web analytics

Countdown to Festivals: Chestnut Christmas Tree

Many pleasant and unpleasant things are happening at the turn of 2008/2009. Unpleasant – credit crunch and recession are on. Pleasant (for me) – there was some snow in England. Last but not least, there is Christmas and New Year shopping, as well as markets and fairs with mulled wine, gingerbreads, and pretzels.

In my first year of blogging, 2006 that is, when I blogged practically every day in December, I created a 2006 Xmas label. I skipped 2007, but this year I thought I’d bring it back, and you may already have noticed it. We have 10 days till December 25 and half a month till January 1, and in these days I’ll be posting pictures and maybe short poems or texts on the festive subjects. I’ll be posting other articles, too, but 2008 Xmas label should be your destination if you are hoping to instill yourself with the Christmas spirit – and maybe even with ideas.

What I’d also like to happen, is to create the content of this label with your help. Wherever you are or going to be for Christmas and New Year, you can send me a picture from that place, and it will appear on the blog. It may be a photo of a New Year Tree in your locality, or the decorations you are preparing, the desserts you are cooking, etc. If there is a special custom you like observing for Christmas and New Year and don’t mind sharing it with us, you can send that, too. Understandably, the hard times we are surviving this year due to crisis and probably a host of other things may well be putting some of us off any kind of celebrations. As I’m caught up in this myself, my view is that we construct our own reality, and therefore, although there is no obligation to celebrate this particular Xmas or New Year, it would be too hard on ourselves not to try and be happy or at least joyful. Thus, let’s build the joy with our own hands.

First off, is this fantastic idea for a Christmas tree from Tatiana Afonina from Russia, whose Easter creations you could see earlier this year. Finally, chestnuts are of more use that just to be eaten: you can glue them together, creating a conic shape, and then you paint them gold. If you don’t care about having a dazzling Chestmas tree, then you can opt for a less glamorous but sweeter version – in the proper sense of the word: instead of glue you can use caramel, and in this case you will be able to ‘recycle’ the tree with no damage to Nature or your conscience, simply by eating it. Whatever you choose to do, remember that these days are all about protecting the environment. If this is something that concerns you, then definitely follow in to Tatiana’s footsteps, and your Christmas could hardly be greener.

 

The Throw: The Crown for My 16 Years of Knitting


The Throw on My Couch, originally uploaded by loscuadernosdejulia.

As you know, this summer I fractured a bone in the ankle; I changed three casts and had my fair share of jumping on one leg or using crutches; I lost the job; before that, in May I moved to a flat; and, to help myself get by at this hard time and also to make my current abode cosier and warmer, I decided I’d make a throw on the couch.

I started knitting it very shortly before I had that fatal fall on my way to work, and in August during the Flickr 888 you could see the beginnings of the throw. I suppose I was in a kind of after-shock state following the fracture, as I didn’t quite realise what I was getting myself into.

I knitted regularly, though not every day. I was making the throw with acrylic yarn of five different colours: two shades of green (dark and light), terracotta, mocca, and creamy white. What you see in the photo is true: the stripes’ width alternates, but each of the stripes is about 2m in length. By November I had all the stripes I needed, and then – only then – did I realise that my biggest challenge had now arrived.

I had to stitch the stripes together, and given that they were multicoloured and long, it’d take me 1,5 hrs to sew two stripes. Having sewn them all together, I took the crochet in my hands and added three rows of each colour along the perimeter. The last task was to hide all the little threads on the inside of the throw. Again, I didn’t work on this every single day, but even so it’d taken me a month to complete all the stitching-crocheting-hiding. The throw on which I now proudly sit or repose measures 3m 03cm by 2m 20cm. A good acquaintance of mine who saw it recently has told me that the work, which I could complete in 3 months, had I not been doing anything else, would cost £3,000, if sold.

Naturally, I’m not going to sell it, but it was an interesting estimation, considering that practically all the knitwear I have is made with my own hands: I must be owning a fortune!

Anyway, I also made a few pillows, with each side being of a different colour and stitched together with the crochet on the outside. And luckily, I happened to make two extra stripes, which I stitched together with the crochet, creating a cover for my black suitcase that I have to keep in the room.

As you’re reading all this, you may be wondering as to why I’d actually make this throw, rather than buy one? You see, on the one hand, I do love knitting and crocheting, this is perhaps the only hobby that has so far not become a professional activity. At the same time, this hobby has always had a therapeutical connection for me: I’d taken it up back in 1992 when my grandmother was gravely ill, and this year I was apparently in the same need of therapy, given all the happenings. On the other hand, however, this year has been the first in my entire life when I lived in the flat that may be called my own, even though I don’t actually own it. I wanted to make it mine, but the good thing is that whichever flat I move in to subsequently, it will be mine thanks to the throw.

On top of that, I had to produce something that could crown my 16 years of knitting and crocheting experience. I think this throw is definitely fitting.

The Act of Smoking, and A YouTube Trouble

A rather unpleasant update as per 13 Dec 2008:

I have just found out that the English version of the video which was in this post has been taken down on YouTube for “the violation of Community Guidelines”. Here is the screen grab with the message:


Interestingly, clicking on any of the hyperlinks takes me to precisely the same page telling me about the violation of guidelines. I am expected to acknowledge it, but I cannot acknowledge something when I don’t know what it is. It never occurred to me to save YouTube Community Guidelines to a file, and when I google “youtube community guidelines” and click on the relevant link, I once again see the violation message. I am happy to acknowledge my fault, if there is any indeed, but I need to understand exactly what I did wrong. Unfortunately, YouTube sends me the message about guidelines’ violation, but it doesn’t offer me an option to communicate with them, to find out what was wrong. The video in question is my original work, it is my poem translated into English by myself. The video does use other artists’ images (who are all credited), to illustrate the idea, but over two years ago I quoted an extract from Adrian Darmon’s interview with Andy Warhol, in which the subject of plagiarism was briefly discussed:

AD: Where do you find yourself vis-a-vis Picasso?
AW: He’s dead, and I’m in his place. On the artistic level, I think I’ll be a milestone.
AD: Do you take yourself seriously?
AW: I’m doing things seriously, with aesthetic taste.
AD: And without plagiarism?
AW: I don’t understand the meaning of your question. In any case, the artists are inspired by the works of others.

To sum it up, another quote, taken from Slavoj Zizek’s book; this is what Fidel Castro said to Nikita Khrushchev during the Cuban crisis: “You may be able to convince me that I am wrong, but you can’t tell me what I am wrong without convincing me”. For your reference, here is the English file uploaded to Google Videos:

//www.youtube.com/get_player

22 Nov 2008

Yesterday René Magritte, the Belgian surrealist painter, turned 110. I’ll start by giving the links to a few of Magritte places online: René Magritte Museum and Magritte Foundation.

I cannot say I ever took serious interest in pin-up art, but back in 2003/2004 I had a CD with the songs from 1950-60s, and some of the pin-up images were used on the cover illustration. The day before I went to London for the first time ever – and incidentally, on the April Fool’s Day, 1 April 2004 – I suddenly envisaged a vivid similarity between Magritte’s pipe and one of those pin-up girls. And really, you cannot say they are totally dissimilar, when you look at them this way (see the images on the left and right; the image on the right is by Greg Hildebrandt).

The Russian poem was written instantly, but it was only this year that I began to think seriously of adding a video montage to it, to illustrate the whole idea. Surprisingly or not, it took Magritte to celebrate his 110th birthday upstairs for me to finally create what was rather difficult at first. I hope you enjoy the English result below.

The Act of Smoking

…………………………………..Ceci n’est pas une pipe
……………………………………………….René Magritte

That what you see is not a pipe.
Imagine: two tender feet
Enter your mouth in a slow movement,
And you breathe in a tangy aroma of sex,
Watching in front of you a beautiful head
Trembling in the fumes of passion.
And, giving in fully to love,
You mentally move your finger
From feet along the legs
Reaching to the cherished curve
Full of the finest tobacco,
Which is what you adore –
Bosom or ass –
And finally, deciding to surrender to lust,
You tightly squeeze the bosom (or ass?),
Drawing in as deeply as you can stand, –
As you can afford,
As you can –
The scent of the Belle Dame,
Of a whore, or a choir girl, or a student,
Of a music-hall dancer,
Of Justine, Mary or Greta,
And let the smoke out through your nostrils,
Relishing how the taste
Sinks deep into your stomach,
And then, taking a woman out of your mouth,
You gently slap her at the front or on the back,
Shaking off the remains of love into an ash tray
And putting the body away into a slip –
Till next time.

© Julia Shuvalova 2004
English translation © Julia Shuvalova 2008.

Slava Polunin: The Monologue of a Clown – 9: Joy

Joy 

People often ask me, why in the final of my Snowshow when people in the audience play with gigantic balloons of all colours, I sit among them, not even taking off my make-up. But I find it very clear. I am enjoying the process. For why did I do all this? I have modeled a situation and am watching now how it works without me being in the midst of it.

I am fond of my performances until I understand them completely. I like when every single person, upon leaving the theatre, tells a different story. Basically, we’re only agents provocateurs. Our main purpose is to make a spectator create his own world, while a performance is just a pretext to it. When you’re contemplating the performance, it’s impossible to predict for how long it’s going to live. All depends on how long its idea will live in me. Once you’ve had an awkward feeling that you do not express yourself in this performance, and this feeling may arrive in five years after the first performance, or in fifteen. For example, once I had a performance ‘Insects’. It was great, but its energy was so bad, that I’ve closed it in half-a-year. People left the theatre, depressed, and I was scared.

In the mean time, the Snowshow has such a scheme that it survives in any audience, even when it’s insensitive, or even if I do not play. The audience is conquered if not by the play’s tenderness, or by the very spirit, then by its structure. Its mood varies from tender and discreet to aggressive and openly nasty. The mood depends on the audience. The performance varies, as does your behaviour, depending on the company you join. In one, you silently take a place in the corner, in another you ask for a drink at the threshold. I still do not have enough of this play. I run to the theatre like a lover to a date.

Joy has become the law of my life. I consider a day lost if I did not enjoy it. If I do not get my joy back from the performance, that means something’s gone wrong, and I finish with this idea. Each of my performances has a very elaborate system of physical and psychological rhythms. For instance, I know that at the third performance I reach the peak, and the fourth will be a flop. For this reason it’s already been 20 years that I have the day-off instead of the fourth performance, and no producer can make me do otherwise. There is no sense to act hard and then at home to cry about it. By the fourth performance I am physically exhausted, therefore I can’t enjoy it and make others enjoy it, too. I’ve discovered these things by intuition and since then I try to follow them exactly. You need to know yourself, to listen to yourself. You need to learn how to gain an everyday pleasure. And the performance should not be the only, or an absolutely necessary pretext to gain it. To inhabit a new space, to make it a space of your activity can be pleasant as well. Say, you come into an audience hall where you’re going to perform. And if there’s a lack of light or the ceiling is low, – then make it even lower, search the backstage, and turn a hall into a cellar using old decorations for it. The emotion of the space will be completely different. You just got to guess, where to go.

I gain an immense pleasure from breaking solid aesthetic systems. Each of these breaks holds a gigantic flood of creative activity. There was a case at one festival. We performed a shapito, but later we learnt that a railroad station was nearby, the trains passing it every 15 minutes. So, we’ve changed the plot like it’s taking place at the halt. We’ve created new personages, a switchman waved away with his signal flag, and we had a great pleasure from entering the reality. Or take this example, now in France. The audience likes us, in the end we bow to the spectators, step backwards, the curtains go up. We stepped further and further backwards when I was struck with an idea, and I said: “Listen, lads, do not stop, keep moving back”. We moved further back. What’s behind? – A door. We opened the door, and found ourselves in the street, on a square covered with the snow, with a lonely streetlight there. And we kept walking, and bowing, although it was absolutely freezing, and we were wearing our costumes. The audience was giving us applauses, not understanding a thing. Then suddenly a taxi appeared. I stopped it, and we all jumped in this taxi and rode away. It was fantastic! What a chance! When you extend a certain topic to the infinity, when you’re not afraid of this extension, if you do not lose a moment for it, it produces very beautiful stories. Another story to finish with it. It took place in Anapa. We decided to perform a procession, to awake the resting people. The crowds followed us in this procession. We went to the beach, and so did they. We approached the water, and so did they. We went into the water, – and they stopped. We entered the water till ankle, till waist, till neck… finally, till head. We disappeared. Everyone thought we’re going to pop back up. Two minutes passed, three, five minutes – none popped up. They were shocked; they even called for the savers! The trick was that we’ve hidden the aqualungs in the water. This unexpected, unpredictable break of a usual situation releases a great energy… So, if there is water, you got to sink, nothing to do. Generally, an actor or a director is like a child who plays with his own toys. The difference is that their toys are sometimes bigger.

Many people try to analyze my performances from the point of their plot or character. Well, there is something like that in them. I cling to a different thing, to something you cannot catch by eye or by word, – to atmosphere. I stretch bonds between my personage and each of the spectators. These bonds are my strings. There is no plot, but our relationship. If I feel that I hold the audience, I can create there whatever I want. Sometimes I regret I cannot hold the audience without any plot whatsoever. At times the plot precipitates the performance, but I need it because a part of the audience cannot sink in the flood of conscience, of sensuality, in the rhythm. I might narrow the audience. But in that case I will lose a part of my spectators, while I want all the audience to be mine. I am trying to create my world that would influence a spectator with its harmony, aura, its contagion, and not with a concrete story of a personage. When at the Olympics, why did I try to circumscribe the carnival by the frontiers of a cosy place, like The Hermitage Theatre? Firstly, Moscow on the whole is not ready for something like this yet. Secondly, we wanted to control our clown life according to our own laws. And, thirdly, we wanted a spectator to understand upon his own example what the ‘unbound theatre’ is like, to penetrate this free, natural life. It’s not strange that people came to The Hermitage Theatre for the second, for the third time. They did not just attend a performance; they wanted to return to this atmosphere again, to feel an overall unity. And this result is bigger than just a skill.

Hero 

His road home appeared to be long. Three years ago when I asked him if they were going to come back here, he said unconditionally: “I don’t know, maybe. Can you guess?” And suddenly he burst into our house with noise and whoops, he put everything on its head, and nobody found possible not to notice him. When he as the chief director was preparing the street performance during the Theatre Olympics (due to which Moscow lived like on a powder-cask for three months, being completely happy at the same time), he received a title of a popular artist. It’s ironic to be a clown with this title… Another one seems to suit him better: he is a citizen of the world, an image of a Soviet dream born behind an iron curtain. His story is a story of a guy who was born in a town of Novosil, near Orel, who became a world-known clown. He is an adult completing his childhood dreams. He is a fantastic workaholic who had turned his life into a festival.

When he came back, at once we recalled him as Assissyai, a loving clown. It was a nostalgic feeling from our youth, and we all wanted to get it back: a scarlet ball on his nose, a scarlet flame of his scarf, and the chicken-yellow overalls. But it could not be so. He changed a lot. Long ago he turned from an eccentric to a metaphysician. His personage became pensive, slower, and sadder. His gesture is inadequate, but his feelings are clearer. This did not make him any worse or more protected from the world. Rather he became more tender and closer to us. Every time he meets the blizzard face to face, we wish him to withstand it as we’re wishing it to ourselves. And long after the performance we have this fabulous picture from the Snowshow in our mind: a little boy, with a bright white make-up, in chicken-yellow overalls and scarlet scarf, pulls his little train through the blizzard – a chain of small houses with lightened windows and steaming chimneys… It seems that Eluard was right. A simple clownery is really the last shelter for a complex soul… 
 
Translated from Russian by Julia Shuvalova.

 

Slava Polunin: The Monologue of a Clown – 8: Method

Method

I seldom come across a question of how to do something. The most important thing is to understand what I want to say. As soon as I understand it, it takes a certain form. Some 10-15 years ago I had to learn how to do it, because I didn’t have enough knowledge. 15 years ago you’ve just got to learn to have a free mind in order to think only of what you want to say, and not how to show it. Now there’s no difference for me between ‘what to do’ and ‘how to say’; it turns me on by itself. Of course, I do analyze something, but I try to do it as late as possible. I am even afraid of analyzing. Usually your discovery is unexpected, and you marvel to yourself: “You don’t say, something I was doing, means that and that ?! That had never occurred to me”. But when you’re trying to do it ‘scientifically’, you produce a carrion.

I read one very beautiful story about Meyerhold. In fact, he gave me everything that has to do with the theatre and directing. For all the techniques I know and use, I’m indebted to him.

His best period for me is the year 1914 when he worked at the studio in Borodinskaya Street; there he was occupied with the essence of the theatre, its magic and ritual based upon commedia del arte. That captured joy of play resulted into that story with the Alexandrine theatre and directing of Don Juan, which, though, had nothing common with that idea of his. At one time Meyerhold enchanted me, and I began to study the tradition of theatre. So, once I read in his book that the power of art depends upon the length of rocker arm, whoch one shoulder is consideration, another is anarchy and freedom. The longer this arm, the more consideration and freedom the artist has at once, the more powerful is then your piece of art. An Artist is the only one who is capable to spread this arm as wide as possible. So, you need to seek harmony but remember: the more you incline to the right, the more you got to stand to the left. It’s impossible to take one direction without taking the opposite at the same time. The cleverer you want to be, the sillier you got to show. You may explore the process, the techniques, but afterwards you got to spit on all this to become free and earnest, natural and impulsive, and not think of how you do this or that. Like, for example, Shalyapin. He was a genius and a fantastic workaholic. He worked at the very minutiae of his part, but sometimes he stopped constraining himself and never knew what would be in the end. He flew into a rage and spread his arm unbelievably. So, the more anarchy, freedom, intuition are there, the better, not forgetting, though, about consideration. Meanwhile, Stanislavsky meant it too.

I often seem to share Stanislavsky’s ‘apartments’ in the sense of a method, especially as far as the Western public is concerned. However, subconsciously I try to avoid his influence. I am more concerned with a ‘playing man’, which often means a disruption of psychology. My understanding of the nature of play is Meyerhold-like, – it’s a performance, a joy, an improvisation, it’s like the decorative volutes. I always say to my actors: “Let’s cut the psychology down, it precipitates us, it makes our rhythm heavy”. And still I feel myself on the way there, regardless. Yet I got acquainted with Stanislavsky through Grotowsky. I found interesting this phenomenon of an artist’s fantastic self-sacrifice during the performance that he had already finished calling so by then. There he fell into hysterics, he revealed his subconscious, even some very intimate parts of it. Once I was told about one actor from the Komissarzhevskaya’ theatre who had starred as Tsar Fyodor Ioannovich and eventually had gone mad. That was a fine lesson to me: I have realized what physical depth an actor can reach, which is mysterious to everyone else; I have seen that he could wear the shoes of his personage and do so till his own end. Once again, this is where one needs intuition and consideration.
I followed Grotowsky to see, whether an actor can perform tragedy, burning himself down and trying his physics. By means of the clownery as the most conditional of the arts, I wanted to reveal the real human pain. And eventually I came to Stanislavsky via Grotowsky. I have realized that psychology and clownery can co-exist. Initially I pinned a photo of Chaplin on the wall, the one with a flower, and then I began looking for similar images in the theatre and cinema. I found a photo of Marseille Marceau as Bip, when he watched a butterfly and fell dead. There were many others who had commemorated this moment of unbearable pain. And I understood that even the clownery has some things that are impossible without psychological filling. I even suspect now that this psychological clownery is a sort of national feature of the Slavic culture. I saw it in the works of Jungo Edwards, of Boleslav Polivka, who were those who steeped forward in the clownery, in their time. Most of those who had seen Jungo’s performance at the Olympics, only noticed its wild joie de vivre, but one can also find it a picture of disruption of a soul, an image of pain. It is reflected in the features, in behaviour. Polivka, with his tender psychological mist, is a pure Stanislavsky. Generally speaking, in the end I saw that I wasn’t alone. But I still avoid a bold identification with Stanislavsky’ system. An actor must possess a secret; there is no need for a full explanation. The actor must be a magician.

Besides Meyerhold with his depth of understanding, I had a lot of other crushes. I came across Artaud and his book Theatre and its Double (Le Theatre et son double), which had sent me to the magical theatre. Same thing goes for Decroux, a teacher to both Marceau and Barreau. His book gave me a lot, including the idea of minimalism that I appreciate a lot. It happened in the yeas when nobody talked about minimalism yet. What Decroux said, was generally this: let’s get rid of all theatrical garbage, for we know not how to use it, and begin all a-new. We take a naked man onto a bare stage and let him do a step. Later another step will follow. Then we allow him to wear knickers, but at first we got to decide which exactly knickers: of what style, form and colour. Then we let him do one more step and say a letter ‘A’. And let him live with this ‘A’ for a year. We have so much, but we are not keen on using it. This idea of Decroux became basic to me. The stage must be as empty as possible. One should only put something on it when he is absolutely sure in its necessity. Every object must become a symbol. As Eisenstein said, every thing has its life, its secret, character, its soul; our purpose is to reveal it. A chair has its own idea, and if we do not show it, we cannot put the chair on the stage.

In the works of Brecht I came across a parable, another nice thing. The construction of all Brecht’s plays is very complicated, but in the end it’s a mere parable, and I found it very good. Of course, we cannot reach to the Bible, but it’s a fixed idea. All Bible is a story of something simple, like a donkey, a stick, or a road. But generation after generation reads it for ages, finding something especially for itself. Simplicity is as important for the clownery as associations. Symptomatically, Eluard, a Surrealist and aesthete, wrote: “The last shelter for a complex soul – a simple clownery”. Just think about it. If the synopsis of the play is a simple story, like, how one had beaten you with a stick, or how you’ve fallen over your own shoe, it’s easy for everyone to understand. The next question though, is what lies underneath this story, how many layers of sense you have made into it.

What I love about Chaplin is how he managed to touch all social classes with his films. A boy with an ice cream laughs at him. An old woman sympathizes with a hero who is offended by many. A girl is moved by how touching he is, how deep his love is. Chaplin baked a pie of ten layers and gave everyone a piece. I took it as a law for myself. If we want our work to be understandable, we have to remember about spectators’ tastes: some like it salty, and some – sour, and we need to take it all into an account and try to bake a puff pastry. Every single thing must have an infinite meaning. Take an apple as an example: it means seduction for a lover, home for a worm, taste for a gourmet, or a perfect round form for an artist. Or a maple leaf: mostly it’s a symbol of Canada, but for a yardman it’s dirt, for a tram-driver it’s a danger, and for a child it’s a toy. You can find up to 20 or 30 meanings of any object, fill it with innumerable associations. Same thing you need to do with the theatrical space; the level of imagery must be simple and infinitive at once. At the Olympics one asked me: “Well, you’ve made a Fools’ Ship, and sailed on her somewhere… What did you mean to say?” I said: “I don’t know. It’s you who adds the content to an image, not me. I do one half of the way; the second you do yourself”. One spectator told me: “Yes, the ship has gone, together with our Russian soul, she crossed the horizon, and a fiery curtain fell behind her. You have showed us Apocalypse”. But it was him who pictured Apocalypse to himself. Another said: “Finally, now you’ve brought these insanes here, and we’re having a festival”. Everyone has his own view. We create a certain image, and people find in it whatever is possible, – either what they can find, or what they need at this very moment.

There was a following scene in one of my performances. One man was running around, while another was trying to stop him hitting his head with a case. The first is very quick, the second is slow, it’s as if he says: “Wait, sit down, let’s share a drink, for what’s sake you keep running?” When we performed it in Russia, everyone sympathized the slow. The Americans preferred the quick: “That’s a nice dude”, they said, “he has such energy, such vigour, and he’s doing right”. Then one day I tagged a label ‘Taxi’ on to the quick’s head. They have rolled in the aisles with laughter! But the artistic feature disappeared. There was but a simple joke, which everyone forgot soon. Since then I do not use ‘Taxi’ labels in my performances. The director should not tell everything about an image, but let a spectator finish this phrase with his own words. The spectator gets the biggest joy from his own creative work, not ours. If you provoke his creative force, and then leave him in the moment when he is ready to follow you, then the most interesting thing begins. My biggest joy is to create our fantasies together with the audience.

Translated from Russian by Julia Shuvalova.

 

Slava Polunin: The Monologue of a Clown – 7: Audience

Audience

English audience was one of my biggest ‘finds’. It takes everything very seriously. Perhaps, if I were occupied with another kind of theatre, it would be an obstacle, because the English are too concentrated, but it’s very good for me, actually. Just as me, they like digging to the truth till the end of time. Their absurdity, nonsense, English humour, ‘Alice in Wonderland’ are on to a good thing for me… They come to the theatre well prepared. The Italians are easy to accept any unexpectedness, any novelty, they agree to any experiment. The English say: “Now, wait, an old bird is not to be caught with the chaff. We will watch it ve-e-ry attentively”. It’s impossible to make the Italians to watch something attentively. It usually goes like: “Wait, guys, let me say just one more word!” – “Relax, it’s fine as it is! Nothing more to say!” While in England there is a ringing silence in the audience. It’s such a pleasant thing for the theatrical performance, you don’t know!

As Grotovsky stated, there is a special exercise for every kind of theatre. Same for national traditions: a special theatre for every nation. For me personally, America is bad. But when I came there with my troupe for the first time and we began running on their heads, an excessively free American spectator quickly understood that he is besieged by the true anarchists, and he cocked them a snook and said: “Now you will see what the real freedom is”. But this game wasn’t interesting to me. It made sense in Russia under Brezhnev; it was my hobbyhorse there. Licedei (Pagliazzi) was an island of spiritual freedom in the country where there was no freedom at all. That was the reason why the audience supported us. People thought: “At last, there is freedom somewhere, at least in the clownery some do what they want, they crush the aesthetic canons, at least it’s them who get the joy”.

America is not a bad country, it’s just too young. In fact, the Americans are like children, they can only understand eccentricity at the moment. When I came there for the second time, accompanied by the Canadian Cirque du Soleil, I already knew that I wouldn’t clutch them on philosophy or poetical emotion. And I decided to conquer them: I went for the techniques, I based my performance on a simple attention to it. I’d make a turn, and while a spectator swallowed a hitch and felt pleased, I’d stop and immerse in thoughts. I’d take a strange thing off the stage, and the spectator began to wonder what it was for. Once I heard the grumble, I’d make next turn. I extended the pauses up to 10 seconds, till the silence became static. It’s a great problem for the Americans – to keep a mind on something that doesn’t move. They do not watch Bergman in America. But fighting with them gave me an immense professional pleasure!

This year I was ‘fighting’ with the French when we had performances at the Casino de Paris. I was looking for a hitch for a long time. Whatever I tried, didn’t work. It was so till I guessed that poetical emotion would be a place of our meeting. Good for me, ‘cause fortnight of my ten weeks tour had already passed. Now I know exactly which countries do need me, and which do not. For example, Spain doesn’t need me. All our attempts to demonstrate tenderness in Barcelona last year failed miserably. They couldn’t understand a thing. The Spanish audience doesn’t forgive if you do not address it personally. Columbia needs me. While in Belgium or in Portugal I am absolutely useless: their society is in such condition that my ideas have no meaning there.

And our Russian audience is just like me. We are so similar. I prefer when comedy and tragedy are together, for me it’s the top of the theatre, and here it is everywhere around you. There is nothing to think up. Who is the favorite personage in Russia? The exhausted, the drunkard, fool, blockhead, the outcast. My personage was an easy-going member of this company. I don’t mean it ironically, it’s true. It’s in our blood – to sympathize with the lost people, with those who didn’t succeed in life. There are not many heroes and victors in Russia. The success of my clownery here based upon the fact that this is the country of anti-heroes. But at one moment I felt that I have nowhere else to go. People loved me, I didn’t have anything to do, I only had to come out to the stage to get applause. It wasn’t just dull – it was scary. There was nothing to overcome. And I left my country. But what is funny – now in Russia there is a nostalgic feeling for what I have done in England and what was absolutely up-to-date there. Nostalgia is one of the most profound emotions in Russia. People need a base to stand on. “We want to get back to what was necessary or even seemed important”, they say. That’s why novelty is impossible here at the moment.

JD – The interview was made in 2001/2002. Below is an extract from Quidam by Cirque du Soleil, the famous and much-loved Skipping Rope routine.

Translated from Russian by Julia Shuvalova.

 

Museum Photography: Examples from Three Countries (UK, USA, and Russia)

How do museums regulate permissions for museum photography, and is there a conflict between personal photos and official museum merchandise?

museum-photography
Industrial Gallery, Birmingham Museum and Art Gallery (@Julia Shuvalova, 2008)

In the first week of December I went to Birmingham, and one my destinations was the Birmingham Museum and Art Gallery that houses the works of some leading Pre-Raphaelites. Taught by experience, I asked about museum photography. Yes, I had to fill out the form again, but this time the rules were set out in more detail, although once more there is a clause or two that may potentially be difficult to interpret even for the staff themselves:

1. Any copyrights (including publication rights) created in the photographic materials produced under the conditions stated below are reassigned to Birmingham Museum and Art Gallery.

2. Any photography is for personal reference only. No permission for any reproduction rights of any kind is granted or may be assumed. Permission for reproduction rights should be applied for, in writing, to the Picture Library. Each case will be evaluated independently.

3. Any work, which is protected by the artists’ copyright, may not be photographed without the permission of the copyright holder.

4. Any works on loan, including temporary exhibitions, may not be photographed.

5. Flash photography is permitted unless otherwise specified.

6. The use of professional photographic equipment is prohibited. Tripods and monopods may not be used under any circumstances.

7. Video cameras or camcorders may not be used under any circumstances. Filming is prohibited.

Fair enough, reading these rules may put an intrepid visitor off taking pictures in the gallery altogether. However, the first two points just further reinforce what I have highlighted in the previous post on the question of reproduction. The problem is seemingly not only about a picture’s commercial use, but about the multiplicity of such uses. Naturally, if the photo is included in a book, it will be reproduced as many time as the book. For this, it is essential to apply for a permission to a museum.

Regarding the 3rd point, my feeling is that this needs to be discussed with the copyright holder before their work actually gets to be displayed. This is something that many professional artists’ and photographers’ websites tend to lose the sight of. By creating a website and making it public, they by default agree that this information can be shared. It is the same as with the printed word: if it was printed, you cannot stop people from quoting it. This is not to say that their work can be reproduced for commercial purposes by other people, but this should mean that a blogger may wish to not only write about them and give a link to their website, but also to include an image in the post, to illustrate why it would be good to visit the website at all.

Likewise, when an artist is displaying their work at the museum or gallery where photography is generally permitted, they have to be aware that a visitor can upload a taken photo online. It makes every sense to restrict this, on the one hand; but, on the other hand, the world has grown bigger with the Internet, and this potentially means that artists, especially young, may find it more and more difficult to compete with other artists and to assert themselves in the world. Social Media tools, and particularly photosharing, will facilitate this to an extent.

With loaned works and temporary exhibitions, I feel the galleries would need to spare some resources to clearly display the permission signs in such spaces of the gallery. As more and more often galleries intercept the regular display with a temporary exhibition, it is difficult for a visitor to understand where a photography permission ends and where it resumes again.

Regarding the specialist photography permission, this is a good point and the one that I think can be reinforced to avoid the taken photos being reproduced to a commercial end. This is how the Brooklyn Museum defines their stance on photography in the gallery:

Photography and videography are allowed in the Museum so long as the images are taken using existing light only (no flash) and are for personal, non-commercial use. Photography and videography are often restricted in special exhibition galleries.

Add to this also that many paintings are displayed under the glass, hence the photographic image of a painting in the gallery space can be far from ideal for reproduction.

A different take on photography and videography in the museum comes from the State Hermitage Museum in St Petersburg, Russia. As you need to purchase tickets to view the collection, you can also purchase a permission to make photos or videos in the museum. The website explains that there are warning pictograms in the halls where it is not permitted to take photos or to use flash. I did use this permission once myself in 2002, and this was great to show the museum to my parents who happened to have never visited the Hermitage.

The question rises, of course: why would I film, and not buy a video cassette or a DVD? Well, we all count our pennies, and on my memory even 6 years ago it was cheaper to pay for a photography pass rather than to buy a DVD set. I have been taking a notice of what people photograph and film, and I have never seen any of them making a complete record of the collection. If any of the readers have been to the Hermitage, they vividly imagine the sheer grandeur of the place: you would not know what to photograph because there is too much to see, and all too splendid! They say it takes 5 hours to quickly run through the entire Hermitage (i.e. only stopping at a few paintings), so imagine the weight of this on your photo- or videocamera. But what the Hermitage achieving with this is very valuable. On the one hand, they allow people to create a personal record of a visit to this art depository, a historic monument, and one of the most beautiful sights in the world altogether. On the other hand, by asking for a small fee for a photography permit they also bring in money to the museum.

More on Photography and Blogs and Social Media

More on Photography in Museum: The Question of Reproduction

Photography in museum: the conflict of copyright and “personal use”. What museums can do to protect their collections.

photography in museums
Visitors taking photos at the John Walker Art Gallery, Liverpool (@Julia Shuvalova, 2008)

It looks like more and more art depositories are beginning to ask visitors to fill in a photography in museum permission form. I do think that this is likely to be requested in a smaller gallery rather than in a big one. Imagine the huge queue of tourists at the British Museum, all filling out permission forms…

As I stated before, I do not see any problem with restricting photography in museum at the special exhibitions, and then there is a tricky situation with the works of art by contemporary artists, as not only is there a “regular” sort of copyright which we all acquire by virtue of producing a work of art, but there is also a 70-years copyright restriction. On the other hand, those works of art can often be found online anyway, so the first question is whether the artist and the art depository by restricting the permission actually end up pushing away the benefits of being directly credited in the image?

Another problem is how to define the concept of “reproduction”. Indeed, if I take a photo of a painting (sculpture, photograph by the like of Man Ray, etc), I am effectively “reproducing” it. Yet again, there are so many reproductions of these works of art on the Internet, and services like AllPosters.com not only provide links to a large number of online images, they also produce quality prints. I never ordered any posters from the mentioned site or others, but it would certainly be interesting to leverage the number of prints bought by those who visited, say, the National Gallery shop online or in person, and the number of prints bought through a poster-making website.

I must admit I never looked into the relationship between AllPosters.com and any of the art depositories, whose works they print: perhaps, there is a sale commission agreement, or some such. Whatever is the answer, this is clearly the case of an image being reproduced for commercial purposes. How is this different from uploading a photo to a blog or to Flickr? As far as Flickr goes, this is currently a non-commercial service, so “reproducing” an image there should not be constituted as a commercial move.

Uploading a photo to a blog can be more complicated to an extent, if the publisher uses AdSense. My personal view, however, going off the fact that many of the images are available online via different resources, is that if the publisher intends to earn their income by “reproducing” the works of art on their blog, there is little need for them to visit a museum and twist the brains over photography permission. They can find very many images on the web, or they can scan “reproductions” from a book.

Two things may be kept in mind. First, art depositories need to assume that people who do fill out a photography permission form may be intending to upload photos to the web: this constitutes the “personal use” for them. This intention cannot be denied simply because photosharing services are one of the most powerful communicative tools online at the moment, and it would be a pity to see the depository restricting this. Rather, a depository should have the means to see where people upload photos taken in the depository, and how these are being used. The question of an image credit is usually not disputed by the online community, but there is nothing wrong about reinforcing it.

And the second thing is that an art depository that asks for a photography in museum permission form to be filled in, can in fact include in it a question about how the visitor is planning on using the photo. Better yet, visitors can be asked to apply for a permission online, and if they are an online publisher (i.e. blogger or website owner), the depository will be able to evaluate the resource prior to giving a consent to photography. Needless to say, such requirement would have to be very clearly displayed on the website or in the gallery.

More on Photography and Blogs and Social Media

Slava Polunin: The Monologue of a Clown – 6: From A to Z

From A to Z
 
There’s no relationship between what I have studied “officially” and what I am doing now. At first I was a student of the Economic Institute, then of the Culture Institute, a faculty of the Mass Show. But in fact I studied in the library, from 9 am till the closing hour, for 7 years, including a visit to the army. The rector, when giving me the graduate diploma, said: “The fact that Polunin has graduated from our institute proves that there are no eternal students”. I had no particular choice for reading; I read everything as a mean of self-education. I especially loved the Silver Age newspaper files. In the army I fell for Dostoyevsky. He is a top of the top for me, too. I was thinking: “You feel bad? Then you’ll feel even worse”. Notes from the Underground was my table-book. With Dostoyevsky one manages to keep aloof of their occupation, to observe a process from the side, – this being the only way of life in our country till this very day. Granted, after Dostoyevsky I compiled a list of other 100 books I had to read, but he is fundamental for me. Today I have a huge library, which is my favorite thing and my treasure. I am like a stingy knight, trembling at it, and I can’t wait to please myself with my favorite book or a book I haven’t yet read. In fact, a pleasure of reading is the biggest in my life. I am like this only because at the beginning I got stuffed and gained such a pleasure of digesting what I have read.

As for my profession, here I started with the naïve things, a mere eccentric pantomime. My ideal was an early Chaplin. I took eccentricity very seriously and studied a theory of trick. When Buster Keaton worked at the film studio, he carried two suitcases of tricks with him – two actual suitcases with files of enlisted tricks, a real collection. I did the same. I even elaborated a theory: if a turn consists of 25 tricks, it can be considered classical. I worked at the rhythm, at the techniques; I elaborated a whole eccentric scale. But when I reached the top, I lost the interest: quantity didn’t provide quality. I could make people roll in the aisles, it didn’t take any effort, but I suddenly understood: laughter is not so important. I began doing only 5 tricks instead of 25, so the techniques did not go against the rhythm of personage’s character development. I concentrated on the personage, on his condition and thoughts. Thus eccentricity changed to poetical process. At this point I staged my favorite performance The Dreamers – about children at play. They didn’t play war; rather, they played romantic games: they went into space, they traveled by sea to the unknown lands, they told fairy tales to each other, they examined insects. A child is one of the symbols of clownery. He has different moods and conditions. At play he is reactive, when talking to the adults, he’s trying to imitate them. But I chose a condition of exploring the life, as the one I prefer the most. By the way, when the child is exploring something, he is very slow and careful with details. My guys were doing all this so ardently, so freely, with such a gift! The dynamics of the play was great, and the performance was very beautiful. On the example of a child we demonstrated that fantasy on its own is good, and by its means the child is creating his world. That was my good-bye to eccentricity and hello to the next stage.

I needed a perpetual change. It took me 2 or 3 years to penetrate one tendency in the art of theatre from the bottom to the top, to consider its aesthetic opportunities, to provide a creative potential. But as soon as I’ve reached the top and gained success, I felt bored. Once the audience has accepted you and showed you its preference, you run out of you “energy drink”. I personally experienced the decay. So, I didn’t leave one performance for another, but rather I went from one aesthetic system to the next. I went from eccentricity to lyrics, from simple action to meditation; afterwards I began getting into contact with the audience. It seemed to me that the classical pantomime of Marcel Marceau, for instance, was too far away from the audience. It was as if he said: “Look at me and follow me, I am your ideal. Keep your mouths wide open and admit that there is something magical in this life, like, say, me, a boneless man”. That was in the 70s, the era of aesthetism. Then another borderline manifested itself because aesthetism did not satisfy the audience anymore. People began taking it offensively: “You all are the stars, and we’re but nothing and nowhere?” I felt that pantomime is losing its spectators, they have a lack of something. And against the usual clownery I began counting down the number of tricks, I hid my skill, the techniques in general, so that nobody at all would see that I was capable to do something. That cut down the distance between the audience and me. If the former believes that one of it can go on stage and do the same thing as you, it means you became the next best thing for them, not a great actor. And if you’re the next best thing, the type of relationship changes immediately. At that time I had a turn Ni-iz-ja-a! (No-o-o-o!). I didn’t demonstrate any professional skills there at all. A turn The Blue Canaries turned to be a red cloth for a bull: four clowns are marking time – and that’s it. One TV-maker told us: “Take this nonsense with you and keep it for a good memory”. And he wasn’t wrong: none of us was doing a double somersault, nobody could actually sing, the harmonies were paper-made. What is the trick then?

The example of the circus helped me to understand this trick. The circus began to lose its audience when it lost poetical emotion and simplicity. It reached unbelievable technical quality – the entire world said ‘Oh!’ when they saw a somersault on the stilts through a double ring. But what’s next? There was no simplicity, like in Picasso’s A Girl on the Ball. There was no tenderness and naivety, like in Fellini’s films. The Skill reached the top, but what about the Soul? And I understood that nobody needed my experiments with a boneless body. At first I demanded my guys to be straight, slim, brawny, to do yoga, ballet dancing. But later it became clear that good-looking people do not fulfill their task; they rather broaden the precipice between the audience and us. We were in deep shit. And it was then that I forgot any former principles and began to take in the troupe the one-eyed, the cross-eyed, the ugly, the strange, the bold, the paunchy, as long as they delivered something nice to the performance. I’m joking, of course. Different to it, what was I like myself? Oh, how I was dreaming to make an ‘aesthetic regularity’ of myself! But then I thought: why the hell do I need it? And I stopped caring about it. I was arching my back, and my wife hit me on it, but eventually she gave up, and this hump became a part of my personage. A count-off point had changed; I began paying more attention to the inward, not the outward. And I said to everyone: “I prohibit any professionalism in my theatre. The main things are the eyes, the atmosphere, my pleasure and involving of everyone in my pleasure: it is the touch to the people in the first row, – we are all together”. So we began crushing the wall between the stage and the audience, we began clutching people at the hitch. The more hitches are there between them and us, the more successful the performance is, as I thought. Nobody could guess what had happened: “They cannot do a thing, then why do they possess the audience?” Simply the mood became a measure of it all.

We are all in the course of the art history, and we cannot forget about what has passed by us and developed into solid categories in the heads of people. If the crowd is moving in one direction, screaming, then, maybe, you should take an opposite direction and keep silence? We need to find the means to be heard and to be noticed, we need to make people want to listen to us. The circus has lost the poetic emotion; I’ve decided to bring it back. It was a resistance to the flood that I thought was heading to the dead-end.

Afterwards there were new visions. At first we performed in small halls, for 100 people. Then we realized that we can hold attention of 10 thousands. That demanded a change in the space for a performance, we needed more freedom. And we went down to the audience, I found interest in the carnival, in a street performance. Suddenly I realized what I had really wanted all my life: I wanted a colourless life to be beautiful and colourful every day. When we went out into the street, we wanted people who were walking towards us to stand still awkwardly, to open their mouths wide, then to drop their bags and to follow us, as if they were charmed. Like in the film The Jolly Fellows, if you remember. At first the audience stared, commented, then it began to follow us, to help us. Finally it got used to all this. I was satisfied as I brought it up: it learnt to work on its own.

Translated from Russian by Julia Shuvalova.

 

Slava Polunin: The Monologue of a Clown – 5: Carnival

Carnival

Carnival is an ideal formula of existence when everything is a theatrical performance and life is a festive occasion. All my performances are easy to arrange by the level of carnival in blood. I love a lot this type of art that I consider unjustly forgotten. It is a powerful tradition. It could provide immense nourishment to the clownery, but nobody is interested in it. I was horrified when I found it out, and jerked to it. Now I have hundreds of books on carnival, now I know all about it. Once I’ve come through a plenty of manipulations to pay a fee to represent Russia at the world’s carnival fund to attend one of their meetings. I wasn’t invited, of course. But when I came to the banquet of this association wearing sandals and shorts, they did not let me in. They didn’t let me attend the carnival tie-less! It proved symptomatic to me: modern carnival tradition came to its end. That association became senseless to me. They make money on keeping their trousers on the waist. It was then that I began studying the real roots of carnival and started looking for those who’ve done the same. I found Misha Shemyakin, his carnival sketches; I came to him and persuaded to work on the play together, basically, to revive the carnival. (Their play ‘Il Diabolo’ about Devil and Fool is almost finished. Polunin showed it in Holland and Poland. Perhaps, one day it’ll reach Russia. – N.K.).

Today there is no place on Earth where you would see a real carnival. Save for one, that is Trinidad and Tobago, a small island not far from Cuba. The world-known artists come there, they create unbelievable costumes, they realize mad projects and just spend their time away from the rest of the world. My attendance of the Venetian carnival was hazardous; I came there together with Misha who twice was an artist-general of it. February at the Venetian carnival is his favorite time in life. At last he finds himself in that very place where he had to be born to live, in the 17th century. Granted, by his own initiative, he erected a statue of Casanova in Venice. It was supposed to stay there for a limited time, but it just made the place look complete, and I am sure, there is no way of getting rid of it now. Everyone has a feeling that it has been there all the time. It is the main ‘course’ of the carnival: people barge there to session, to take photos. Unfortunately, Shemyakin’s presence as an artist-general did barely affect the carnival. It’s impossible to push it anywhere, whatever he did. The Italians are very stingy. Finally Misha said: “Fine, damn it! I’ll find money myself. How much? 5 millions? Okay!” He got in touch with different companies, showed them his sketches and books, they made him an order for advertisement ‘with these your little devils’ and paid him 5 millions. He gave money to the Italians: “There are your five millions, please, spend them on the carnival”. – “No”, the Italians answered, “we have 5 millions ourselves”. Then, for god’s sake, why didn’t you change anything in your carnival; and instead your 5 millions had come to grief? The Italians and Russians are but all the same! Nobody has money, but everyone is absolutely happy.

Of course, the Venetian carnival, tender, aesthetic and showing-off as it is, is the remains of the late splendour. The laces turn to ashes, there is no flame, but mere sparks. It is dying, but this death is so beautiful! There are people who visit the carnival every year; they’re waiting for the day when they wear their costumes on which they’ve probably spent their last penny. It’s a star hour for them. They walk out into the square, and other people, star-eyed, give them loud applauses. There you’ve got a feeling of a life’s festivity, of a second reality. There’s such architecture all around, and nobody will throw a sidelong glance on you. The audience is colossal, all staring! It’s running for a marvel, you do “Ops!” and it says: “WOW ?!” Anywhere in Europe for your ‘Ops’ you’d get: “What ?! You want a punch in the mouth?” Meanwhile, this is a perfect place for provocation. Here I love playing up with usual things. I observe the environment, take a notice of the system and bring it to the top. People in the café make the perfect pit. Once I took a notice ofpigeons, bought a pocket-full of seeds and began throwing them around. All Venetian pigeons rushed to San-Marco. Hell! People covered their heads, the pigeons hustled and bustled, tables fell over. The waiters applauded me. The carnival in Venice is a good place to try your ideas. Your have a personage, you dress him up and walk about with him for hours: there’s always the audience, always joy, irresponsible atmosphere… Irresponsibility is a very important word for the theatre.

Translated from Russian by Julia Shuvalova.

 

error: Sorry, no copying !!