Émile Durkheim identified the theatre as being derived from the oldest forms of religious or spiritual ceremonial, which were the way in which a society would initiate and reinforce cultural beliefs, in a manner that was collectively witnessed. The theatre almost as a ritual of initiation that is present in our everyday and in which we are the main contributors to the enchantment of the absurd! The boundaries between the art object and everyday life are opened up to such an extent that to engage with the work means to enter a performative reality in equal measure. In this respect the following artists participated in an exhibition at the TATE in 2007. Pawel Althamer Cezary Bodzianowski Ulla von Brandenburg Jeremy Deller Trisha Donnelly Geoffrey Farmer Dominique Gonzalez-Foerster Jeppe Hein Renata Lucas Rita McBride Markus Schinwald Roman Ondak Catherine Sullivan Mario Ybarra Andrea Frazer Tino Sehgal
These artists made part of an exhibition in the Tate in 2007 with the name ‘The world as a stage’. Their works is a conjunction of several mediums from sculpture and installation to video and performance. The common factor is the theatricality that is enclosed within their works as a determinant factor to the understanding and interactivity in their works. These artists in some way illustrate the concerns of some of authors such as Richard Kostelanetz and Michael Fried.
Each one of the artist has its own medium and a way of expressing themselves but the reason that unites them is not just a concept, but the way they face their work as a live stage that encompasses an ambiguous mise en scene that is individualized and appropriated by each spectator. Even though they are a small group of artists their works in some way make me reflect of art as already a theatre stage where each exhibition is a play and each work is a stage. This apparent dichotomy is very present and not so much abstract if we consider the actions that are necessary to activate an artwork and all the schemes that trap in some way the spectator as a fly that is obfuscated by light. Art as far as I am concerned was always theatrical but nowadays this term seems to come to light as a more present expression that leads the artwork to a mere fragment/residues or even an essence that as shape or an action may be consistent or not. The object becomes then a mirage because the work became concerned not with what stays but rather what leaves. What I want to say by this is that the object is no more a document, it become almost a fragrance in the air that is only apprehended by an impulse representative of an action.
Tino sehgal as far as I am concerned can be considered these days as an exponent of this practice!