Porous Bodies – A dialogue on festival curating (original) (raw)

The Institutional Practices of a Festival

Taking as my starting point the assumption that art is a social practice, and how it is made and perceived is always determined by the socio-political and economic context, I would like to propose that a festival be regarded as an art institution – and consider the implications of that perspective. The political ontology of the festival; the political and economic entanglements of curatorial practices; economic (self-)censorship and its recent manifestations at theatre festivals in Poland will be the main facets of my study. I will also enquire about how the festival today can be ‘taken over’, regained a space for critical activity. My consideration of the institutional practices of present-day festivals will be based on my own experiences as a curator; they will also be situated in the context of practicable institutional-critical activity as proposed by Gerald Raunig, and take as their point of reference the concept of an institution as a common good. The concept of the ‘performativeness of the art world’ formulated by Ana Vujanovic will be of primary importance to my study.

The Artful Narrative of Anthropological Festivals: View from the Baltics

Film Festivals and Anthropology, 2017

This chapter examines a creative tension that ethnographic film festival programmers contend with in the process of curating their programmes. I will argue that ethnographic film festival curatorship is characterised by a paradoxical relationship, which reproduces a stable discourse of “anthropological cinema”, at the same time as it contests it. I will argue that these two approaches to the film festival do not represent a schizophrenic or negative paradox. Rather, the practice of curating a successful programme–one that ensures its continuity and contribution to the discourse–is the art of engaging with the simultaneous articulation of these contrasting perspectives.

A Global Crisis in a Contested Space: Curating the Buffer Fringe Performing Arts Festival 2020

Acotaciones, 2021

The article aims to examine the interconnectedness between a global health crisis and a performing arts festival, within a contested space. The COVID 19 global health crisis interacted with the geography of Cyprus and Nicosia, a space defined by its separating line, in the context of the Buffer Fringe Performing Arts Festival 2020. As a result, part of the theatrical praxis has come to be re-defined based on the new emergency of the global health crisis. It has reframed much of the praxis that rests in the gap between a political act and an interventionist practice. The article firstly presents the curatorial approach as that emerged from the 2019 Festival with the interplay between methodology and content, leading to the formulation and implementation of the 2020 festival as a physical and digital event in the midst of the pandemic. The maneuvering through the limitations of the health crisis, fostered processes of newly formulating the Open Call, cancelling and postponing, creating new norms and conditions to maintain the inclusive character of the Festival and create new audiences, resulted in the redefining the contested space itself, and the notions of the ‘marginal’, the ‘stranger’ and the ‘other’ in Cyprus, as well as part of the digital and international dimensions of the Festival. Resumen (Spanish) : El artículo tiene como objetivo examinar la interconexión entre una crisis sanitaria mundial y un festival de artes escénicas, dentro de un espacio en disputa. La crisis de la COVID 19 interactuó con la geografía de Chipre y Nicosia, un espacio definido por su línea de separación, en el contexto del Buffer Fringe Performing Arts Festival 2020. Como resultado, parte de la práxis teatral ha vuelto a ser redefinida a partir de la nueva emergencia de la crisis sanitaria mundial. Se ha reformulado gran parte de la práxis que reposa en la brecha entre un acto político y una práctica intervencionista. El artículo examina en primer lugar el enfoque curatorial que surgió del Festival 2019 con la interacción entre metodología y contenido, lo que llevó a la formulación e implementación del festival 2020 como un evento físico y digital en medio de la pandemia. La gestión debido a las limitaciones de la crisis de salud propició procesos de reformulación de la convocatoria, cancelando y posponiendo, creando nuevas normas y condiciones para mantener el carácter inclusivo del Festival y crear nuevas audiencias, lo que resultó en una redefinición del espacio de disputa en si mismo, y las nociones de 'el marginal', ' el extrangero' y 'el otro' en Chipre, asi como en parte de la dimensión digital e internacional del Festival.

Festival's Soul in the City's Body

Performative Study of Theatre Festival Fringe 2012 Searching for a theatre which merges the festival soul in the central stream of the city, providing a multi-layered challenge for spectators with the city’s body and the present time, there are a few altered preview performances. They walk in the real streets, merge with the existing reality and pierce the real life going on. They superimpose a new layer to the urban space, and create a Foucault heterotopian space, something in between theatre and reality.

Enter Here: Emergent Dramaturgies and the Civic Role of an Arts Festival

Illusions: New Zealand Moving Image and Performing Arts Criticism, 2012

This article concerns itself with two local works that premiered in the recent New Zealand International Arts Festival (NZIAF): Jenny McLeod’s Hōhepa, performed and produced by NBR New Zealand Opera and The Conch’s Masi which featured a large cast including actors, Fijian dancers, a masi maker, a vocalist and a team of animators. The works were both exciting yet I was left wanting more. On the one hand they proposed new dramaturgies distinctive to the local, yet on the other neither allowed full entry into their respective worlds (for me, at least). As I reflected on the performances, issues of space, context and what we expect of large-scale festival works arose. Do new dramaturgies and new aesthetics need new spaces? How might audiences be incorporated within these spaces? Given the continuing predominance of the proscenium, do we need to more carefully scrutinize the values and aesthetics encoded within it? Whilst I do not wish to suggest that any problems within the works can be attributed to the Festival itself, which is to be applauded for its role in supporting such significant new New Zealand works, I do propose that there is an important relationship and tension between the model and values of the Festival and emergent forms that is worth addressing.

A film bacchanal: Playfulness and audience sovereignty in San Sebastian Horror and Fantasy Film Festival

2016

The focus of this essay is a medium-sized festival that has had an essential role in determining the character of cult film fandom in Spain: San Sebastian Horror and Fantasy Film Festival (SSHFFF). Since its opening in 1989, SSHFFF has become generally known by the fans of the genre for the participatory and intentionally annoying behaviour of the audience during the theatrical screenings. Since survival has been the main concern of many Spanish festivals after their problematic proliferation in the 2000s (Mesonero Burgos) this essay examines the aspects that may have contributed to the event remaining a city council managed event regardless of its rather endogamic profile. In order to evaluate the importance of the audience performance in catalysing the festival's permanence, the essay focuses on how the audience enacts a playful and highly restricted protocol to negotiate with the organisers. In particular I am going to use the concept of play as a key cultural category to und...

Festivalisation of cultural production

The growth in arts festivals that has taken place since the 1990s has changed the structure of the cultural market place. Based on interviews and discussions with festival directors and arts producers, participant observation as a producer and audience member, primarily in the UK, together with examples from the literature, this paper explores the question of whether festival aesthetics and the particularities of festival production and exhibition are changing the nature of the work that is being produced in response to festivalisation. It identifies a number of dimensions of the festival experience, commissioning, spectacularisation, thematic programming, immersion and participation, that are increasingly prevalent in the performing and visual arts being produced for non-festival settings. This festivalisation of culture poses new challenges and offers different opportunities to artists, producers and audiences to make innovative kinds of work that wouldn't have been possible within the hitherto standard production models.