Tuesday, October 25, 2016

Centaur 2016 - Chlorine


Centaur's Brave New Looks Series
October 19 - 29, 2015

Written and choreographed by FLORENCE LONGPRÉ & NICOLAS MICHON 

The play is based on the true case of a woman in Mascouche, Quebec. When she was 8 years old, two boys forced her to swallow chlorine, which resulted in her being paralysed from neck down. She could only communicate by opening and closing her eyes.

The stage action takes place 10 years later, when the main character Sarah is 18 years old. Her father catches Nathan, a teenage boy, a neighbour, peeing on their lawn and forces him to make bi-weekly visits to his daughter. After some period of awkwardness, a friendship begins to form. It quickly becomes apparent that Nathan needs Sarah's company as much as she needs his visits. Suddenly, he discovers he has somebody he can talk to. He becomes a chatter box, telling Sarah about everything that happens to him, giving an impression of using her as a sounding board. Since the actor often recites his monologues facing the audience rather than Sarah, this additionally reinforces a therapeutic kind of set up, not unlike those in a psychiatrist's office where a patient is lying on a couch facing away from the silent doctor while externalizing his life, his inner perceptions, imagery, problems, and the dysfunctional family incidents, thus working towards the reintegration of his inner being. Since they are both just teenagers, the sexuality issues inevitably also come to the forefront.

The play has an unusual element that punctuates various scenes, delineating the passage of the time. Three ballerinas are "floating" through the story line to the score of the The Sound of Music and other tunes from that era. They are dressed in pink, Sarah's favourite colour. A spectator could question whether they are Sarah's invisible friends, her guardian angels, just a scenic device to elevate or dessipate the play's psychological tensions, or all of those elements simultaneously

The play masterfully portrays an unusual relationship that develops in the aftermath of a horrific bullying incident. It throws light on the issues that ensue, bringing forth the emotions, needs, and desires of a young quadriplegic girl, as well as those of a boy who becomes her friend. It is a sensitive story that goes to the core of this particular human situation. The playwrights, the play directors, and the actors all succeeded in creating an engaging onstage presentation that is comprehensive, striking, and emotional. It has the power to engage the audience, not leaving it indifferent.  

The play also has many off-stage elements. Though not physically enacted on the stage, the graphic narration of Sarah's bullying incident that left her severely disabled creates vivid pictures in the audience's minds, as do the colourful incidents from Nathan's life he eagerly describes to Sarah. Also, there are many stage elements that are simply hinted at and left to the audience's imagination. The stage backdrop shows a rural nature scenery, but except for the very first interaction on Sarah's parents' lawn, all subsequent action happens inside their house, on the ground floor or in the basement where Sarah has her room.

There are always many non actual, non graphic or physically enacted elements in any play, including Chlorine, that are understood, imagined, or hinted at. This is why I did not consider it necessary to have actors exhibit their private body parts to the audience. These types of contemporary theatre exhibitionistic tendencies, in my opinion, have now surpassed the initial desire to shock or to be of a special interest to the audience as something new or unusual. I would now tend to characterise them as trying to be "cutesy", believing it is still innovative and capable to make a special impact or attract more attention and audience's interest. In the case of Chlorine, I think it detracts from the sensitive presentation of the story line, and forces the audience into a voyeuristic situation whether they want it or not. If it were really necessary for the play's message to be completely graphic, why not show then Sarah's diaper in the incident where her parents are washing her? Why simply show only her bare behind? The diaper (pulled from behind her if she were lying facing the audience with the bare upper leg) would have brought home much more powerfully the true complexity of her situation. The same goes for the Nathan's character stage exhibitionist incident  which could have been omitted if his stage position was choreographed with much greater class and taste vis-a-vis the audience, additionally reinforcing a sense of intimacy between the two main characters. 

There is also another issue in the play: nobody has seen Sarah since her incident. Yet she is shown in a wheelchair and therefore could have been taken out for walks by her parents. Instead, her parents installed her in their basement. And since I presume there was no elevator in their regular family home (if there were one, she could have been taken out to their backyard or for walks), this would also imply she was not taken out of the house to see a doctor, or to a hospital, and there would have been quite a problem in case of an emergency, or fire. This either points to her parents' gross negligence, if that was the case in real life, or to the play's story line disregarding this issue.  

Play's Official Synopses
'Based on an actual event, the title refers to the bullying incident which led to Sarah’s paralysis: when she was eight, two boys forced her to swallow chlorine. The chemical crystals burned her vocal cords, making her only form of communication the opening and closing of her eyes. At the onset of the play, it’s been almost a decade since Nathan has seen her and as he makes his way drunkenly home from a school dance, he wonders what has become of the girl love, and ends finally, with redemption. Over the course of the teenagers’ friendship, Sarah’s parents come to realise the incident hasn't arrested the development of their daughter’s mind and heart and the carefree little girl who went about singing the soundtrack to “The Sound of Music” has grown into a woman with more mature needs and desires.’
The Creative Team


WRITTEN & CHOREOGRAPHED BY FLORENCE LONGPRÉ & NICOLAS MICHON
TRANSLATED & DIRECTED BY JOHANNA NUTTER
SET & COSTUME DESIGN BY CATHIA PAGOTTO
LIGHTING DESIGN AND TECHNICAL DIRECTION BY JODY BURKHOLDER SOUND DESIGN BY GABRIEL LAVOIE-VIAU

Cast:
CATHERINE LEMIEUX, LINDA SMITH, AUGUSTUS RIVERS, BRIAN WRIGHT

Ballerinas:
CATHERINE GONTHIER, MÉLANIE LEBRUN, ERIKA MORIN

For more information, visit the Centaur Theatre website.

Thursday, October 20, 2016

Biennale Montreal 2016 Open


Le Grand Balcon
Montreal's Biennale 2016 Now Open

October 19, 2016 - January  15, 2017

Le Grand Balcon was conceptualized and curated by Philippe Pirotte.
This intense and multifaceted artistic event comprises of the following:

55 artists and artistic collective groups,
25 Canadian artists 8 of which are from Quebec, 
35 new original works,
23 countries (Belgium, Cameroon, Canada, China, Egypt, France, Germany, Iran, Israel, Japan, Lebanon, Netherlands, New Zealand, Nigeria, Norway, Peru, South Africa, South Korea, Sweden, Switzerland, Turkey, United Kingdom and United States),
22 exhibition and program venues and local collaborations,
10 international coproductions,
4 publications


The main exhibition area is at the Montreal's Museum of Contemporary Art -MAC. However, during the opening days and until Sunday October 30, 2016 many more artistic happenings and performances are taking place. Please consult the Biennale Montreal 2016 website for all the events and schedules.


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Hover your mouse over images for description and credits.


For more information, visit the La Biennale de Montréal website. 


You can read more about the Biennale Montreal 2016 in my previous article here.

Saturday, October 08, 2016

Constellations

Centaur Theatre /48th Season
October 6 - 30, 2016

Play written by Nick Payne
Directed by Peter Hinton 

Centaur Theatre opens its 48th season with Constellations, the winner of the London’s Evening Standard Best Play Award. It is a tale of two people finding love in a theoretical quantum-physics multi-universes. The play made waves on both sides of the Atlantic: in London’s West End (2012), and on Broadway (2015). It was written by the British playwrite Nick Paine, and it is directed by the accomplished Canadian director Peter Hinton, the former Artistic Director of the NAC English Theatre and recent META nominee.

The main female character Maranne, a quantum physicist, formulates clearly the main premisses on which the play is based:
Marianne: In the quantum multiverse, every choice, every decision you’ve ever and never made exists in an unimaginably vast ensemble of parallel universes.

If you accept the theory of the multiverses, then you will be greatly amused with the variations and permutations of the characters' fragmented experiences and their reactions to them. You will see the physicist Marianne and the bee keeper Roland going on a journey through parallel worlds where they fall in, and sometimes out of love over and over again in a multitude of ways. Every choice creates a different, life-altering outcome in their relationship. 

Bit even if you do not believe in the theoretical multiverses, you will be amazed to discover what a myriad of possibilities each relationship presents, and how the variations on the way people choose to react to the reality or how they select to express their free will alter the outcome of their relationship and create different life scenarios. The play is a multifaceted, kaleidoscopic succession of episodes on how the same loving relationship could play out under different circumstances, or how it could be altered because of the personal choices the characters decide to make.

Whatever are your believes, keep in mind that the theory of multiverses is only a Quantum Mechanics theory, not a law like the Newton's Laws of Thermodynamics. Those theories have not yet been proven to become the physic's laws. Almost all theories are either significantly elaborated upon, changed, or totally discarded later on in the future.

Also consider what the spiritual mystics had claimed throughout the ages that multiverses do exist but are in the spiritual realms, and that we are all spiritual beings in control of our choices that are defined or even limited by the physical reality in which we exist. 

It is also interesting to note that in all 5 or 6 multiverses portrayed in the play, Marianne, regardless of her proclamations of infinite possibilities and outcomes in the different physical universes in which she firmly believes she simultaneously exists, develops brain tumour, and only in one of them it is benign. In all the other ones, it is the same type of spread-out multiple brain tumour from which the father of the playwrite Nick Payne died, and which is also going to lead to Marianne's death. Somehow, this does not appear to support too well the Marrianne's proclamations of the multiple possibilities with the multiple outcomes in the hypothetical multiverses. Even benign brain tumours continues to grow, are very difficult to operate, and eventually lead to death, though in a slower scenario than the cancerous ones.


There are only two actors on the stage with a cellist in the background who helps with the tonal accents to separate the fragmented episodes from different universes from each other, delineating the beginning and the end of each successive experience. The play is 85 minutes long without an intermission.  



Nick Payne wrote Constellations in the aftermath of his father’s death, after watching Brian Greene’s documentary The Elegant Universe, an exploration of the quantum mechanics theory which postulates the existence of eleven space-time dimensions. He described Constellations as a dramatized attempt to reconcile “the urge to remember versus the need to forget”.

Peter Hinton, the play's director, elaborated:
"Constellations is a play in which this science is explored through the varied possible lives of a single couple. As we follow Roland and Marianne through breaking up and staying together, moving in and going their separate ways, having affairs and monogamy, we also see romance interrupted and tested by death; it is a love story both celebrated and mourned.”


The Centaur Theatre’s Artistic and Executive Director Roy Surette stated this about the play:
“Constellations is the poster play for our “Swept Away” season slogan, transporting audiences from the world we know to multiple universes where this ordinary couple’s awkward, humorous and ultimately touching relationship develops in countless directions. We are proud to introduce this simple yet beautiful story to English Canada for the first time with our partners, Canadian Stage, and are so fortunate to have Peter direct. What a perfect artistic match in any universe! His vision is always innovative and surprising; and he’s put together a celestial group of artists." 

Graham Cuthbertson returns to Centaur as Roland, a somewhat awkward bee-keeper.

Cara Ricketts, a Toronto actress, makes her Centaur debut as a studious quantum physicist, Marianne. Cara’s previous credits include work with Soulpepper Theatre and several Stratford Festival seasons. She is also known for her role as Bertilda in the popular TV series, Book of Negroes.

Michael Gianfrancesco, who has designed for theatre, opera and dance across the country, as well as for both the Shaw and Stratford Festivals, created the sets and costumes. Andrea Lundy, a 9-time Dora Award-winner and 28-year theatre veteran, brought her considerable experience to the production’s lighting design. Centaur’s Audio Engineer, Peter Cerone, who has been designing for dance, theatre, art installations and more since 1980, contributed the sound design. Michael Hart, another Stratford alumnus who has worked with Peter Hinton several times, is the stage manager, assisted by Jacynthe Lalonde. Stephanie Costa assisted Mr. Hinton and Montreal performer, recording artist and teacher, Jane Chan, plays the cello live. 



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Hover your mouse over images for description and credits.

Production Team:

Actors Graham Cuthbertson and Cara Ricketts
Cellist Jane Chan
Set & Costume Designer Michael Gianfrancesco 
Lighting Designer Andrea Lundy
Sound Designer Peter Cerone
Fight Director Jean-François Gagnon
Stage Manager Michael Hart
Assistant Stage Manager Jacynthe Lalonde
Assistant to the Director Stephanie Costa

CHAT UP, IN COLLABORATION WITH MONTREAL GAZETTE:
Sunday October 9th at 12:30pm.
Free coffee and biscotti offered by Season Sponsor Bonaparte Restaurant.
Admission is FREE!

TALK BACKS:
Get behind the scenes with Constellations’ two actors after the evening performance on Thursday Oct. 13th and after the matinée on Sunday Oct. 16th.

For more information, visit the Centaur Theatre website.

Sunday, October 02, 2016

1700 La Poste - Claire Labonté

Claire Labonté
at 1700 La Poste

October 7 - December 18, 2016

Claire Labonté is a self-taught artist. Initially, her paintings which deployed minutely executed motifs across large surfaces were classified as naive art. However, over the years, her art evolved into an orchestrated complex imagery with a striking autopoiesis. As she explained herself, her paintings happen in the space after she dips her brush in a paint and before she makes the mark on the canvas. It is during this meditative instant where her works take shape and the imagery is conceived. Her imagery expresses her personal type of visual poetics, her unconscious sense of aesthetics, and not only her own but also the collective mythology that surrounds her. In addition, the colours she deploys are striking and vibrant, and project the sense of great energy and vitality. The colours play the major role in the propagation of her repetitive motives and painterly spots into a complex visual symphony of balance, harmony and meaning.




Her notion of a painting “making itself” reveal two involuntary constants in her art: the repetitive nature of her artistic process and the mythological dimension of the resulting works. In 2003, after twenty years of personal exploration and in-depth searching, she enrolled at a university to investigate the enigmatic mechanic-like and the unconscious nature of her work. She obtained the Bachelor of Philosophy and the Master of Fine Arts degrees, and came to view her repetitive creative process as being at the root of the mythological dimension of her artwork. In 2011, after completing a thesis on the mythical and ritualistic aspects of her paintings, she focused her pictorial research on the concepts of repetition and replication.



In 2013, in an effort to resist the mytho-narrative imagery that automatically introduced itself through the repetition or replication of her small touches of paint, Labonté created L’esthétique des contraintes à l’Orée des bois -The Aesthetic of Constraints at the Woods’ Edge (see the top-most image). With this work, she came to discover that the circumstances involved in the application of a touch of paint not only accounted for the mythical nature of her own paintings, but were fundamental to creative activity as such.


Claire Labonté's pairings could be easily discussed in conjunction with the Alfred Pellan's art who used extensively the repetitive elements and themes in his later works. This type of repetitive-imagery depictionthe complex visual rhythms that are conceived and portrayed, might even represent an artistic approach specific to some Quebec artists, and might stem from the Quebec's collective mythology.



Claire Labonté has participated in international exhibitions in Switzerland and France, including the fourth Biennale internationale d’art hors les normes in Lyon. She is the recipient of awards and grants from Switzerland, Québec, and the Canada Council for the Arts. Her murals have been integrated into the architecture of a number of public buildings.




Since 2008, Claire Labonté has exhibited primarily in Québec museums that have the necessary space to display her large and at times almost endlessly wide works that are perceived as being “murals.” 


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Hover your mouse over images for description and credits.

Watch the video about the Claire Labonté's exhibition at 1700 La Poste here.

1700 La Poste is a private space dedicated to visual arts. It presents events in the form of exhibitions and lectures. It is housed in a former Postal Station F, built in 1913, that was originally conceived by the architect David Jerome Spence. It is located in Montreal's Griffintown, 1700 Rue Notre-Dame West. The building was fully restored a century later, thanks to private financing from Isabelle de Mévius, and the vision of the architect Luc Laporte.

For more information, visit the 1700 La Poste website.
The admission to the exhibition if free of charge.