Albumen : a living hotblooded art piece

Albumen : a living hotblooded art piece

PhotoMarianne Duval

The Arts Court Theatre is the perfect intimate space for this experimental performance piece, produced as part of the TACTIC’s mainstage series .  The play, written in English by  francophone playwight, Mishka Lavigne, is  a  reflexion on the relationship between   varying artistic gazes and how they apprehend  the  exterior world.

During these discussions  the set becomes an important part of this collective  artistic  vision   as  the visual and material substance of the acting space  envelope the actors.  Thanks to the well thought-out reflection by  director Éric  Perron working with a fairly abstract text almost lacking in any stage directions, the result  of Perron’s work is impressive . He  eeks out all the possible meanings from a  text that could have remained profoundly  hermetic.

Three performers in the first portion of the evening, move around and climb over  a form that resembles a deconstructed version of a painter’s easel. References to painting and artwork are thus from the first moments thrust  into the performance space.  A huge red round moon-like shape glows in space and soon becomes the background for shadowy  highlights of the human body projected into the space as a wandering screen looking for a home.  Two young people are in conversation.   Jessa (Andrée  Rainville) the young model,  exchanges  ideas and feelings with Lucas (Mitchel Rose) working in a blood bank with people who feel they are compelled to donate blood. Lucas is taken with Jessa and wants to get closer to her. He watches her, obsesses about her blood  in a deeply erotic way, sees the drops flowing on the floor, as her body becomes  a canal pulsing with blood that excites him ( Deboer’s costume for Jessa  brings that to life in a strong way) while  that huge red circular shape could also  be a drop of blood that might suggest the pure form of a Kandinsky circle that would bring us back to Jessa’s abstract  origins and that  are  constantly referred to  in the conversations among the three protagonists,

Danielle (Margo MacDonald)  sees the exterior world through her own distant gaze. . She states clearly that photography is a form of voyeurism  and her photographic lens  lays its gaze on the young girl in a strangely heated conversation .

The photographer however (Danielle) , sees  the young girl as an object  to be captured by her lens nothing more, while Jessa’s   translucent and unbearable  eyes, anger and upset the photographer.   She would like to dig them out with a  needle because those eyes prevent the artist  from connecting with her own  photographic art no doubt because they are too perceptive.

As the young couple chat and discuss their own special relationship which is less abstract than that felt by the photographer and much more linked to the body, a form of corporeal obsession takes over the young bodies in space and  forces them   to reveal much confidential information.

We quickly see how  Jessa is precisely one of those beings who lives through her body. Played by an excellent Andrée Rainville with strong emotion and richly felt tension, she climbs up and down a long red silk rope that hangs from the ceiling,  allowing  this  young actress  with acrobatic training to  swing from the long piece of material  to climb over the easel,  and straddle the split wooden structure, exciting the gaze of Lucas who is more and more in love with the young model as she reveals her artistic past and the nature of her great potential as a painter….not as an acrobat!  . However as a corporeal presence, her body becomes a form of opposition to her talent as a painter and she evolves into a model who has to control her body and learn how to pose for long periods without moving.    Thus her fate and her interaction with Danielle is a form of denial of  what she really feels or the authentic  nature  of her talent.

The discussions evolve towards more complex emotional exchanges.  Danielle invites Lucas and Jessa over for dinner.  What are those hidden motives?  Much is suggested. In fact the performance is a long string of that which is suggested, but never really spoken clearly.   Danielle has a passion for red bleeding meat  while Lucas is attracted to bleeding bodies and needles that drip with blood from those who donate in his clinic. Love, perversion, cannibalism, vampirism, much is laid out  before us in a strangely provocative way that director Perron seems to catch at every turn.

A strangely fascinating  encounter of three incompatible creatures who express their deepest desires with much freedom. A dramatic encounter of a living art piece that associates   Joan Miro,  Constructivism  and a disturbing  form of Symbolism inscribed in a Fuseli nightmare  and anything else you might want to toss in.   Its really quite fun.

 

Albumen  written by Mishka  Lavigne. A TACTICS mainstage production

Directed by  Éric Perron

Set and lighting  Benoit Brunet-Poirier

Sound  Al Connors

Costumes Judith De Boer

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