Performance

Regent's Park

Parliament Square

Jubilee Gardens

St. Paul's Cathedral

Library

About

My provocation is triggered by the vehicles which transport us, protecting us from the weather outside - if not the weather within… The shared safe space of the bus houses the private spaces of our bodies – both convey.  Tackling visual and physical phenomena which we sometimes take for granted, I will propose that we need to (re)vivify our senses and interrogate afresh that to which we have become habituated, in order to advance our creative disciplines.

Outside reality can be observed as a arranged reality, in other words – as a theatre. All you need is a frame. In our case – bus window. Looking through it can create other way of perceiving. It´s nothing new – John Cage said that theatre is anything what can be heard and seen. I would add – what can be framed. Without frame there is not art. Reality is reality. And Art is Art. But if we mark, pull out or tear out just a part of reality and through this action we draw an attention of human being to this section, then we are actually creating art.

The Weather Within

Design explores the space between. We focus on what is invisible and the feelings that are absent, and make them real. We listen for the small voice and amplify it. We look out for the fleeting sight that flashes across our peripheral vision, and catch it.

 

My provocation is to represent the quiet stories that none the less echo and become louder by their recognition. Theatre for the non-theatricals. Theatre for when there is just no other way of sharing the story or thought. Theatre that will be gone if you miss it, but will resonate for a long time if you have participated or witnessed it. Ephemeral theatre that can be as powerful as a sideways blow, or as gentle as the movement of the smallest leaf at the top of the tree when there is no wind.

 

Theatre that listens and tells. Theatre where the story makers, tellers and audiences play Chinese whispers.

Suzie Holmes

Jiří Havelka

Pip Nash

Performance

Regent's Park

Parliament Square

Jubilee Gardens

St. Paul's Cathedral

Library

About