CompaRe | Allgemeine und Vergleichende Literaturwissenschaft
Refine
Document Type
- Part of a Book (15)
- Article (2)
- Book (2)
- Part of Periodical (1)
Has Fulltext
- yes (20)
Is part of the Bibliography
- no (20)
Keywords
- Performance <Künste> (20) (remove)
Da Literatur, die in den digitalen Medien entsteht, häufig in Bewegung und ephemer ist, braucht es neue literaturwissenschaftliche Methoden, um dieser Literatur zu begegnen. Der Beitrag skizziert die Schwierigkeiten, mit denen die Literaturwissenschaft konfrontiert ist, und schlägt vor, sich an den Methoden der Tanz- und Theaterwissenschaften zu orientieren, um methodologische Zugänge zu finden, die die Spezifika digitaler Literatur einbeziehen.
Anarchival practises : the Clanwilliam Arts Project as re-imagining custodianship of the past
(2023)
Where is the past? It is not really behind us, but with us, constantly imagined and re-imagined in public discourse through historical narrations. Using the Clanwilliam Arts Project as a case study, this volume is founded on the 'anarchive', a conceptual constellation that positions the past in relation to the present, bringing into view strategies to facilitate remembering beyond the colonial archive.
Performance. Oper. Feminismus : Bemerkungen zu "7 Deaths of Maria Callas" von Marina Abramović
(2022)
Auf der Bühne der Deutschen Oper liegt eine Frau in einem Bett. Wir blicken, so ist dem Programmheft zu entnehmen, in die Rekonstruktion eines historischen Schlafzimmers. Maria Anna Sofia Cecilia Kalogeropoulou soll hier gewohnt haben, besser bekannt unter ihrem Künstlernamen Maria Callas. [...] Bevor Abramović in Kalogeropoulous Schlafzimmer erwacht, gab es sieben Kurzfilme zusehen, die als filmische Kommentare auf sieben Bühnentode des klassischen Opernrepertoires konzipiert wurden. In der Reihenfolge ihres Ablebens treten auf: Violetta, Tosca, Desdemona, Cio-Cio-San, Carmen, Lucia und Norma. In den Filmen lässt sich Abramović von deren jeweiligen Todesarten inspirieren: Abramović stürzt von einem Turm, Abramović wird von einer Schlange erwürgt, Abramović zertrümmert im Wahnsinn Mobiliar usw., alles bei ununterbrochenem Einsatz der Zeitlupe. Den Filmen wird die sie jeweils inspirierende Szene live musikalisch zur Seite gestellt, jede Figur dabei von einer anderen Sängerin verkörpert. Allerdings kommen in den meisten Fällen nicht die tatsächlichen Todesszenen der betreffenden Dramatis Personae zur Aufführung, sondern ein Potpourri ihrer vermeintlich schönsten Melodien. [...] Das fundamentale dramaturgische Problem der "7 Deaths of Maria Callas" erklärt sich aber erst mit Blick auf eine Installation, die Abramović auf Grundlage derselben Zusammenstellung von Film und Musik, allerdings unter Zuhilfenahme von historischen Aufnahmen von Kalogeropoulou präsentiert hat. In dieser Version, unter dem Titel "7 Deaths" in der Londoner Lisson Gallery gezeigt, entfaltet sich ein intimer Dialog zwischen deutlich voneinander zu unterscheidenden Medien und Stilen. Die Autonomie der musikalischen Darbietung geht in der Bühnenversion verloren, der Charakter der Installation verschiebt sich in Richtung Stummfilm mit Live-Musik. Letztere hat nur noch begleitende Funktion und kann weder von der Aura des Historischen noch von den stilbildenden Interpretationen der Callas profitieren. Noch in ihrer Abwesenheit stellt Kalogeropoulou aber an performativer Intensität alles zur Aufführung Kommende in den Schatten. Denn während Abramović bei dem Versuch scheitert, sich mit ihrer physischen Präsenz gegen ihren eigenen Celebrity-Status zu behaupten, treten die Sängerinnen des Abends mit dem Medienphänomen Maria Callas in Konkurrenz. Eine Übermacht völlig anderen Kalibers.
Can reenactments be a way to create counter-narratives in and for the museum? Through the analysis of political performance (or what the artist Tania Bruguera calls 'political-timing-specific' artworks), this essay discusses the potential of reenactment as both a practice of materializing memories and narratives of oppression and of rethinking museum policies in terms of preservation and display. Its main argument is that, while the archive can be regarded as a form of materializing the memory of these works, reenactment is more than a way of recovering the past; it is also a device for reconstructing memories of activism and oppression. This essay further suggests that reenactments of political-timing-specific works demand a change in accessioning, conservation, and presentation practices, which might be inclined to erase decentralized art-historical and material narratives.
The Neoplastic Room at the Muzeum Sztuki in Łódź was originally designed in 1948 by the avant-garde artist Władysław Strzemiński. Destroyed in 1950 and reconstructed in 1960, it became the focal point of the museum, with the 'International Collection of Modern Art' by the a.r. group being exhibited there. At the same time, it became a point of reference for contemporary artists and a strategy for building a permanent collection for the museum, as well as a reflection on how the past can give a vision of the future. This essay focuses on the gesture of 're-curating' the Neoplastic Room in relation to the performative practice of the artists involved (e.g., Daniel Buren, Elżbieta Jabłońska).
To support the practice of preservation and mediation of video works in the LIMA Collection (Amsterdam), the authors explore the possibilities of reinterpretation as a rather common practice in the performing arts. As a choreographer and a dramaturge, they establish a correlation between reinterpretation and dramaturgy - as a way to deal with non-objective or transitory aspects of the works - and describe their method in relation to the video and performance artist Nan Hoover.
Locating authenticity in artworks that are remade (all or in part) or re-performed over time presents a unique challenge for art conservators, whose activities have traditionally been oriented toward caring for the material aspects of art objects. The paper offers a brief overview of perspectives on authenticity and discusses various theoretical models that have been developed to conceptualize how media, installation, and performance artworks are displayed and cared for over time. These include the score/performance model, the concepts of autographicity and allographicity, the concept of iteration, and authenticity as a practice. The author proposes a theoretical model based on the ritual aspects of presenting artworks, arguing that authenticity, repetition, and community participation can be reconciled within a ritual context.
In the 1990s, the question of the legacy of historical performance was posed with a particular sense of urgency. In the context of most pioneers of the art form having retired from live performance, reenactments not only reproduced past works but positioned artists within the genealogy of performance. The sense of the passage of a generation and the transmission of the memory of past performances were made explicit by Marina Abramović in "The Biography" (1992), a theatre piece in which she stages the very process of accounting for her past, as well as by Takashi Murakami and Oleg Kulik, who emerged on the art scene in the 1990s and mimicked live works from the past.
In this fifteen-minute lecture-performance, Malin Arnell presents her dialogue with the work of French-Italian artist Gina Pane (1939–1990). Oriented around textual and visual traces of Pane and Arnell's historical intra-action, this ongoing dialogue explores performance art documentation and historical narratives. The project interrogates the operations of archives, asking: 'How do queer feminist performance archives make you vulnerable, how do they make you feel, act, react?' 'Whose bodies remain present, and which bodies are lost?' The framework of the work - its repetition with variations and its artistic and queer feminist methodologies - enables an exploration of history, documentation, and bodily epistemology as an attempt to take responsibility for what is not known by doing, through action - through performance.
In the reactivation of the feminist collective of artists Le Nemesiache, this paper looks at the tension between rhetoric and translation in relation to the dislocation of archival materials from their situatedness in place (Naples) and time (1970 to the present). Translation emerges as the conveyor of the conditions from which the addresser started, as well as the ones of the addressees, as a potential that takes place in the moment of enunciation through a plurality of subjects. Considering the epistemological tension between history and fiction, as well as the mediation that happens through the body and the different subjectivities triggered by intra-action, this essay will engage with the following question: if the archive is the memory, can dramaturgy and reenactment from the archive become the message of a prophecy?