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Events

Mar 22 2024

Beware of Robots: Performance, Questions of Technology, and a Strong Program for Theatre Studies with Professor Ulf Otto – Mar. 27, 2024

part of BMO Lab’s ‘Staging Infrastructures’ Winter Lecture Series

Friday, March 27, 2024, 4-6 pm


A recording of the lecture:


Where does technology lead in the context of performing arts? In the logic of the discipline, technology is often equated with an extended concept of stagecraft, a domain of devices that are of interest in regards to their artistic use and the aesthetic experiences they enable. But a closer look at performance in practice reveals something else: a deeply technological matter, a plurality of entangled socio-technical ensembles, in contrast to the enclosed assembly of humans that theory claims. It is this radical change in perspective, the methodological repercussions it entails and the epistemological questions it provokes, that is interesting about technologies in performance. This talk shows how prevailing ways of making scholarly sense of performance are challenged by the consideration of technology. It tracks down the changing meaning of technology in the course of a cultural historiography of theater; and turning to the transdisciplinary field of Science and Technology Studies, proposes a relational materialist concept of technology. It concludes with sketching the consequences of adopting a corresponding symmetrical perspective and a strong program for Theatre Studies.

Dr. Ulf Otto is Professor of Theater Studies and Intermediality at Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität Munich. His research focuses on the interdependencies of theatricality and technology in industrial as well as post-industrial cultures, and is informed by Science and Technology Studies. Recent publications include the monograph The Theatre of Electricity (2020, English 2023) and the anthology Aesthetics of Intervention (Theater der Zeit 2022). His articles have can be read in TDR, Theatre Research International, and Theater Journal. Current projects are pursuing praxeographical and computational methods. More info: www.ulf-otto.de

Written by David Rokeby · Categorized: Blog, Events

Mar 22 2024

Staging Infrastructure with Norah Sadava and Amy Nostbakken, Mar. 8, 2024

part of BMO Lab’s ‘Staging Infrastructures’ Winter Lecture Series

Theatre artists Amy Nostbakken and Norah Sadava joined Prof. Doug Eacho to discuss their recent Canadian Stage multimedia spectacle Universal Child Care, gendered issues of care work and arts-making, and the need for political performance today.

Here is a recording of the presentation:

Universal Child Care:

Witness the sheer power and force of the unaccompanied human voice in the newest work from Quote Unquote Collective. Part concert, part theatre play (and self-consciously neither of those things), the ensemble screams about the lack of affordable child care and growing inequalities while comparing different approaches to child care around the globe.

Quote Unquote Collective:

Quote Unquote Collective is a Canadian multi-disciplinary performance company that aims to work outside the boundaries of tradition and expectation. Co-founders Amy Nostbakken and Norah Sadava, who both have backgrounds in physical theatre and music, have joined forces to produce work founded on the belief that art and performance are tools to provoke conversation and change. The duo’s multi-award winning project, Mouthpiece (Coach House Press), premiered in Toronto in 2015. It has gone on to tour internationally, receiving multiple awards, a showing in LA sponsored by Jodie Foster and is translated in several languages. Currently Mouthpiece is being performed by companies in Albania, Turkey and Romania. They then adapted, starred in and composed the score for the feature film Mouthpiece with director Patricia Rozema. The film opened TIFF in 2018 and is distributed internationally. They have directed music videos for bands such as July Talk and U.S. Girls, created a six-woman rock-opera Now You See Her (Coach House Books), birthed three humans, and are currently working on a television series with producers Babe Nation, as well as their next feature film script

Written by David Rokeby · Categorized: Blog, Events

Mar 07 2024

From Digital to Dressing Room: Hair Theory, Technology, and the Styling of Black Women on Broadway – Christin Essen – Mar. 1, 2024

part of BMO Lab’s ‘Staging Infrastructures’ Winter Lecture Series

Christin Essin, Associate Professor at Vanderbilt University and author of Working Backstage and Stage Designers in Early 20th Century America, is an award-winning historian of technical theatre, performance design, and labour. This Friday she will share work from a new project on the intersections between race, technological change, and the styling and costuming of Broadway performers. 

Essin’s research draws sharp focus to the skilled Broadway professionals whose use of analog and digital technologies prepare the bodies of actors to perform. Even costume technologies as small as a hairpin, she argues, have the potential to unlock the situational and cultural complexities of backstage labour. 

Written by David Rokeby · Categorized: Blog, Events

Feb 22 2024

BMO Lab’s 2024 Winter Lecture Series: Staging Infrastructure

Theatre is made of more then sets, words, and actors. It is made possible thanks to countless forces, energies, efforts, and things – from janitorial services to urban transit, air conditioning to box office tabulation. Increasingly theatre scholars as well as artists are following the broader “infrastructural turn” in cultural and media studies to notice the unnoticed ‘backstage’ of our art, and our wider world. This March, the Lab will host three events pulling back the curtain on the politics and histories of the everyday work that makes theatre tick, with talks on race and hair styling, gender and child care, and historiography and electric light. We are honored to host Christin Essin and Ulf Otto, two of the leading global scholars of backstage theatre technology, as well as Norah Sadava & Amy Nostbakken, who will reflect on their devised work Universal Child Care (currently at CanStage) after its run. 


Upcoming:

Ulf Otto – Wednesday, March 27th, 4:00–6:00pm – Please RSVP 

Beware of Robots: Performance, Questions of Technology, and a Strong Program for Theatre Studies with Professor Ulf Otto – Mar. 27, 2024

room H-12 BMO Lab, University College 15 King’s College Circle, Toronto, Ontario M5S 3H7

For Directions: https://bmolab.artsci.utoronto.ca/?p=3341


Previous Events:

Christin Essin – Friday March 1st, 4:00-6:00pm 
Recording available:

From Digital to Dressing Room: Hair Theory, Technology, and the Styling of Black Women on Broadway – Christin Essen – Mar. 1, 2024

Norah Sadava & Amy Nostbakken – Friday, March 8th, noon-1:00pm
Recording available:

Staging Infrastructure with Norah Sadava and Amy Nostbakken, Mar. 8, 2024

Written by David Rokeby · Categorized: Blog, Events

Feb 19 2024

Symposium: Interpolations 1 – Oct. 21, 2023

Interpolations 1 was a one-day symposium at the BMO Lab devoted to the interfaces between computational media and the performing arts. A dozen scholars of digital performance, VR theatre, the tech industry, computational dance, and more gathered to chart connections and pathways for this increasingly vital area of research. The day culminated in a keynote address “The Work of Art in the Age of Digital Commodification.” from renowned theatre artist Annie Dorsen and philanthropic leader Sam Gill.

We intend to renew this symposium as an annual event  – to learn more or get involved, contact Doug Eacho at douglas.eacho@utoronto.ca .

Documentation of the Event:

Session 1: Virtual Sensoria, w/ Elizabeth Hunter, Elise Morrison, Jessica Rajko


Session 2: AI as Theatre, w/ Miriam Felton-Dansky, Christopher Grobe, and Lindsay Brandon Hunter


Session 3: Still Exhausted: TDR Launch Panel, w/ Catie Cuan, Douglas Eacho, and Sydney Skybetter


The Work of Art in the Age of Digital Commodification
Keynote address: Annie Dorsen and Sam Gill 
Responses: Jacob Gallagher-Ross and Sarah Bay-Cheng

Written by David Rokeby · Categorized: Blog, Events

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