28 September 2008

Inside In-i: Juliette Binoche and Akram Khan


A performance co-directed and performed by Juliette Binoche and Akram Khan at the National Theatre, London.

The performance was about the relationship between men / women.

What I most liked was the minimalism of the cenario, which was basically a screen and two chairs and the plays with light and shadows.

27 September 2008

No Man's Land, by Harold Pinter

No Man's Land, at Duke of York's theatre in London.























What an amazing play! Amazing actors! Amazing screenwriting!

Exactly a kind of play I like: Basically it was just four actors on stage (Michael Gambonm, David Bradley, David Walliams and Nick Dunning), in the cenario what is essencial and remained the same from the beggining till the end, as the story is passed in the same room, between an evening till the next morning. The dialogs are minimum and full of playing with words.

I liked so much that I had the urge to buy the book and go to watch another day!

An interesting quote from the beginning of the play:

"(...) there are some people who appear to be strong, whose idea of what strength consists of is persuasive, but who inhabit the idea and not the fact. What they possess is not strength but expertise. They have nurtured and maintain what is in fact a calculated posture. Half of the time it works. It takes a man of intelligence and perception to stick a needle through that posture and discern the essential flabbiness of the stance. I'm such a man." (Spooner dialog, act one, p. 3)

22 September 2008

Sebastião Salgado in Berlin


"Sebastião Salgado - In Principio", an exhibition in C/O Berlin, showed black and white photos by the Brazilian photographer, who documented the landscapes of the countries of coffee growers.

I always liked Salgado's photographs and liked this exhibition very much. What I most knew about his work was the documentation of poverty and portraits of people in Brazil, especially from the North of the country. First time that I see theses photographs about coffee.

What I'm most interested in these kinds of photos is the fact that it is documenting time, people and history of a certain culture, in a very authentic way.

Link for the exhibition:
http://www.co-berlin.info/co-neu/joomla/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=500

19 September 2008

Midsummer Night's Dream in Germany

Midsummer Night's Dream, a production by Senftenberg Theater, Senftenberg-Germany.

It was very interesting to watch another production of a play I've seen at the Royal Shakespeare Company in Stratford-Upon-Avon. This production had a completely different approach, not more or less interesting, but different. As it was the opening of the season in the theatre, the play was placed in many rooms in the theatre. Each act was put in a different room. It took around 5 hours and at the end (when there is a wedding party), dinner and wine were served for the audience. Very interesting experience! Although I think it works mainly because it's a very light comedy.

Website of the play

15 September 2008

Ivanov, by Chekhov

Ivanov, by Chekhov, a Donmar Warehouse's production at the Wyndham's Theatre, London.

I read this play some months before I went to watch this production. When I read it, I liked it very much, but watching this production was very disappointing to me. I didn't like the approach of this director, which in my opinion took away the most interesting aspect of Chekhov's play and made it an ordinary meaningless superficial comedy.

Ivanov who is in constant oscillation between ecstasy and depression (characteristics of his despair) was turned into this middle-aged crisis man, which was the whole time depressed with a defeated posture.

I don't mean the actors. The actors were all great! What I really didn't like was the direction.

At the end, I clapped especially to Kevin R McNally.

Website of this production

29 August 2008

Stomp

What an amazing show! Just saw it in London this weekend and became a fan of this group. It is a small group of people (only 7) on stage making sounds and music with very ordinary elements: bins, broom, paper, their body, balls, etc. The rhythm, choreography and acting are very well done and it's with humour.

What most attracts me in this show is the synchronized rhythm among the group, which reminds me of what I like in Delicatessen by Jean Pierre Janet and West Side Story. Objects and simple objects making amazing sounds.

More information:
http://www.stomp.co.uk/

YouTube video:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=US7c9ASVfNc&feature=related

11 July 2008

Taste of Bath and Bristol Wine & Food Fair


Well.... it's also cultural input isn't it? Food and wine are also culture! ;)

14 June 2008

Wicked the musical

Wicked is a untold story of the witches of The Wizard of Oz. The play took place in Apollo Victoria, in London.

I haven't been to a musical for a long time, so I was looking forward to go to this play. Although I thought that the production was really well done, in terms of the lights, make-up, costumes, it was everything too "perfect", a "Disney-like", where even the dirty and mass are perfectly put in place. I really didn't like and I was very disappointed by the story, which I thought was very poor.

I'd rather go to a theatre play, where there are just actors on the stage than go to a huge expensive production that doesn't add any new experience in my life.

Official Website:
http://www.wickedthemusical.co.uk

China Design Now



China Design Now was an exhibition at the Victoria and Albert Museum of design from the last 2 decades in the main cities in China: Beijing, Shanghai and Shenzhen. It exhibited posters, toys, product design, installation, video, animation, etc.

What I got most interested was the Homescape by Chen Shaoxiong: a photo collage installation with pictures of furniture and objects from typical homes rearranged.

Website of the exhibition:
http://www.vam.ac.uk/vastatic/microsites/1636_chinadesignnow/

29 February 2008

Brit Insurance Designs of the Year

An exhibition of the 100 best projects of design of the year in the Design Museum in London.

I liked very much some of the projects, especially in the Interactive session. Although, I was a bit disappointed with the Graphic Design session. I was expecting a bit more in terms of experimentation, new materials, print process...

The projects that interested me most were:

- Sketch Furniture, by Front
The group Front have developed a process to turn "air" sketches into real furniture.
Watch the video
Read more in the Front website

- Your house, by Olafur Eliasson.

This book was designed by Olafur Eliasson who relates the experimental narrative of reading a book to walking through a house.


- Sharkrunners, by area/code
Sharkrunners is an online game created for the 20th anniversary of the Discovery Channel's Shark Week.
In the game, players become virtual sharks researchers, but the sharks in the game are the real white sharks with GPS, which provides the position and movement of the real sharks.
Play the game

- Private View Exhibition for Trussardi, Palazzo Trussardi Alla Scala, Milan, by Paul Cocksedge
An exhibition at the Salone del Mobile in Milan. The walls are covered with a filter that for human eyes it appears black. People discover the hidden objects using their mobile cameras or digital cameras.

- The Replenishing Body Kiosk, by Ross Phillips

An interactive video installation where visitors were invited to make a one-second video recording which become part of the video portrait.

Showstudio website

15 February 2008

Animated Exeter


We went for this event especially for the Quay Brother's talk, which was very quick and superficial.

Besides the talk, there was an exhibition with their work (the puppets and models) which was really interesting see the scales and the quality of the models and scenario. We could see the effort they put in details and the choice of materials.

We also watched the session of their short films ("Quay Brothers: a short Collection"). Some of them, I've seen in DVD before, but of course the experience is different in big screen. The movies were: "The Comb", "Street of Crocodiles", "This Unnameable Little Broom", "The Mascot" and "Are we still married?". What I most liked was "The Mascot", a story of a puppy that try to steal an orange but everyone wants that orange and try to get from him.

Other talks we attended:
- Pitch Perfect (with Marion Edwards, Matthew Sagar, Tim Searle, David Freedman and Lucy Murphy)
- Animate & Educate Conference, with Curtis Jobling (Bob the Builder, Frankstein's Cat)