The
Search for Narrative
by Laura Felleman
Fattal
The most cursory cultural
investigator cannot help but notice that the visual arts have become a
significant source and impetus for the narrative of contemporary books,
theater, and dance. In recent memory, the following the atrical and dance
performances "Contact" by Susan Stroman and John Weidman, "Art" by Yasmina
Reza, "Sunday in the Park with George" by Stephen Sondheim, book by James
Lapine, "Les Miserables" by Claude-Michel Schfonberg/music and others,
"Picasso at the Lapin Agile" by Steve Martin, and "The Sleep of Reason,"
by Antonio Buero-Vallego have taken the not-so-dead-life (natura morta)
or still life of painting into the vital arena of the performing arts.
The quest to seek intra-discipline aesthetics among dance, music, theater,
and the visual arts is not the charge, but instead a turn to establish
a narrative that has brought about this invasion of interactivity between
the arts. Clearly defined boundaries between the arts have been fading
since Fluxus, Happenings, and Performance Art for over half a century.
In the early part of the twentieth century, Marcel Duchamp's chess games
and use of the fourth dimension of time in his numerous produced and pondered
pieces all speak to the interrelatedness of the arts.
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