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Believing the muscle of the heart should be exercised with each theatrical experience

VisionQuest seeks to provoke raw, visceral responses through a mixture of plays whether sanguine, incendiary or disquieting. We are a force of artists committed to a passionate exploration of the truth of the human condition through drama in order to better our work, our lives and our world.

 

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The Mischievous Ant

Currently I'm consulting and doing some script writing for a performance project called "The Mischievous Ant." A director here at Queen's is working with people from the Rhode Island School of Design (RISD, pronounced RIZZ-dee) to make a theater piece with some technology associated with it.

In thinking about this it seems to me that there are three broad categories of using new technology in a performance.

Technology for the audience only
This is some technology that is part of the performance that the characters do not react to. For example, there might be a video screen above the stage that shows what the characters are thinking. It helps tell the story.

This also includes technological ways in which the audience can affect the performance. For example, the way they shift in their seats can affect the lighting or how characters move. The characters are not aware of the presence.

Technology in the reality of the characters
This is technology in the world of the play. Characters interact with it. For example, there might be characters who have TV sets for heads, and the TV sets "speak." The characters treat this as normal, as they are familiar with this part of technology in their world, as we are with cell phones in ours.

Technology that the characters react to
The technology is a new part of the world of the play, and the characters react to the new technology appropriately: with fear, awe, etc.

 


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Articles catalogue
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Imagez Studio, the Artwork, Brynn Carroll.

In literature, poet Charles Baudelaire was developing his work and the movement, and especially with such luminaries as Verlaine contributing to the collective effort of the literary movement during the 1860s and through to the 1870s. With the works of Edgar Allen Poe coming to popularity in the 1880s, the Symbolism movement in Artwork represented an outgrowth into the darker and more gothic nature of Romanticism, and contrasted with Romanticism's rebellious and impetuous sides. Symbolist writers wrote in very metaphoric and suggestive manner, to imbue the subjects with a sense of symbolic meaning, and made realistic images into representatives for more esoteric and primordial ideas.

In translating the language of dreams into Artwork with symbolic leanings, discovering a visual style that draws upon that philosophical approach that captures a sense of art that has been influential on more than one movement artistically, and has evoked some of the more fantastic imagery to ever cross a canvas. The Symbolist Manifesto was published in 1886, leading to a description of the movement that included ideas such as being hostile towards plain and matter-of-fact meanings, and to express the ideal in a perceptible form was the sole purpose of this art form.

Symbolists that preferred poetic means of conveying their ideas, were known for their techniques of removing technical aspects to achieve a greater fluidity for their work, and became related with seeking use of symbolic images over raw description to evoke the state of the poet's soul. Paul Verlaine was influential in an 1884 publication defining the essence of Symbolism, through many essays on the relevant poets of the day, and came to the conclusion of relating the works of this movement to the famed philosopher Arthur Schopenhauer, whose own work delved into art as a means of refuge from the strife of the world.

These similarities, which presented a contemplative and artistic refuge using themes such as mortality and otherworldliness, created disparaging arguments between critic and artist alike. Leading to many Symbolist poets of the day to make their own publications and periodicals, and the literary Symbolism then reached its' peak in the year 1886, with one particular periodical lasting until 1965. Though the two aspects of the movement were distinct, they would occasionally overlap each other, and became a continuation for mystical tendencies in a Romantic tradition, even flirting with the self-consciously dark Decadence movement.

There were several dissimilar groups of painters and visual artists within the Symbolism movement, and the artistic movement seemed to have a greater impact worldwide than the literary movement, reaching multiple artists and sculptors from such distinct parts as Russia. Many of the symbols found herein are not necessarily universal, but more personally affected with the artist's obscure and private references, with some dreamlike subject matter influencing later Surrealists. Symbolism has had a strong link to music for a while, and mostly due to the enthusiasm for the work of Richard Wagner, whose own music reflected his influence from the philosopher Schopenhauer.

Believing the muscle of the heart should be exercised with each theatrical experience VisionQuest Theater Articles catalogue

2005  2002