commedia dell'arte has always been a
theatrical improvisation based on a specific scenario) has several defined
sections as follows: in the beginning, Harlequin is an enchanted dreamer. The clarinetist has to suddenly run out from the
backstage and start dancing actively tapping a rhythm with his legs, which
brings an additional sound context into the composition - the basic melodic
formula and its development are played on the background of certain rhythms. Next, Harlequin is a playful
improviser. He varies the melodic formula with the desire for a slower pace
and clear pronunciation of individual sounds. He can leave the
stage, play behind the scenes or perform acrobatic stunts - anything that
corresponds to the concept of ‘improvisation’. In this section, the sounding
material is structurally the most detached from the formula given at the
beginning. The performer can show all his skills in playing the instrument. Then Harlequin goes to sleep (the performer lies down on the stage) and
in his dream he sees himself as a lyrical
hero, who stares into the void and plays the same melody twice gradually
kneeling on his left knee, and as an uncompromising and strict pedantic teacher. In the dream, he charms
everyone with his melody, turning the ugliness of the world into the inner beauty. He dreams of music. When Harlequin wakes
up and rises, he shows to the world the music he heard in his dream. He
tries to play it as vividly as possible, but he stumbles, stops, becomes
agitated, and then begins to play again sending the sounds into the space. It all ends with a Harlequin’s frenzied
dance (a special sole is used that allows hearing the noise of feet hitting
the floor at a large distance). In other words, during the play, Harlequin is turning
from a dreamer into a person who forms part of the universal space mind. All other actions made by the performer during the stage implementation
of Stockhausen’s opus are random, and in this regard the score can be likened
to a scenario of the commedia dell'arte
that existed many centuries before. Such a scenario provided only a structure –
a sequence of events taking place in the play. This rough
script that contributed to the actor’s improvisation was attached to the back
of the wings so that actors could see the scene to be played next and make up
their own text. Note that at the end of this one-man show Harlequin
has to fall on his knees before the public. Only at this point the basic melody
of the composition that gradually crystallizes during the show has to be played
in its ‘final’ solid form, rather
than in phrases as during the stage implementation of the composition through
the actions of the character – movements, acting, choreography, etc. In Harlequin by Stockhausen, the motor
expression of emotions matches the music. The score also has a number of
comments on how you need to play the material – ‘Hold the sound like a bird
cries’, ‘When playing, quickly turn your head from side to side to create a feeling
of rough tremolo’, etc. Stockhausen’s Harlequin is a collective image, because
this character has received different interpretations in the commedia dell’arte:
he can be a silly servant who always argues with Pantalone, or a passionate
dreamer who attracts the sympathy of the audience. In the note, the
composer revealed not only the stage dramaturgy (e.g. ‘lies down on the set’, ‘stands
up’, etc.) and the special conditions of the performance (variations of the
formula), but also the images for the conversion of the formula. (For example, it
is specified that Harlequin is a charming dreamer, a playful improviser, or
lyrical hero: this emotional state should be expressed both by the actions of
the performer and the music.) Theatrical coloring is introduced by the colorful
costume (for the first shows, the costume of S. Stevens was designed by
Stockhausen himself) and bright makeup that personify the image.
The Italian Renaissance and Baroque is another storehouse of prototypes of modern performance. A striking
example is Paradise (1490) - a theatrical play written by the famous
artist Leonardo da Vinci who created
the plot and designed the scenery, costumes, lighting and color effects, and
musical material. The drama action of Paradise was devoted to the Duchess of Milan Isabella of Aragon and
was staged before her on January 13, 1490 right in the green room of the Castle
of Milan fit out specifically for this presentation: da Vinci paintings were
hung among the tapestry, and paintings by other artists depicting heroic deeds
of the Duke Francesco Sforza, the husband of Isabella of Aragon, were put on
the ceiling together with garlands decorated by artificial vegetables, fruits
and flowers (the material symbols of Paradise). According to
witnesses [18], the most impressive was the Paradise itself - a separate stage
designed by da Vinci, which included a high podium with lit torches simulating
the stars and court actors dressed in ‘costumes’ of different planets that
moved in a circle, symbolizing the cycle of life in the nature. In general, the
imaginative concepts were the very image of Isabella. (The text of the play tells the story of her
life, and describes her beauty, and all the characters - Apollo, Jupiter, and
Mercury - leave the(delete) Paradise to enjoy her beauty), the image of the
Universe (da Vinci’s passion for astrology and astronomy is well-known), and
the image of Religion (Paradise, heavens with Gods, etc.). As you can see, da
Vinci was a versatile artist who combined different kinds of creative activity.
In many cases, the authors for performance art of the twentieth century
are very versatile artists as well. For example, when composing the
instrumental performance Eonta
(1964) for piano and brass instruments, its author - I. Xenakis - was both a composer and
director of events taking place on the stage: he designed a dramaturgical plan
of movements for instrumentalists, as well as the light and color palette. The Xenakis’ idea is associated with determining the place of a
unique personality in society and approving the prevalence of society (the
brass) over personality (piano). The theatrical process which, according to the
composer, includes ‘stochastic’ (based on the theory of probability) and ‘symbolic’
(based on logistics) music is described in the score as in any performance. The first page of the score shows a disposition of the instruments on
the stage. (Black dots are places where
the brass musicians have to stop when moving). The composition has only one
part, but it can be divided into three sections according to the stage drama. Each section
ends with the movement of the brass musicians in complete silence. In Section I, the piano stands separately
in the left side of the room, and all brass musicians sit on chairs in the
middle of the stage. The music is expressive; the most distinctive is a
sophisticated piano part that starts the composition. After the piano solo, the
brass musicians rise from their seats, and the actual performance and the story
begin. All brass instruments offer a contrast to the piano:
when the piano sounds aggressive, the brass instruments play slowly and calmly
recreating a cantilena.
Gradually - at the first climax – the brass musicians
come close to the piano (with no fallboard) and become its body in relation to
the audience. The piano player ‘defends’ himself against them by loud rhythmic
ostinato. The brass instruments suppress the piano due to their
dynamic advantage by playing staccato tremolo. The pianist stops playing
admitting his ‘defeat’ in the acoustic ‘battle’. Then the brass musicians line up in
silence, walk across the stage and sit on chairs in the right side. When Section II begins, the
entire musical material is ‘swapped’: the piano ‘smoothes’ the aggression and
plays peaceful and quiet sounds in the upper registers (‘pulsing chords’,
according to Xenakis), while the brass musicians play
in a rough and dissonant manner. This is escalation of the conflict and its climax.
Gradually, the chaos and aggression are shown by all performers; at the same
time, there is a high possibility of the dialogue – interchange of phrases
between the instruments (the conflict ‘on equal terms’). In this process, the brass musicians again stand up and surround the
piano, while continuing to play their material from the score. Then - at the second climax – they target it at the piano and actively
play their material ‘into the piano’, suppressing its volume, although it is
that time when the pianist plays difficult passages within the limit dynamics,
which at the end ‘falls’ into the silence. In this silence,
the brass ensemble withdraws (at a slack pace - the performers walk strictly
one after another) from the piano, and the musicians sit on the chairs that
were put earlier in the middle of the stage. Section III of Eonta
is a resolution to the conflict: it shows not only the musical chaos, but also the
chaos in actions, i.e. on the stage. The brass ensemble ceases to be an ensemble - each of
the instrumentalists begins to move in any direction. This part of
Section III may be called the prevailing ‘cadence’ of the brass ensemble as the
piano takes no part in it. After taking different positions across the stage, the
brass musicians gather in a group and sit down on the chairs in the right-hand
side of the stage. The composition ends dramatically: the piano and the
brass ensemble again start the fight forming the third climax which, just as
the previous ones, dies when the piano stops to play. The most silent
accord extended by trumpets and trombones allows us to consider the brass
musicians winners in the conflict. Consequently, at the level of the storyline,
Eonta has
three stages, each of which performs a specific function in the dramaturgical
process – starting point, culmination of the conflict and its resolution. The piano here is a character that actively fights the crowd represented
by the brass ensemble. But any attempt to become a full member of this crowd
suffers a defeat - a sudden termination of playing and silence. This technique
is dictated not only in terms of acting: six brass instruments can really
suppress the sound of the solo piano in terms of acoustics. It is this factor that
played a major role in the choice of instruments when Xenakis
was writing Eonta.
Note that the Baroque era forms a new type of pastime for socialites:
the so-called ‘secular clubs’, in
which the participants used to stage some dramatic performances and plays. For
example, such a club existed in the house of the Duke Alfonso II (1533-1597): every Thursday, very important people gathered
at his house to dance, sing songs and read poetry that had common subject or
plot. To emphasize the individuality of each meeting, they
chose special settings and sewed unique costumes. In the twentieth
century, absolutely any place could become a platform for performance:
futurists headed by F. Marinetti considered the theatrical stage as an ideal
platform (Manifest of Lust (1913) by
V. de Saint-Point was staged at the Comedy Theater of the Champs Elysees). Another
performance platforms were clubs (Scene
with Table (1974) by M. Haimovic was performed at
the London’s club The Garage), art galleries
(Magnolia (1976) by S. Russell was
featured at the New York gallery Artist
Space), educational institutions (Time
to Move (1994) by M. Chaydri was performed at the
London's Institute of Contemporary Art), roofs of old buildings (Delay Delay (1972) by J. Jonas was presented
on the roof of an old five-story building), park areas (The Base of the World (1961) by P. Manzoni was performed in a park
on the outskirts of the Danish city of Herning), and stores
and shopping centers (The Store
(1962) by C. Oldenburg was shown at the East Street Mall in Dallas). It becomes obvious that the place for performance was not so important;
the most significant was the form of presentation, idea, and concept.
One of the main representatives of baroque performance was a famous
Italian architect, sculptor and painter G.L.
Bernini (1598-1680), who built his own theater and wrote scripts for comedy
plays in the 1630s (Note that Bernini’s passion for performances was not
spontaneous. At the beginning of the 1630s, he was an organizer of the Roman
Carnivals and had an experience in the production of bright and cheerful shows). The actors were Bernini’s brother Luigi, the artist
G. Abbatini, and students of the school of fine arts.
The plays were characterized by abundant scenery, bright costumes, additional
visual imagery (e.g., paintings), architectural structures, specifically
designed items, and literary and musical works. For his plays,
Bernini created a special machine that could quickly change the scenery,
lighting, and the stage as a whole. [17] Comedies were staged in a confined
space and suggested that only a small number of spectators was present in the
room, thus achieving a certain sacredness of all that happened on the stage. As
a rule, the plots chosen were either absurdist situations or real events that
were relevant to that time, and served as a ‘replica’ of modern life. These
kinds of plots also characterize ‘performance’ in the twentieth century as a
whole.
An example of an absurdist
situation is Bernini’s stage performance Two Theaters (1637) that
involved the following events: the people who came to see the show found
themselves in the situation as if they were in front of the mirror – the actors
in black costumes and masks were sitting on the stage in the same manner as the
audience. The purpose of the performance was to show the emotions
of the audience from the outside: the actors responded to the emotions and
movements of the spectators by copying them. At the same time, the actors were
reading different texts: one actor explained the purpose of the performance in
the Prologue and another one addressed directly to the audience, saying that
there were several types of audience and several alternative perceptions of
events taking place on the stage. The spectators who came to see the performance behaved
in different ways: someone loudly applauded and someone got up and left the
room, full of indignation (and the actors on the stage were doing the same
things!). Is this not reminiscent, to some extent, of a canonical
musical performance of the mid-twentieth century - the composition 4'33" (1952) by J. Cage? In the Bernini’s
show, the spectators, who expected to see a bright stage performance but did
not get it, created the events taking place on the stage, i.e. acting on the
stage began when the audience started to perform some actions. In the Cage’s
show, the spectators, who expected to listen to the music but did not get it,
created a sound of the show on their own by making noise, getting off their
seats, expressing their dissatisfaction, slamming the doors, and stamping their
feet, i.e. the ‘music’ appeared when the audience started to perform some
actions (note that, according to Cage, any noise is music of the world around). Noise has always accompanied performances: as late as in 1914 F. Marinetti in his Manifesto on the
Dynamic and Synoptic Declamation noted that it was necessary to create a new
declaiming technique in order to ‘liberate intellectual circles from the old
static, pacifist and nostalgic declamation.’ A new dynamic
and warlike declamation was desired for these ends. Marinetti proclaimed for
himself the ‘indisputable world primacy as a declaimer of free verse and
words-in-freedom’... The Futurist declaimer, he insisted, should declaim as
mush with his legs as with his arms. The declaimer’s hands should, in addition,
wield different noise-making instruments.’ [16, 22; 14, 288; 15, 333; 16, 256;
19] This idea was implemented in performances of Pedigrotta (1914) by Marinetti
and of The Printing Press (1914) by G.
Balla. (It was
staged for S. Diaghilev, and therefore largely related to the art of
choreography: 12 people imitated various parts of mechanical machines.) And the
manifesto The Art of Noises (1913) by
L. Russolo developed a point of view among performance
artists that anything can become a source of sounds and, in the first place,
all sorts of items, machines and devices.
The ‘mirror communication’ between the audience and the actors – as
compared with Two Theaters by Bernini
- takes place in the theater performance The
Madness (1920) by M. Dessi. Its idea is as follows: an unsuspecting audience
fills the room, sits down on the seats and begins to watch the events taking
place on the stage. After that a man comes out on the stage and for a long
period of time shows the signs of his madness (circling, snarling, uttering
only one word – ‘madness’) to the audience in order to ‘infect’ the spectators
with his madness. At the premiere performance, the actor managed to
immerse part of the audience into a magical state, in which they also started
to perform the above actions and shout the word ‘madness’. Thus, the spectators
began to do the same things as the actor – another implementation of the idea
of two theaters.
In addition, the prolonged effect of the Bernini’s show can be noticed
in the twentieth century in the performances, where the stage space is ‘stratified’ into a series of distinct
spaces or implies the presence of actors
in the audience. ‘Stratification’ of the stage into two separate areas
marks the theatrical performance Simultaneity
(1915) by F. Marinetti, which shows the relationship between two families (the
parallel drama technique is used), while stratification into three areas
characterizes the performance Communicating
Vessels (1916) by Marinetti again. In both cases, the actions taking place in one of the
spaces did not accumulate only in one area of the stage - performers could move
and, depending on the plot twists, go from one space to another. The presence of actors in the audience is a frequent phenomenon in the
musical performances of the twentieth century. We will note only
a typical example - the play Terretektorh (1966) for 88 performers by I. Xenakis.
The score is preceded by a diagram, which shows that the conductor is placed in
the center of the circular space, while the location of instrumentalists and
the audience is shown in bold and small dots respectively. Xenakis had been testing his ideas for a long time until he found a unique, in
his view, location for the visualization of the stage space and for a specific
tonal halo. Y. Nazaikinskiy notes, “In Terretektorh,
each of the musicians received additional percussion instruments and whistles
to create a vortexual rotation of noises of
dramatically different nature - a sort of a ‘sonotron’,
as defined by Xenakis by analogy with synchrophasotron.” [3, 452] In addition, Xenakis suggested that Terretektorh should be performed in
ballrooms free of any objects to avoid malformation of the specific acoustic
flow that could have been distorted in conventional ballrooms.
Referring back to the Baroque art, note that the play The
Inundation of the Tiber (1638) that showed on the stage the flooding that
occurred in Italy
a year before can be an example of realism in the Bernini’s performances. The
performance content was achieved by an unusual atmosphere of the action – water
was continuously flowing down the walls of the stage and the audience was in
constant anticipation of the approaching waves due to the specially created background
sound. In addition, a certain visual segment of the Tiber
was recreated on the stage: in the center there was the river and in the
perspective (scenery and illustrations) the audience could see the castles of
St. Angelo and St. Peter.
At the premiere performance, some viewers, who
erroneously thought that the events on the stage were real, left the room in a
hurry shouting, “It’s a flood again!” Certain special effects that, to a large
extent, allowed the spectators to become participants in the events taking
place on the stage were also present in other Bernini’s shows. For example, the play Justice showed
in the same year had a real fire on the sage, which also freaked out the
spectators, especially ones sitting in the front row. Similar methods of affecting
the audience can also be seen in a number of performances of the twentieth
century.
In the specified time period, there are also performances that
completely replace live acting by a set of technical means regarded spectacular
from the theatrical point of view. Thus, the stage implementation of Futurist Mechanical Ball (1922) by I. Pannaggi
included the sound of music and mobile scenery with mechanical figures imitating
real people.
In general, the XVII century is marked by a lot of plays and shows that
can rightly be called the prototypes of performance. Primarily, this is due to
the full prerogative of secularity over religion in the specified time period
(as well in the history of art). These works include the masked comedy The Masque of Blackness (1605) by B.
Johnson with music by A. Ferrabosco and costumes by I.
Johnson, Oberon (1611) by B. Johnson
again with music by A. Ferrabosco and R. Johnson, and
D. Shirley’s fantasy show of several acts The
Triumph of Peace (1634) directed by I. Johnson with music by W. Lewis, C.
Ives and B. Whitelock.
Thus, we need to single out the main genre features of performance that
emerged in these works and characterize performance as a genre in the twentieth
century:
— Movable stage allowing a quick change of the stage plans (The Masque of Blackness) or a number of
nearby podiums (Paradise
by da Vinci);
— Collective (The Masque of
Blackness, The Triumph of Peace) or
‘monopolistic’ (Paradise by da Vinci)
creation of the show;
— Clearly defined plan of action (in all performances) that must be
respected;
— Empowering instrumentalists with features of actors (The Triumph of Peace involved a group of
lute players dressed in the costumes of priests and moving across the stage -
an early prototype of a special form of performance in the twentieth century -
instrumental theater);
— Use of realistic elements in the show (live horses in The Triumph of Peace);
— Special spectacularity of stage actions (The Masque of Blackness used a technique of imitating a sea wave by
blowing up blue fabric on the podium);
— Synthesis of the arts within a single work (in Oberon, the stage scenery included specially designed canvas,
architecture structures standing on each side of the room and creating the
participation effect for the audience, choreography for additional
interpretation of the text, etc.).
The value of performance in the art of the twentieth century is
emphasized by R. Goldberg: ‘…a radical stance has made performance a catalyst
in the history of twentieth-century art; whenever a certain school, be it
Cubism, Minimalism or conceptual art, seemed to have reached an impasse,
artists have turned to performance as a way of breaking down categories and
indicating new directions.’ [1, 320] While agreeing with the opinion of the investigator,
it also should be noted that all performances, one way or another, according to
the form of their implementation, are based on intentional or unintentional epatage that became a prerogative of the huge number of
works of art in the twentieth century. [7, 623-632] What will remain in the
history of art, and what will be just a local phenomenon - time will tell!
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