{"title":"国家艺术节(回顾)","authors":"April Sizemore-Barber","doi":"10.1353/tj.2024.a932175","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<span><span>In lieu of</span> an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:</span>\n<p> <span>Reviewed by:</span> <ul> <li><!-- html_title --> <em>National Arts Festival</em> <!-- /html_title --></li> <li> April Sizemore-Barber </li> </ul> <em>NATIONAL ARTS FESTIVAL</em>. Makhanda, South Africa. June 22-July 2, 2023. <p>For nearly half a century, South Africa’s National Arts Festival (NAF) has been the premier platform for the artistic state of the nation. Its most recent outing in 2023 marked a hearty post-pandemic rebound, with ticket sales doubling from the previous year’s initial tentative return to live performance. At the same time, COVID’s long interregnum also allowed the festival’s organizers to take stock and adjust the status quo, most notably by substantially curtailing the number of productions featured on the fringe program. This contraction marked a striking departure from the fringe’s previous centrality to the festival’s identity and branding as the second largest after Edinburgh’s. The decision was at its root pragmatic: plagued by years of nationwide rolling blackouts (also known as load-shedding) interrupting performances, the NAF would now limit all performances to venues with a backup generator. Nevertheless, this ethos of strategic contraction had a galvanizing effect on the eleven-day festival as a whole. In prioritizing smaller-scale, local stories and idioms over spectacle and size, the festival thrived with a tighter, more personal focus. Playing to its strengths of combining multiple forms and incubating new voices, 2023’s festival strikingly foregrounded work by Black feminist artists, often working in Indigenous languages.</p> <p>A broader trend toward responsive, genre-bending, site-specific performance was apparent in the work of the winners of the prestigious Standard Bank Young Artist Awards. Given a platform at the festival to execute their visions, the winning artists—and their work—provided a model for how constricted performance aesthetics can often inspire spatial reimagination. As an illustrative example, three of the six artists honored—all Black women—staged performance installations at the hulking Settlers Monument complex, a location where generators could be depended on to keep the lights on. Lady Skollie, an Indigenous artist of Khoi descent, used the apartheid-era arts center built to memorialize British colonizers to interrogate the absence of her ancestors from the historical and artistic record. Transforming the bowels of the building into an exhibition of Indigenous rock art, which has largely been destroyed in South Africa, <em>Groot Gat</em> (<em>Big Hole</em>) re-created cave art in situ. The result—referencing capitalist extraction in the famed Big Hole Kimberly diamond mine while also celebrating women’s vaginas as a creative force— served as a South African iteration of the Great Hole of History (introduced in Suzan-Lori Parks’s <em>The America Play</em>). Rather than depicting the artform as a static ethnographic relic, Skollie’s cave paintings vividly imagined a matriarchal origin story for the Khoi, South Africa’s original people.</p> <p>Several floors above <em>Groot Gat</em>, recording artist Msaki’s <em>Del’ukufa</em> (<em>Dare to Die</em>) spoke to a similar sense of displaced trauma. Playing to a packed audience in a single gallery, the intervention was the first in a series of site-specific public rituals that Msaki staged throughout the festival. Msaki circled and anointed a mound of red soil adorned by candles, crosses, and cattle skulls that evoked the colonial violence marking the Eastern Cape landscape. Her soaring soprano was accompanied by a musician on a straw mat and some smoldering imphepho herb, which is used in ancestral communication: <em>Ndiyozilanda!</em> (roughly, “I am returning to collect my things”). The visuals, sounds, and smells combined to take the audience on a multisensory metaphysical journey, all while standing still. The call evoked a spontaneous, embodied response in three-part harmony from those assembled, as Msaki’s use of aural histories suggested the possibility of both personal and collective healing.</p> <p>On the ground floor, poet and performer Koleka Putuma invited audiences into her multimedia gallery installation, a meditation on substance abuse in the Black community and the restorative possibilities afforded by Indigenous medicines and psychedelics. Despite being titled <em>A Theatre of Beauty: Imvuselelo</em> (<em>The Revival</em>), Putuma’s installation was less obviously theatrical than her acclaimed solo performance <em>Hullo, Bu-Bye, Koko, Come In</em>, one of the most memorable outings at the NAF in 2022. 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Its most recent outing in 2023 marked a hearty post-pandemic rebound, with ticket sales doubling from the previous year’s initial tentative return to live performance. At the same time, COVID’s long interregnum also allowed the festival’s organizers to take stock and adjust the status quo, most notably by substantially curtailing the number of productions featured on the fringe program. This contraction marked a striking departure from the fringe’s previous centrality to the festival’s identity and branding as the second largest after Edinburgh’s. The decision was at its root pragmatic: plagued by years of nationwide rolling blackouts (also known as load-shedding) interrupting performances, the NAF would now limit all performances to venues with a backup generator. Nevertheless, this ethos of strategic contraction had a galvanizing effect on the eleven-day festival as a whole. In prioritizing smaller-scale, local stories and idioms over spectacle and size, the festival thrived with a tighter, more personal focus. Playing to its strengths of combining multiple forms and incubating new voices, 2023’s festival strikingly foregrounded work by Black feminist artists, often working in Indigenous languages.</p> <p>A broader trend toward responsive, genre-bending, site-specific performance was apparent in the work of the winners of the prestigious Standard Bank Young Artist Awards. Given a platform at the festival to execute their visions, the winning artists—and their work—provided a model for how constricted performance aesthetics can often inspire spatial reimagination. As an illustrative example, three of the six artists honored—all Black women—staged performance installations at the hulking Settlers Monument complex, a location where generators could be depended on to keep the lights on. Lady Skollie, an Indigenous artist of Khoi descent, used the apartheid-era arts center built to memorialize British colonizers to interrogate the absence of her ancestors from the historical and artistic record. Transforming the bowels of the building into an exhibition of Indigenous rock art, which has largely been destroyed in South Africa, <em>Groot Gat</em> (<em>Big Hole</em>) re-created cave art in situ. The result—referencing capitalist extraction in the famed Big Hole Kimberly diamond mine while also celebrating women’s vaginas as a creative force— served as a South African iteration of the Great Hole of History (introduced in Suzan-Lori Parks’s <em>The America Play</em>). Rather than depicting the artform as a static ethnographic relic, Skollie’s cave paintings vividly imagined a matriarchal origin story for the Khoi, South Africa’s original people.</p> <p>Several floors above <em>Groot Gat</em>, recording artist Msaki’s <em>Del’ukufa</em> (<em>Dare to Die</em>) spoke to a similar sense of displaced trauma. Playing to a packed audience in a single gallery, the intervention was the first in a series of site-specific public rituals that Msaki staged throughout the festival. Msaki circled and anointed a mound of red soil adorned by candles, crosses, and cattle skulls that evoked the colonial violence marking the Eastern Cape landscape. Her soaring soprano was accompanied by a musician on a straw mat and some smoldering imphepho herb, which is used in ancestral communication: <em>Ndiyozilanda!</em> (roughly, “I am returning to collect my things”). The visuals, sounds, and smells combined to take the audience on a multisensory metaphysical journey, all while standing still. The call evoked a spontaneous, embodied response in three-part harmony from those assembled, as Msaki’s use of aural histories suggested the possibility of both personal and collective healing.</p> <p>On the ground floor, poet and performer Koleka Putuma invited audiences into her multimedia gallery installation, a meditation on substance abuse in the Black community and the restorative possibilities afforded by Indigenous medicines and psychedelics. Despite being titled <em>A Theatre of Beauty: Imvuselelo</em> (<em>The Revival</em>), Putuma’s installation was less obviously theatrical than her acclaimed solo performance <em>Hullo, Bu-Bye, Koko, Come In</em>, one of the most memorable outings at the NAF in 2022. 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引用次数: 0
摘要
以下是内容的简要摘录,以代替摘要:评论者: 国家艺术节 April Sizemore-Barber 国家艺术节。南非马坎达。2023 年 6 月 22 日至 7 月 2 日。近半个世纪以来,南非国家艺术节(NAF)一直是展示国家艺术状况的主要平台。最近于 2023 年举办的这届艺术节标志着大流行病后的酣畅反弹,门票销售比上一年最初试探性回归现场表演时翻了一番。与此同时,COVID 的漫长停滞期也让艺术节的组织者得以对现状进行总结和调整,其中最明显的就是大幅缩减了边缘项目的作品数量。这一缩减标志着边缘节目与以往作为仅次于爱丁堡艺术节的第二大艺术节的身份和品牌的中心地位大相径庭。这一决定从根本上讲是务实的:由于多年来全国范围内的滚动停电(也称为断电)导致演出中断,国家艺术节现在将所有演出都限制在有备用发电机的场所。尽管如此,这种战略收缩的精神对整个为期十一天的艺术节产生了激励作用。通过优先考虑规模较小的本地故事和成语,而不是场面和规模,艺术节在更加紧凑、更加个性化的关注下蓬勃发展。2023 年艺术节充分发挥了其结合多种形式和孵化新声音的优势,黑人女权主义艺术家的作品引人注目,这些作品通常使用土著语言创作。在著名的 "标准银行青年艺术家奖"(Standard Bank Young Artist Awards)获奖者的作品中,可以明显看出一种更广泛的趋势,即反应灵敏、体裁多样、特定场地的表演。在艺术节上,获奖艺术家及其作品被赋予了一个平台来实现他们的愿景,为受限的表演美学如何经常激发空间再想象提供了一个范例。举例来说,六位获奖艺术家中有三位都是黑人女性,她们在庞大的定居者纪念碑建筑群中举办了表演装置艺术活动,而这个建筑群的照明全靠发电机。科伊族原住民艺术家斯科利女士(Lady Skollie)利用种族隔离时期为纪念英国殖民者而建造的艺术中心,对其祖先在历史和艺术记录中的缺失进行了拷问。Groot Gat(大洞)将建筑内部改造成土著岩石艺术展,在原地重现了洞穴艺术。其结果是,在著名的大孔金伯利钻石矿进行资本主义开采的同时,也将女性的阴道作为一种创造性的力量加以颂扬,这就是历史大洞(在苏珊-洛丽-帕克斯的《美国剧作》中被介绍)在南非的翻版。斯科利的洞穴壁画并没有将这种艺术形式描绘成静态的人种学遗迹,而是生动地想象了南非原住民科伊族的母系起源故事。在格鲁特加特楼上几层,唱片艺术家 Msaki 的 Del'ukufa(《敢死队》)也表达了类似的流离失所的创伤感。Msaki 在整个艺术节期间举行了一系列特定场地的公共仪式,这次表演是其中的第一场。Msaki 环绕并涂抹了一个红土堆,上面点缀着蜡烛、十字架和牛头骨,唤起了人们对东开普省殖民暴力的记忆。为她高亢的女高音伴奏的是草席上的一位乐师和一些燃烧着的用于祖先交流的蕲艾草:Ndiyozilanda!(大致意思是 "我回来取我的东西")。视觉、听觉和嗅觉结合在一起,带领观众踏上了一次多感官的形而上之旅,而这一切都是静止不动的。Msaki 运用听觉历史暗示了个人和集体治愈的可能性。在一楼,诗人兼表演者科勒卡-普图玛(Koleka Putuma)邀请观众走进她的多媒体展厅装置,沉思黑人社区的药物滥用问题,以及土著药物和迷幻药提供的恢复可能性。尽管名为 "美的剧场":Imvuselelo(《复兴》),普图玛的装置艺术却没有她广受赞誉的个人表演《Hullo, Bu-Bye, Koko, Come In》那么明显的戏剧性,而《Hullo, Bu-Bye, Koko, Come In》是 2022 年国家艺术节上最令人难忘的表演之一。然而,这种形式上的流动性和对简单归类的抵制成为了普图玛的......
In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:
Reviewed by:
National Arts Festival
April Sizemore-Barber
NATIONAL ARTS FESTIVAL. Makhanda, South Africa. June 22-July 2, 2023.
For nearly half a century, South Africa’s National Arts Festival (NAF) has been the premier platform for the artistic state of the nation. Its most recent outing in 2023 marked a hearty post-pandemic rebound, with ticket sales doubling from the previous year’s initial tentative return to live performance. At the same time, COVID’s long interregnum also allowed the festival’s organizers to take stock and adjust the status quo, most notably by substantially curtailing the number of productions featured on the fringe program. This contraction marked a striking departure from the fringe’s previous centrality to the festival’s identity and branding as the second largest after Edinburgh’s. The decision was at its root pragmatic: plagued by years of nationwide rolling blackouts (also known as load-shedding) interrupting performances, the NAF would now limit all performances to venues with a backup generator. Nevertheless, this ethos of strategic contraction had a galvanizing effect on the eleven-day festival as a whole. In prioritizing smaller-scale, local stories and idioms over spectacle and size, the festival thrived with a tighter, more personal focus. Playing to its strengths of combining multiple forms and incubating new voices, 2023’s festival strikingly foregrounded work by Black feminist artists, often working in Indigenous languages.
A broader trend toward responsive, genre-bending, site-specific performance was apparent in the work of the winners of the prestigious Standard Bank Young Artist Awards. Given a platform at the festival to execute their visions, the winning artists—and their work—provided a model for how constricted performance aesthetics can often inspire spatial reimagination. As an illustrative example, three of the six artists honored—all Black women—staged performance installations at the hulking Settlers Monument complex, a location where generators could be depended on to keep the lights on. Lady Skollie, an Indigenous artist of Khoi descent, used the apartheid-era arts center built to memorialize British colonizers to interrogate the absence of her ancestors from the historical and artistic record. Transforming the bowels of the building into an exhibition of Indigenous rock art, which has largely been destroyed in South Africa, Groot Gat (Big Hole) re-created cave art in situ. The result—referencing capitalist extraction in the famed Big Hole Kimberly diamond mine while also celebrating women’s vaginas as a creative force— served as a South African iteration of the Great Hole of History (introduced in Suzan-Lori Parks’s The America Play). Rather than depicting the artform as a static ethnographic relic, Skollie’s cave paintings vividly imagined a matriarchal origin story for the Khoi, South Africa’s original people.
Several floors above Groot Gat, recording artist Msaki’s Del’ukufa (Dare to Die) spoke to a similar sense of displaced trauma. Playing to a packed audience in a single gallery, the intervention was the first in a series of site-specific public rituals that Msaki staged throughout the festival. Msaki circled and anointed a mound of red soil adorned by candles, crosses, and cattle skulls that evoked the colonial violence marking the Eastern Cape landscape. Her soaring soprano was accompanied by a musician on a straw mat and some smoldering imphepho herb, which is used in ancestral communication: Ndiyozilanda! (roughly, “I am returning to collect my things”). The visuals, sounds, and smells combined to take the audience on a multisensory metaphysical journey, all while standing still. The call evoked a spontaneous, embodied response in three-part harmony from those assembled, as Msaki’s use of aural histories suggested the possibility of both personal and collective healing.
On the ground floor, poet and performer Koleka Putuma invited audiences into her multimedia gallery installation, a meditation on substance abuse in the Black community and the restorative possibilities afforded by Indigenous medicines and psychedelics. Despite being titled A Theatre of Beauty: Imvuselelo (The Revival), Putuma’s installation was less obviously theatrical than her acclaimed solo performance Hullo, Bu-Bye, Koko, Come In, one of the most memorable outings at the NAF in 2022. Yet such fluidity of form and resistance to easy categorization served as...
期刊介绍:
For over five decades, Theatre Journal"s broad array of scholarly articles and reviews has earned it an international reputation as one of the most authoritative and useful publications of theatre studies available today. Drawing contributions from noted practitioners and scholars, Theatre Journal features social and historical studies, production reviews, and theoretical inquiries that analyze dramatic texts and production.