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Performance, Photography, Performativity: What Performance ‘does’ in the Still Image
Taylor, Allan S., «Performance, Photography, Performativity: What Performance ‘does’ in the Still Image». , , Abstract Auslander (2006) states that images generated from performance documentation and practices stemming from performance to camera could be considered ‘performative’ if they are meant to be seen as happening in the ‘now’ they are viewed, with the spectator as the current intended audience. This thesis takes Auslander’s supposition and situates the term performativity within an established academic discourse as a social, political or cultural ‘doing’ and questions what, apart from performing, performance ‘does’ in its transcription to a photographic image. I propose a ‘doing’ occurs because the intentional performance of a given act invokes…
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Performing the image: Representations of the body in the avant -garde
Hein, Nina, «Performing the image: Representations of the body in the avant -garde». Ph.D., , Ann Arbor, United States 2005 Abstract This dissertation provides an interdisciplinary analysis of body imagery in Futurism, Dada, and Surrealism. Building on existing discourse on the body from aesthetic, sociohistorical and philosophical perspectives, the dissertation highlights the work of specific avant-garde artists who actively redefine the body in their work. Specifically, I analyze visual representations of the body in several media—painting, sculpture, photography, theatre performance, and film—as well as imagery of the body in avant-garde manifestos and theoretical and literary texts. I show how the avant-garde represented and promoted certain body images as part of…
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Framing Brecht: Photography and Experiment in the Modellbuecher, “Arbeitsjournale”, and “Kriegsfibel”
Imbrigotta, Kristopher, «Framing Brecht: Photography and Experiment in the Modellbuecher, “Arbeitsjournale”, and “Kriegsfibel”». Ph.D., , Ann Arbor, United States 2013 Abstract Theater is not just a visual art form but also a performative and interactive one. Bertolt Brecht (1898-1956) developed an innovative theater aesthetic that engaged in distinct ways with visual imagery—especially photographs. These images were vital to both the performance aspect and dramaturgical reception of his craft. Photographs figure significantly in his prose and poetry as well as his essayistic work. While scholars have devoted attention to Brecht’s films and his work in other experimental media, few have addressed the fundamental questions I investigate: How does Brecht employ photography…
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Staging visibilities: Stanislavsky’s system, photography, and epistemologies of the body, 1870–1938
Kairschner, Shawn Travis, «Staging visibilities: Stanislavsky’s system, photography, and epistemologies of the body, 1870–1938». Ph.D., , Ann Arbor, United States 2007 Abstract This dissertation locates turn of the century acting techniques within a set of diagnostic discourses that strive to convert the body’s visible surfaces into legible signs of invisible psychic interiority. To facilitate the reading of somatic surfaces, these discourses deployed photographic imaging technologies capable of rendering the surface of the body transparent. I argue that the period’s foremost theater artists, notably Andre Antoine and Konstantin Stanislavsky, applied “photographic” diagnostics to their rehearsal processes and acting systems. These figures developed hermeneutic strategies that enabled actors, during rehearsals, to extrapolate…
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The Actor’s Image: Reading Representations in Nineteenth-Century American Theatrical Photography
Nacy, Philip Kellett, «The Actor’s Image: Reading Representations in Nineteenth-Century American Theatrical Photography». , U of Missouri, ColumbiaUMI, 2006 Abstract Other data Number of pages: 399 ISBN: ISSN: DOI: URL: http://search.ebscohost.com/login.aspx?direct=true&db=mlf&AN=2006654051&site=ehost-live&scope=site Language: EN key: PSGZF49S
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O insustentável desejo da memória : incursões na fotografia de teatro em Portugal (1868-1974)
Figueiredo, Filipe, «O insustentável desejo da memória : incursões na fotografia de teatro em Portugal (1868-1974)». Dissertação de Doutoramento em Estudos Artísticos, ramo de Estudos de Teatro, Universidade de Lisboa, Lisboa 2015 Abstract O presente estudo tem com objecto a produção de fotografia de teatro em Portugal entre 1868, data das primeiras fotografias, em série, associadas a uma determinada peça, e 1974, que corresponde, simultaneamente, à extinção da companhia Rey Colaço-Robles Monteiro (RC-RM) e ao fim do regime do Estado Novo. Neste contexto histórico, de aproximadamente cem anos, identificam-se as mais significativas práticas da fotografia de teatro, a partir de um vasto trabalho de levantamento e de sistematização de imagens…
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The Role of the Performance Document: The Photographic Paradox and the Ephemeral Event
Simon, Danni E., «The Role of the Performance Document: The Photographic Paradox and the Ephemeral Event». M.A., Sotheby’s Institute of Art – New York, Ann Arbor, United States 2015 Abstract In contemporary artistic practice, there has been a resurgence of performance- based work, resulting in an unprecedented interest in performance documentation. As performance art proliferates and gains admission into the exhibitions and archives of the traditional visual arts institution, the question of how to institutionalize these ephemeral practices comes to the fore. The documentation of performance, specifically the photographic document, has proven to be pivotal in the collection, preservation, and institutionalization of transient art. Now, more than ever before, the…
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Theatre and Performance Photography: Documentation and the “unlive”
Anderson, Joel, «Theatre and Performance Photography: Documentation and the “unlive”». , Queen Mary, University of London, London 2008 Abstract Although theatre and performance photographs often illustrate scholarly works on theatre and performance, and despite recent interest in links between theatre and the still image from both theatre practitioners and theorists, there remains relatively little critical work on theatre photography. This thesis examines theatre photography, implementing approaches that are a departure from habitual conceptions of the photograph as document. Taking the intersection of theatre and photography as a vantage point, this thesis considers how photography might shape theatre rather than recording it, and how this might challenge notions of theatre’s constitution,…
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Napoleon Sarony’s living pictures: Photography, performance & American art, 1865-1900
Pauwels, Erin Kristl, «Napoleon Sarony’s living pictures: Photography, performance & American art, 1865-1900». Ph.D., Indiana University, Ann Arbor, United States 2015 Abstract This dissertation investigates the complex artistic legacy of Napoleon Sarony, a pioneering figure in American photography. Based in Manhattan from 1866 until his death in 1896, Sarony was the most celebrated photographic portraitist of his era, known best for adapting the drama and fantasy of Gilded Age theatre to his construction of public images. Rather than creating straightforward likenesses of his subjects such as Sarah Bernhardt and Oscar Wilde, Sarony used flamboyant pose and costume, elaborate set-pieces and skillful retouching to create what he called “Living Pictures”—expressive portraits…
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Theatre Photography between Theatre and Performance / Anderson, Joel
Anderson, Joel, «Theatre Photography between Theatre and Performance». Focales, , n° 3 : Photographie & Arts de la scène, (2018), pp.