Upload
lythuan
View
217
Download
5
Embed Size (px)
Citation preview
danube university krems | workshop exhibition development
CHRYSALIS sheltered state of becoming mixed patterns of invention
polysemantic methodspupa of the exhibition
!a workshop with FRANK DEN OUDSTEN
danube university krems | exhibition development 10-15 november 2017
frank den oudsten | 10-15 november 2017, 1
danube university krems | workshop exhibition development
CHRYSALISa sheltered state of becoming
Premise 1 refers to the terminology of the trade and the daily dilemmas of the exhibition maker. As to the development of exhibitions, the German speaking realm adapted the phrase “scenography”. But what actually is scenography? How is it understood? By what thought is it informed? Manifestations of scenography - as we got to know them for instance in World Expo’s - tend to be big, large scale, costly, glamorous and spectacular, suggesting a trade based on exuberant technological expertise. However, as to the other dimension: the conceptual level of invention, it’s still a rare thing for a curator and a scenographer to share an intense process of development that leads to powerful and relevant metaphors, which any exhibition as “vehicle” so desperately needs. This act of shared invention, of course, is necessarily located at the midpoint of the axis which connects (or divides) the two parties involved. Scenography as a phrase is composed of the terms “scene” and “graphy”. Scene refers to the Greek skene meaning hut, tent or temporary shelter. Graphy refers to the Greek graphein meaning writing, suggesting a text or an idea. The composite “scenography” therefore might be read as the effort of offering shelter to an idea. This aim is central to the professional field of exhibition development and a shared interest of both curator and scenographer.
Premise 2 we may find in the first lines of the renowned book The Empty Space. In it British theatremaker Peter Brook defines the bottom line of theatre, that other format of scenography, if you like. Brook: “I can take any empty space and call it a bare stage. A man walks across this empty space whilst someone else is watching him, and this is all that is needed for an act of theatre to be engaged”.This is what’s scenography is all about: it’s about intimate engage-ment and confrontation as being the state in which transformative energy gets shaped and starts to flow. Therefore, no matter big or small, scenography always is a genuinely relative art, opposed to design which rather focuses on the detailing of the absolute object. So, I’m intrigued by that bottom line of Peter Brook and I feel that scenography in the exhibition-context, should be taught, learned, explored and invented on a similar intimate and relative scale. I’m especially intrigued by the early stages of development, when the entire exhibition finds itself in a state of becoming. I’d like to call that state of incubation: the stage of nano-scenography. Rudimentary and fluid acts of exhibition-making are invented in those first all passionate brainstorms. That’s what’s our workshop is about: inventing the nano-scene, imagining its material shape, reading its magic and testing its consistency in a public presentation.
frank den oudsten | 10-15 november 2017, 2
danube university krems | workshop exhibition development
CHRYSALIS mixed patterns of invention
a jazzy assignment: homework 1) collect two of your favourite pictures.
2) collect two of your favourite words in addition.
(everything, words and images, should be chosen ad libitum)
3) present your collection at the start of the workshop.
time will be short: six days. perhaps too short for any design effort.
therefore, it isn’t about design. it is about invention. we’ll try to think as wildly as we can. reaching as far as we may. intensive
preparation therefore, is unavoidable and important. so, please, collect your images and your words.
for some reason all of it should be fascinating on a personal level. it might be photographs you shot yourself, even selfies.
it may be copied photographs from magazines. anything, as long as the visuals relate to your personal world.
please bring along your pictures and words in print. digital representations on laptops will be useless.
we’ll work with the printed series, recombine them and ask questions. what chains of association are embedded in your private collection? research the dna of your material.
invent intriguing, hybrid words to them. what’s the narrative potential of it all?
what metaphor may convey that potential? shape or think that metaphor
that’s our short workshop
!
frank den oudsten | 10-15 november 2017, 3
danube university krems | workshop exhibition development
CHRYSALIS polysemantic operations
a jazzy Assignment: 2 WORDS + 2 IMAGES
The process is SIMPLE.
Everyone collects two favorite, found words, or generates two assembled hybrid terms and thinks for themselves how the words or terms could be exhibited as
WORD-IMAGE-ART. The chosen terms can be unrelated. Similarly, you collect two personally important, meaningful pictures, photographs, reproductions, which are also chosen purely intuitively and unrelated (also from the picture). The participants at the workshop should bring the two words and the two pictures (this is important for our
starting position) at the beginning in print (Din A4 or A3.) The material should therefore be presented physically on paper and not stored on the laptop. With these
personal collections of the participants, we are going to construct succinct NEIGHBORHOODS at the beginning of the workshop, looking for the ultimate series of pictures and the ultimate DREAM-PHRASE to generate a narrative potential for the
forthcoming transformation in the studio. The metamorphosis takes place in the workshop in a process of continuous transformation and recombination.
This engages in a serious poly-semantic method, only loosely implemented.
The material is basically free. The scale is naturally free-flowing.
The poly-semantic does not have any finite references.
frank den oudsten | 10-15 november 2017, 4
danube university krems | workshop exhibition development
CHRYSALIS the pupa of the exhibition
| |
128 HOURS THINKSPACE > one INTERVAL
PROGRAM
||
pressure cooker||
DAY 1
FRIDAY 10.11.2017
INTRODUCTIONS: PERSONAL, GROUP WORKSHOPLECTURE 1 THE NOTION OF DRAMATURGY
LUNCH
WORKSHOP: COMPILING A COLLECTION SETTING UP A MATRIX
INVENTING A NARRATIVE
DAY 2
SATURDAY 11.11.2017
TEAM ISSUES / QUESTIONS+ANSWERSBREAKDOWN OF MAJOR SEMANTIC ELEMENTS
LUNCH
DEFINING THE EXHIBITION IN TERMS OF DESIGN 15.00-17.00: FIRST INVENTIONS AND VISUALIZATIONS
INDIVIDUAL PRESENTATIONS OF SYNOPSESWORKING AND MENTORING INDIVIDUALLY
frank den oudsten | 10-15 november 2017, 5
danube university krems | workshop exhibition development
DAY 3, 4, 5
SUNDAY, MONDAY, TUESDAY 12-14.11.2017
TEAM ISSUES / QUESTIONS+ANSWERS
WORKING AND MENTORING INDIVIDUALLY
LUNCH
WORKING AND MENTORING INDIVIDUALLY
STATE OF THINGS / INDIVIDUAL PRESENTATIONS
DAY 6
WEDNESDAY 15.11.2017
TEAM ISSUES / QUESTIONS+ANSWERS
ETTING UP EXHIBITION IN KUNSTMEILE
LUNCH
ADDING LIGHT + FINE TUNING LAYOUT
INTERNAL ROUND OF CRITIQUE AND COMMENTARY
OPENING OF EXHIBITION / APERO
|||
REFERENCES / LITERATURE
Samuel Beckett, Essay on Proust, 1931 Antonin Artaud, The Theatre and its Double, 1938 James
Joyce, Finnegans Wake, 1939 Claude Lévy-Strauss, The Savage Mind, 1962
Marshall McLuhan, Understanding Media, 1964 Peter Brook, The Empty Space, 1968 Roland Barthes, Camera Lucida, 1980
Marshall McLuhan, The Global Village, 1989 Brian O’Doherty, Inside the White Cube, 1999
Bazon Brock, Lustmarsch durchs Theoriegelände, 2007 Frank den Oudsten, Space.Time.Narrative, Ashgate, 2012
+ + +
frank den oudsten | 10-15 november 2017, 6