[Candrama] The S Word: Stanislavski and Place (WAAPA/ECU April 2024)
Paul Fryer
paul at paulfryer.me.uk
Thu Mar 2 06:42:27 EST 2023
Dear Colleagues,
We are very pleased to announce our *2024* symposium, to be hosted by
the Western Australian Academy of Performing Arts, in April 2024.
*STAND IN PLACE / STANISLAVSKI AND PLACE*
*4-6 APRIL 2024*
*WAAPA, EDITH COWAN UNIVERSITY*
*PERTH/BOORLOO, WESTERN AUSTRALIA*
Stanislavski was clear that the actor must /take their place/ in the
theatre. His writings are full of injunctions to reflexively situate
oneself with respect to the stage, set, actors, objectives, and so on.
Echoing Stanislavski’s conceptual and physical praxis, modernist
performance makers such as Meyerhold and Schlemmer went on to postulate
that the /actor brought their own sense of place onto the stage/,
shaping the performance space and enabling performer to align
themselves, their attention, and their movements to a range of axial
placements and combinations, as in Laban’s kinesphere. Later theatre
makers as varied as David Donnellan and Suzuki Tadashi have suggested
that the theatre is a /place of life-and-death struggle/, a site where a
battle for survival is conducted by both characters and the actors
themselves.
The act of the performer /taking their place/ in their body in the
theatre developed in parallel to the importance of ‘place’ in the world
of the playwright and in the places represented on stage. Stanislavski’s
not always happy peer, Anton Chekhov, has been described as the “first
/environmental playwright/,” with scripts such as /Uncle Vanya/ (1898)
and /The Cherry Orchard/ (1904) being concerned with the places wherein
they are set, with the environmental and socio-political conditions
and//histories etched across their landscapes. Interestingly, there is a
rich tradition of Australian plays which are strongly connected to
place, /No Sugar/ (Jack Davis, 1985), /Cloudstreet (/Nick Enright and
Justin Monjo, 1998, after the novel by Tim Winton), /When the rain stops
falling/ (Andrew Bovell, 2008), and more recently, /City of Gold /(Meyne
Wyatt, 2019).
For the forthcoming /Stanislavski and Place/ symposium, we call for
submissions for academic papers, artist presentations, and panels, which
consider the /places of theatre arising from or existing alongside
Stanislavskian performance and acting praxis./ We invite you to Stand in
Place with us, on Whadjuk Noongar Country, here at the Western
Australian Academy of Performing Arts, Edith Cowan University,
Perth/Boorloo, and interact with this place, as you tell us about your
places.
Topic areas could include (but are not limited to):
* Performance and theatre in relation to ideas of being in place and
being out of place
* Stanislavskian performance in /your /place (what changes with/in it?)
* Placemaking and theatre making
* Futures of Eco dramaturgy and theatre form
* Decolonisation strategies and First Nation knowledge of place and
performance
* Beyond Stanislavski, extending his ideas in concepts of place/space
* Training in relation to ideas of place including but not limited to
intercultural/transcultural form and practice
* Site specific and place specific performance modes in relationship
to realism, Stanislavski and actor and audience relationship
* Movement, body weather and other performance modalities and training
methodologies
All enquiries to Renee Newman r.newman at ecu.edu.au or Jonathan W Marshall
jonathan.marshall at ecu.edu.au
Further information regarding deadlines and registration to follow.
Prof. Paul Fryer PhD, FRSA, FHEA.
Visiting Professor, School of Performance and Creative Industries, University of Leeds.
Visiting Professor, School of Arts and Creative Industries, London South Bank University.
Hon. Visiting Professor, School of Arts and Digital Industries, University of East London.
Co-Director, The Stanislavsky Research Centre.
Founding Editor, Stanislavski Studies and Series Editor, Stanislavsky And...(Routledge/Taylor & Francis).
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