Performances
Marking the 10th anniversary of Homo Novus, we have gathered 11 Latvian artists from various genres for a production of new small scale performances, installations or actions. These works will be based in the British theatre scholar Alan Read’s theory of “theatre as the last human venue” and structured as an event, unified in time and space.
In his book ‘Theatre, Intimacy and Engagement’, Alan Read writes: “The last human venue marks the location and moment of human beings’ awareness of their own eventual extinction. Performance, on the contrary, explores ways in which performance operates as an exciter of sentience, kick-starting our sense of being alive, acting as a pleasurable lengthening of device to extend our inevitable faith. Humans in this venue distinguish themselves from other animals through their experiencing of an extended childhood, in their ability to sustain a controlled, unbroken outward breath and by their unique capacity to aesthetically disappoint.”
‘The Last Human Venue’ programme includes performances by theatre directors Pēteris Krilovs, Vladislavs Nastavševs and Valters Sīlis, and the exhibition by directors Andrejs Jarovojs, Viesturs Meikšāns, set designers Monika Pormale, Izoldes Cēsniece, Reinis Suhanovs, fashion designers MAREUNROL’S and artistic collectives Nomadi and umka.lv.
L'Effet de Serge
6 September 19:00 | Latvian Railway history museum | 7 and 5* Ls
This performance by the French director and scenographer Philippe Quesne takes the format of a living room drama. Every Sunday Serge entertains his friends with a parade of homespun spectacles, animating everything around his basement and putting some magic back into their lives. With a nod to Jacques Tati, Samuel Beckett and Mr Bean, ‘L’Effet de Serge’ is a haunting and humorous tribute to the imagination and necessity of making art.
“His universe may be small, his rituals seem ordinary, but L’Effet de Serge will make you love the world a little more.”
L’Effet de Serge is one of teh best known performances by Vivarium Studio and has been embraced by audiences across 20 countries.
About artist
Philippe Quesne was born in 1970 and studied visual arts, graphic design and set design in Paris. After ten years as s set designer for opera, concerts, theatre performances, and contemporary art exhibitions, in 2003 he created Vivarium Studio in Paris, a laboratory for theatrical innovation which features painters, actors, dancers, musicians and a dog. The performances of Philippe Quesne / Vivarium studio showcase simple yet fantastic images – an improvised amusement park in a deserted snowy landscape, explorers in potted plant jungles that re-enact the Big Bang, or a thirty-year-old Serge playing in his apartment with a toy car that draws circles with a sparkler. In his creations a childlike amazement in front of the magic of theater meets with a gentle melancholy about the limitations of mankind.
Vivarium Studio best known works include D’aprés Nature (2006), L’Effet de Serge (2007), La Mélancolie des Dragons (2008), Big Bang (2010).
Credits
Author, director and scenographer: Philippe Quesne
Cast: Gaëtan Vourc’h, Isabelle Angotti, Rodolphe Auté and local guests
Producer: Vivarium Studio
Co-producer: Menagerie de Verre Paris
Supported by: Le Forum – scene conventionnee de Blanc-Mesnil and Festival actOral montevideo – Marseille
6
September
19:00
7 and 5*
Lats
Language
No text
Duration
1 h 15min
Address
Website
Supported by
* Ticket price for pupils, students, seniors