Performative Spaces

Objectives

The student should be able to:
1. Obtain the main conceptual and theoretical tools for an approach to the specificity of the Performing Space;
2. Get to know the different types of Performing Spaces and their historical evolution;
3. Recognize and articulate specific approaches about different types of performance (dance, theatre, circus, installation/hapenning, etc);
4. Identify and analyse the main contemporary tendencies of the Performing Spaces;
5. Bring to context the attended performing pieces, in relation to the performing space that is used, being sensitive to the communicational process involved;
6. Develop a theoretical/Practical work to create a visual solution for a Performing Space/Act. This will be carried out by theoretically analysing the concept and its pertinence by means of autonomous research.

General characterization

Code

722011096

Credits

10.0

Responsible teacher

João Miguel Osório de Castro Garcia dos Santos

Hours

Weekly - 3

Total - 280

Teaching language

Portuguese

Prerequisites

None

Bibliography

BLOOM, Martin. Accommodating the Lively Arts, Smith and Kraus, s/local. 1997.
MACKINTOSH, Iain. Architecture, Actor & Audience, Routledge, Londres. 1993.
GOLDBERG, Roselee. A Arte da Performance, Lisboa, Orfeu Negro, 2007 .
KWON, Miwon. One Place after Another: Site-Specific Art and Locational Identity. Cambridge (EUA), the MIT Press, 2004.
KESTER, Grant H. Conversation Pieces: Community+Communication in modern Art. Berkeley, University California Press, 2004.
JONES, Amelia. Body Art/Performing the Subject. University of Minnesotta Press. (1998).

Teaching method

The lectures will be complemented by support reading, which should promote productive discussion in classroom about the subjects. Study visits to Venues and Events will contribute to improve technical knowledge and provide space for theoretical and critical training. The regular presentations that students will need to do for their work-in-progress (including the production of audiovisual displays, which are very relevant considering the nature of the subjects) will bring different perspectives together and stimulate the discussion about distinct scenic concepts.

Evaluation method

Evaluation method - Practical + Theoretical Work(50%), Presentation / Discussion of work(30%), Reading / General research / Assiduity(20%)

Subject matter

I) Historical perspective over the relation between performance and theatre architecture: from Greek amphitheatres to modern multitasks.
II) Scenic visual languages. The evolution of the visual languages within performances: from the Theatre of the World to the Happenning.
III) Study of the Visual displays involved in the Scenic Arts: Sets, Scenic displays, Props, clothes, light, video, etc.
IV) The visual expression as an answer to Performance. Installation as a template to the performing action.
V) Space and object appropriation as a strategy towards a performing action.

Programs

Programs where the course is taught: