Sångaren på den tomma spelplatsen - en poetik. Att gestalta Gilgamesheposet och sånger av John Dowland och Evert Taube
Abstract
The aim of this doctoral project is to explore an expanded role of the singer in an artistic field
situated between poetry, theatre, music and reflection. The project consists of three parts:
Firstly, three performances of songs and poetry: (a) Me, Me and None but Me!, a blank-verse
monologue connecting songs of John Dowland, (b) Gilgamesh – The Man Who Refused to
Die, a musical version of the Babylonian Gilgamesh Epic, and (c) The Poet and Time, interpretations of works by the Swedish chansonier Evert Taube. As artistic methods, I use the
Shakespearean traditions described in Peter Brook’s The Empty Space. Within these traditions,
scenic communication is established using verbal imagery instead of a stage set. Secondly, a thesis, where I describe the working process of the performances as a series of problem-solving. I also compare my performances to performances by contemporary artists. In the thesis, I also apply a method of inquiry in which I use the Orpheus myth as a means of understanding the expanded role of the singer. Thirdly, a film by Lars Westman. The DVD contains excerpts from the performances and interviews with me, conducted by Westman and by the Norwegian singer and researcher Astrid Kvalbein.
The results of my research are firstly manifest in the performances themselves. Secondly, the written descriptions articulate a synthesis of artistic knowledge which has not previously
been collected in one publication. Thirdly, the comparing of the Dowland performance
with other performances constitutes a mapping of new forms of presenting lieder on a national
level. The comparison with a Palestinian Gilgamesh performance gives new knowledge
about how Western theatrical traditions are combined with Arabian storytelling tradition
in an international context. Fourthly, the Taube performance implies new results in literary scholarship. Finally, the inquiries into the use of the Orpheus myth show that the mythic figure can be seen as an embodiment of “knowing-in-action”. Thus, the thesis establishes
a link between practice-based research and mythology as embodied knowledge.
Degree
Doctor of Philosophy
University
Göteborgs universitet. Konstnärliga fakulteten
University of Gothenburg. Faculty of Fine, Applied and Performing Arts
Institution
Academy of Music and Drama ; Högskolan för scen och musik
Disputation
Lördagen den 29 maj 2010, kl 13.00, Schildknechtteatern (Teater 2), Högskolan för scen och musik, Artisten, Fågelsången 1, Göteborg
Date of defence
2010-05-29
sven.kristersson@mhm.lu.se
Date
2010-04-23Author
Kristersson, Sven
Keywords
Orpheus
empty space
performance
song
verse
Evert Taube
Gilgamesh
John Dowland
Publication type
Doctoral thesis
ISBN
978-91-977758-9-2
Series/Report no.
ArtMonitor
20
Language
swe