Abstract
ABSTRACT: This essay discusses the experimental theatre of Robert Whitman who, in 1960, turned toward performance with the sensibility of a process-oriented painter and sculptor. More specifically, it addresses the role that perception plays in both the creation and the reception of three of his less often studied performances: Architecture (1972), Northern Dark (1987), and, more recently, Passport (2011). As part of a larger intermedia trend in American art of the 1950s and early 1960s to create audio-visual “Happenings” that seek to “intensify” and “renew perceptual experience,” these postdramatic event-structures interweave film into complex imagistic sequences that are both felt and understood cognitively, live and mediated. In a discussion of the remedial intent implicit in Whitman’s theatre of vision, termed a “theatre of images” by Bonnie Maranca, the article relies on early American process philosophy to clarify the nature and the effects of embodied experience that these works seek to elicit.
Publisher
University of Toronto Press Inc. (UTPress)
Subject
Literature and Literary Theory
Reference44 articles.
1. Baker, George. “The Anti-Images of Robert Whitman.” Cooke, and Kelly 114-42.
Cited by
1 articles.
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