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SWARM>IN MINDS: Games and ambitions

Drucken

ON THE PITFALLS OF CREATIVITY WITH THEATER IM BAHNHOF AND PEEPING TOM

By Katherina Zakravsky


I. GAMES

The game is a close companion of dance and performance at least since Xavier Le Roy played his mysterious and extended games in "E.X.T.E.N.S.I.O.N.S." in Hans Ulrich Obrist's groundbreaking "Laboratorium" in Antwerp 1999. Playing games fit the appetite for structural transparency and conceptual clarity. The game is the sibling of "conceptual dance". This is our legacy of the nineties, both well established and a bit contested by now.

As the piece "Project" (2003) is proof of a certain proximity between performance and game but also a profound contradiction. Games are for participants, not spectators. One has to know the rules to follow the process. Usually, staying outside is not really fun. What is more important though: games have the temporal structure of repetition and variation. In "Project" the performers are playing one ball game. To watch it, however, does not provide the fun one is used to when watching a game as it is a set choreography. There is no tension about the unpredictable element of the game. There is no insecurity about who is going to win.

So the common dominator could be the art of improvisation. If performers improvise they can play a real game and create a performance at the same time. Thus the performance is brought together with the risky element of competition. By playing a game the performers themselves become stakes in the performance game. When human interaction with all its vague mixtures of flirt, competition and collaboration is blended with the formal structures of the game, we are entering risky and very contemporary territory. "Big Brother" and the ubiquitous media craze of "voting out" are right around the corner.

All those elements and problems could be observed in Helmut Köpping's workshop "Kreation Kollektiv". Köpping of the "Theater im Bahnhof" in Graz, Austria, is obviously an experienced master of playing games.

A Zen master of games

It is the second day, I am a little late. First I'm watching without getting the rules. It feels a little bit like watching Le Roy's games in 1999, playing football backwards, but also far more mysterious games with people lifting arms and shouting "one" without me having a clue what that means. It is just plainly obvious that one of the three men in the large group takes body contact as an opportunity to hunt after some of the women. A lot of giggling is to be heard. Köpping is standing at the side of the dance floor, watching attentively like a referee. After a while he stops the game and says: "You can find an organic end or destroy the game. After a while it comes back."

He is a true Zen master of games. When everyone suddenly lines up as if following a command he is not too happy. He introduces another game that looks like a popular partner exercise to create trust between two strangers. One has the eyes closed and turns as the other one moves around him/her. Yet the idea is not so much to focus on this exercise but to juxtapose it with the other game to let one game develop from the other. Köpping gives the games names which he utters slowly and thoughtfully. And he knows all the participants' names. He has seen enough of the "Focus Jump" game and moves on to another one. The game does not need to reach a climax; it can also be stopped by decision. And the little confusion between one game and another game should be considered like a gift. The master is right: in the periods of confusion the participant becomes a performer proper. Where there is confusion there is conflict of thoughts, conflict of emotions – the classical breeding ground of drama. So he speaks as a theatre pro when he says "Invest in little confusions." What a shame that it hardly happened.

The danger of plastic water bottles

After a while Köpping proposes the game "It is about …" Every participant occupies an area on the dance floor and proclaims a topic or an idea for a potential evening. The game could resemble the public manifestation of political speech but it turns out to look rather like an exercise in marketing. Four groups compete with repeated shouting of their titles and accompanying gestures. Well, the participants are young; still it is a bit odd that when asked to represent any idea they like the outcome are things like "meeting people with red underwear" or "the danger of plastic water bottles". Once there is no predefined content there is an overwhelming tendency towards the banal. Finally people propose the idea of "getting higher" and climb on each others' shoulders in a funny display of fake acrobatics. Here we see at least a metaphor at work.

Finally Köpping digs deeper into the uncanny territory of a society competing for spectacles. Just like in a talent show everyone has to present an act, be it singing, moving, talking or doing nothing at all. The group watching the small solo is asked to raise arms as soon as they have seen enough. Once half of the arms are up, the star of the moment has to leave the stage. Needless to say, no one survived 15 minutes – hardly anyone. This is a very tricky game as the contemporary's attention span is very short no matter what is being served to him. The sensation of change will always be more attractive than any single act. The TV practice of zapping has shaped an impatient sense of timing. But what does it mean to zap live performers? Is it a simple exercise in contemporary cruelty and consumer's attitude?

In the beginning, when one male participant proposed several animals and did not survive two, I thought so; when another female participant tried a half-hearted strip singing some sleazy music and was immediately voted out it was a small surprise. It soon became obvious that anything too predictable could not survive. The winners were an act of reciting classical prose combined with a quite professional falling sequence that probably was an extract of a piece and a concentrated, slightly acrobatic act with a chair. Professionalism still wins. Or, as another long survivor proved, just standing there and doing nothing. But in an intense way.

A sobering lesson about decision making

People took the tough competition with good humour. And the calm matter-of-fact discussion afterwards took the brutal edge off the game. Reflecting their criteria of voting out they noticed hat predictability is the killer; also anyone who showed his/her eagerness for recognition too clearly became unpopular. After all, we live in an age of the commodity being staged like a capricious lady. So also a performer who does not give a shit about the audience's attention is the bigger success. And they admitted that once a lot of arms were up they just joined in the crowd, following the herd. This teaches a sobering lesson about the relevance of decision making through temporal majorities. And about the timid beginnings of a potential lynch mob.

What do games deliver for the creation of contemporary dance and performance pieces? They pave the common ground for spectacle and competition. The workshop taught interesting lessons between Zen-like performance wisdom and a contemporary instinct for marketing and media. What it could not demonstrate on that day is the art of making creation actually collective (and not competitive).

II. AMBITIONS

If any company working in Belgium is calling people come. Belgium still is dance wonderland. Even a relatively fresh company like "Peeping Tom" attracts a crowd of young attractive dancers of every ethnicity. This time there are about as many boys as girls. There are also a number of Asian dancers; Spanish and French can be heard, too.

Gabriela Carrizo and Franck Chartier are a couple and follow the workshop accompanied by their little daughter. It is the last day. Already during the warm-up for the final improvisation, Chartier starts to act as DJ – a role he will stick to for the rest of the time. After a short statement to thank the dancers for the intense week – "we received a lot" – he will only intervene to end a group impro of about two hours. While everyone stretches and rolls around on the floor an aria is being played in full blow.

No average pop or electro there. Arias of Italian opera, piano and organ pieces, marimba jazz, a remix of a famous African work song and soft Asian ambient form the sound carpet of the gigantic group improvisation. While classical music fills the room a couple of dancers start little solos absolutely not on the beat. A woman pulls up her braid and starts walking in squares. It is funny how the pure pressure to improvise without any rules or themes makes people behave like animals in a zoo; they take refuge in stereotypical behaviour; one such stereotype in contemporary dance being wild shaking; we will get to see a lot of hysteric shaking while the room is filling up with spectators.

From an outcry of Modernity to a motto of Postmodernity

Slowly people are getting their acts together. A Spanish dancer with longer hair, obviously an alpha animal, shows a nice little number on a chair he then puts behind a curtain to have his personal resting place; later he will be gathering people for a little drama with wooden cigars. Another young dancer with curly hair starts a slow tentative disco dance. He stops and comes back to continue. A female Asian dancer is contorted and walks on the sides of her feet in a basic Butoh gesture. It is a game of trial and error. One of the shakers adds talking to moving; his voice is shaking, too. The slow disco dancer adds an imaginary partner to his melancholic slow waltz.

It has been a long way from Friedrich Nietzsche's radical outcry of Modernity "Everything is permitted yet nothing is possible", to the contemporary motto of Postmodernity "Anything goes, nothing works." With time comes the obligatory self-reference. A woman standing next to a shaking guy shouts: "Do something more extreme!" In the second half, solos are extended to duos and group scenes; still in decent formal boundaries. They are riding each other's backs till they drop.

Suddenly Tom Waits is singing. Everything is getting more desperate, both the mood and the quality of the music. We see the first ones undressing to their underwear. In the third part self-reflexion is turning to heavy duty existential topics. There is sort of a rape scene and a woman is crying: "This is not a performance, this is for real!" A second intercourse will be more harmonious. A small Asian dancer grabs a rope hanging from a bucket fixed in the ceiling. He makes a noose and puts his head in. Sex gives way to suicide. It's about the art of topping each other; outshine each other with drastic acts. He has a comical talent and balances on toes on the edge of the chair. He is only millimetres away from swinging free. For a few seconds he does, holding on to the rope. Officially we are all good formalists, but when it comes to making an impression it's the return of the heavy content. Of course with the ironic blink of an eye.

Self-marketing and creativity in the age of new virtuosity

No wonder the whole lengthy thing ends on the note of the proverbial apple of sin being handed from mouth to mouth. And the small Belgian family is watching the show in silence. A thought starts dawning on me when I observe the first glimpses of bare skin, the first expressive cries and forced comical acts. This is not a regular workshop. There is just too much ambition in the room. I ask them afterwards if it also was a secret audition. Well, it was. They are looking for performers. They also said so. And a workshop is a more relaxed way than a stressful audition. One could claim. Still, this double-booking is a bit tricky, and a sign of the times. Exploitation, self-marketing and creativity are blurring into each other in the age of new "virtuosity" (Paolo Virno) – and dance and performance are not an exception, they are the role model.

When being asked if they know the then radical film "Peeping Tom" starring the no longer ambitious actor Karlheinz Böhm in the part of a heavily disturbed killer – he had nothing to lose, he was about to start a new career – they declared loving Sissy. Well, Romy Schneider, not the empress.

 

Workshops:
Helmut Köpping: Kreation Kollektiv (Day 2)
Gabriela Carrizo & Franck Chartier: The Process Of Creation (Day 5)

Quotes:
Xavier le Roy: E.X.T.E.N.S.I.O.N.S. (Antwerp 1999); "Project" (TQW 2003)
Paolo Virno: Grammar of the Multitude (2004)
Michael Powell: Peeping Tom (GB, 1960)


(August 21, 2008)