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Scenographic Design Drawing: Performative Drawing in an Expanded Field [Hardback]

(UNSW Art and Design, Australia)
  • Formāts: Hardback, 288 pages, height x width x depth: 236x160x24 mm, weight: 740 g, 21 bw illus and 8pp colour plate section
  • Sērija : Drawing In
  • Izdošanas datums: 14-Jan-2021
  • Izdevniecība: Bloomsbury Visual Arts
  • ISBN-10: 135016853X
  • ISBN-13: 9781350168534
  • Hardback
  • Cena: 101,78 €*
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  • Formāts: Hardback, 288 pages, height x width x depth: 236x160x24 mm, weight: 740 g, 21 bw illus and 8pp colour plate section
  • Sērija : Drawing In
  • Izdošanas datums: 14-Jan-2021
  • Izdevniecība: Bloomsbury Visual Arts
  • ISBN-10: 135016853X
  • ISBN-13: 9781350168534

This enlightening study explores the set design drawings for theatre and live performance, highlighting their unique qualities within the greater arena of drawing practice and theory. The latest volume in the Drawing In series, Scenographic Design Drawing encourages an interdisciplinary dialogue in the field of drawing with the inclusion of illustrations throughout.

Scenographic design drawings visualize the images in the designer's 'mind's eye' early in the design process. They are the initial design tool in the creative engagement with theatre, opera, dance, and non-text-based performance. It is, in particular, this body of drawings that is unique as both a performative and a theatrical representation of multiple worlds within the 'stage space'. Sue Field illuminates this illustration process and identifies how these drawings have functioned and developed over time.

Scenographic Design Drawing serves to satisfy an emerging global curiosity and a thirst for new knowledge and understanding in relation to the drawings executed by the historical and contemporary scenographer. This work addresses a critical research gap and shows how the scenographic design drawing continues to be a principal site of innovation, subjectivity, originality and authorship in theatre and live performance.

Recenzijas

Sue Field reveals the astute savant she is through this well researched examination of theatrical drawings. She has captured the zephyr that emerges when a designers marks on paper transmit to the viewer the soul of a theatrical work. Line by line and blotch by blotch, Field interprets a lineage of theatre drawings to generate a visual awakening in the viewer. Exploring the semiotics of imagery and layered revelation in the picture plane, Fields own drawings vibrate with compositional and graphic tension, where the viewer is asked to link metaphor, memory and meaning. -- Peter Cooke, Carnegie Mellon University, USA Dr Sue Fields passionate publication contains informed opinions and images about ideas, speculations and creative outputs of the scenographer whose often implicit knowledge is made explicit and known and then interrogated by the author. The result of this is a comprehensive account of the recent historical and theoretical insights into scenography and the value and potential of this very particular type of drawing. This book creates a new lens on the primacy of drawing and we begin to see something familiar yet excitingly different. -- Vaughan Dai Rees, UNSW, Australia Sue Fields detailed study of scenographic design drawing presents a rich seam of analysis, shining a spotlight on the relationship between drawing, visualisation and embodied practice in contemporary design for performance. Referencing historical scholarship, the established tropes of scenography, and its reinvention in a post physical age, drawing is recast here as an autonomous thinking tool in the building of worlds. -- Paul Fieldsend-Danks, Plymouth College of Art, UK

Papildus informācija

Focusing on set design drawings for theatre and live performance, this book highlights their creative purpose and explores how they have functioned and developed over time.
List of Illustrations
viii
Acknowledgments xii
Introduction 1(20)
1 Drawn behind the Fourth Wall
21(42)
Scenography
22(2)
Worlding Theory
24(4)
Scenographic Design Drawing
28(4)
The Thinking Drawing
32(6)
The Scenographic Thinking Drawing
38(5)
The Peacham Drawing
43(1)
The Exploratory Rehearsal Drawing
44(4)
The Digital Presentational Drawing
48(3)
The Performative Scenographic Design Drawing
51(1)
Performative
52(3)
Anti-theatricality
55(2)
Theatricality
57(6)
2 Creating a Scene
63(36)
The Second Scenographic Turn
65(3)
Natalia Goncharova: Le Coq d'Or, 1914
68(4)
Pablo Picasso: Parade, 1917
72(6)
Dorothea Tanning: The Night Shadow, 1946
78(6)
The Ballet Russes in Australia, 1936-40
84(1)
Arthur Boyd: Elektra, 1963
85(5)
The Playful Aesthetic of David Hockney
90(6)
A Glimpse into the Past
96(3)
3 Staging Architecture
99(32)
Norman Bel Geddes
100(3)
Frederick John Kiesler
103(7)
Elizabeth Diller and Ricardo Scofidio: The Slow House (1989)
110(8)
Aldo Rossi
118(7)
Frank Gehry
125(6)
4 Drawn to Perform
131(30)
An Emergent Field: Expanded Drawing
134(2)
Gosia Wlodarczak
136(1)
The Performative Scenographic Design Drawing
137(3)
William Kentridge
140(7)
Gabriela Tylesova
147(4)
DanPotra
151(2)
1927 Suzanne Andrade and Paul Barritt
153(8)
5 The Drawn Absence
161(34)
The Field of Post-dramatic Theatre
162(3)
Punchdrunk
165(2)
Huis Clos
167(2)
The "Look" as an Action of Grasping
169(3)
The Voyeuristic Gaze of the Theatre-Going Spectator
172(1)
No Exit (2017)
172(2)
Definition of Presence
174(1)
An Absent Presence in No Exit (2017)
175(4)
The Video No Exit
179(2)
The Scale Scenographic Model
181(4)
Theatricality in No Exit
185(1)
The "Room of Imagination" and the "Room of Memory"
186(1)
The Set Model of the Hypothetical mise-en-scene within the Black Model Box
187(1)
The Model as an Epistemic Tool
188(1)
The Hybrid Genre: The Drawn Absence
189(6)
6 Drawn into the Future
195(32)
The Simultaneity of the Image
196(3)
Digital Scenography and Worlding Theory
199(3)
Digital Scenography
202(6)
The Digital Drawing
208(5)
The Freehand Thinking Drawing
213(5)
Authorship, Authenticity, and Autograph
218(6)
Drawn to the End
224(3)
Notes 227(9)
References 236(15)
Index 251
Sue Field is a researcher at UNSW Art and Design, Australia, and a lecturer in the School of Architecture at the University of Technology, Australia. Sue has an exemplary history of working in the performing arts industry. She has extensive experience in scenographic design, lecturing and teaching, practice-based education and research, and is a practitioner in expanded drawing as an art practice. She has written scholarly papers for journals, national and international conferences, and has published academic book chapters. She was awarded a Doctor of Philosophy (PhD) from the University of New South Wales, Australia, in 2018.