Author Archives: Robert H Allen

Mediated (2009)

Below are some photos from the video installation featuring documentation from Playing the Rapture, a stage production that had premiered in March, 2008 at the Baltimore Theatre Project. The Mediated show was hosted by the California Museum of Photography. You can download the Mediated catalog as a PDF.

For this installation, excerpts from the original performances were projected onto a tabletop-scale 3D model of the set, creating visual distortions.

Scalable Relations (2009)

Below are some photos from the video installation featuring documentation from Playing the Rapture. The Scalable Relations show was hosted by the CalIT2 gallery at UC San Diego. The staged production of Playing the Rapture premiered in March, 2008 at the Baltimore Theatre Project.

For this installation, video of the performers from the original performances was separated onto two monitors hung about 6 feet above the ground, with set projections on the walls and floor behind.

Earthbound

This project is still in progress. Basic information is posted here, and links to videos will be added when they become available.

“Earthbound” is an internet-oriented adaptation of August Strindberg’s Dream Play. It is designed for webcasting in serial form, using only three players: two humans in interaction with a computer ‘player’ that generates the theatrical space.

The entire play is being broken into several dozen short segments to be webcast serially. (See below for the movies as they become available.)

One: Prologue
Two: Outside the Growing Castle

Strindberg’s 1901 Dream Play is a groundbreaking dramatic work that signaled the arrival of modernism in Western theater. Although rarely produced, it continues to be a seminal work for many theater artists. The play follows the adventures of Agnes, a daughter of the god Indra who descends to earth in order to come to terms with the human condition. For “Earthbound,” I have reimagined the entire play—which originally featured several dozen different roles—as a complex dialogue between Agnes, a male resident of the world, and the environment of the world itself. The first two are played by human actors, while the world is ‘played’ by an interactive database programmed to follow the logic of dreams in general, to replicate aspects of the play’s structure, and to represent the perspective of technology as a primary player in the drama of the other two characters.

Each individual segment of “Earthbound” is being constructed from a library of scene fragments and images, organized ad hoc through the database program. Specifically, the program is designed to incorporate a degree of willfulness in its logic, departing from a strictly literal visual interpretation of the text and its stage directions towards a more associational set of representations.

Over the past few years, my performance-based work has been following a trajectory in which technology plays an increasingly central role. There is of course nothing new about the use of technology to enhance theatrical performances, but my goal is to shift our understanding of technology’s role in theater, so that we stop seeing it as a supportive function and come to terms with it as a thing in itself, as if it were a player possessed of an alien perspective and intelligence. At the same time I want to avoid the romanticizing approach that descends from Shelley’s Frankenstein, which personifies technology in human form in order to tell a specific story about our relationship to the nonhuman. I’m more interested in actualizing the technology as a force, and thereby blurring the boundaries of what can function as a viable theatrical agent.

PROJECT CREDITS

Concept, direction, video editing, and programming: Robert Allen

Videography: Amy Kaczur

Actors: Joseph Byrd and Valerie McCann

Technical consultant: Antoinette LaFarge

This project is supported by a grant from the University of California, Irvine.

More Directing

A Dream Play by August Strindberg
Theatre of Generations, St. Petersburg, Russia; June 2008


A Dream Playby August Strindberg, adapted by Courtney Baron
California State University Long Beach, CA; University Players, March 2003.


Twilight by Anna Deveare Smith
California State University Long Beach, CA; University Players, March 2002.
Twilight
 was restaged for the 10-year anniversary of the Los Angeles Riots, sponsored by the Legal Aid Foundation of Los Angeles; April 2002.


Virtual Live an experimental media/theater event by Robert Allen and Antoinette LaFarge
Presented at Location One Gallery, NYC; January 2002.


How I Got That Story by Amlin Gray
Presented at ‘Space at 24,’ NYC; A production of Pathogen Arts, August 2001.


The Roman Forum 2000 an original work created and conceived by Robert Allen and Antoinette LaFarge at Side Street Projects, Los Angeles, California, August 2000
The Roman Forum was part of a national project on the presidential campaign and election, “Democracy-The Last Campaign”.


Dear Anton adapted by Courtney Baron from the plays of Anton Chekhov
Premiered as part of the Chekhov Now Festival, sponsored by the Laboratory for International Theatre Exchange, New York, October 1999.


The Creditors by August Strindberg
Presented in August 1999 as part of the New York International Fringe Festival; in a new translation by Harry G. Carlson.


Couples by Giovanni Pucci
Presented as part of the Outlet Theatre Summer Reading Series, July 1999.


“August in January,” a festival celebrating August Strindberg’s 150th birthday.
I directed The Creditors and Coram Populo and served as co-organizer of the festival, which included a symposium, “The Other Strindbergs,” at Marymount Manhattan College, January 1999.


Le Ménage by Aïda Croal
Premiered at LaMama E.T.C. in October 1998.


Madness & Joy by Giovanni Pucci
Presented in September 1998 as part of the New York City Playwrights Festival.


Still Lies Quiet Truth by Antoinette LaFarge
Premiered in August 1998 as part of the New York International Fringe Festival; and presented again in November 1998 as part of the New York Digital Salon.


The Good Night by Courtney Baron
Premiered in June 1998 at the Theatre for the New City, New York.


The Merchant of Venice by William Shakespeare
Presented at the Horace Mann Theater, May 1997.


The Dream of Heaven and Hell by Courtney Baron
Premiered in February 1997 in the Columbia University New Works Series for Playwrights.


The Dance of Death (part 1) by August Strindberg
Presented at Columbia University, December 1996.


Le Ménage by Aïda Croal
Workshopped in October 1996 in the Columbia University New Works Series for Playwrights.

Far-flung news

I’ve agreed to serve as movement consultant for, and perfomer in, an upcoming project in the Experimental Media Peformance Laboratory (xMPL) at UC Irvine. Entitled Far-Flung follows function, it’s the brainchild of New York artist Ursula Endlicher. It will premiere in October.

Hangmen News

I was invited to present a new work, Hangmen Also Die, in OSCENE 10 at the Laguna Art Museum in Laguna, CA (Feb. 12-May 16, 2010). OSCENE 10 is a high-visibility annual survey of contemporary art and culture in Orange County. Recently I have been extending my practice as a director and theater maker into the different context of gallery installations as a way of exploring possibilities that are difficult to realize in traditional theater venues.

In the installation, video from various sources–including most crucially the filming of a live performance by an actor on opening night–is programmed into an evolving collage that is projected on a wall at large scale. The video collage was programed to cannibalize itself and decay over the course of the exhibition until almost nothing was left. The text of the monologue addresses the tendency for certain types of political action to undermine their own objectives by corrupting the individuals involved. In this way, the programmed degradation of the installation rehearses the theme of corruption.

Highlights from the text include extracts from my project of several years ago, Galileo in America, Hiener Müller’s performance text Mauser, and Bertolt Brecht’s The Measures Taken.

The full monologue can be viewed here.

Some  additional information with  videos and images from the event.