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& contents Series editors preface vii Introduction 3 From display to experience 8 Re-performance 23 Theatre in the museum: collection as performance 29 The experiential museum 43 Performance as collection: repertoire in the museum 60 Conclusion: re-performance matters 73 Further reading 79 Index 87 v

Introduction Why theatre and museums? When, in 1991, Charles Marowitz made his case to free Shakespeare, it was to wrest productions of the plays away from museum replicas in painfully reconstructed Globe Theatre conditions (Recycling Shakespeare, p. 58), a sentiment that suggested theatre or at least imaginative, exciting theatre might be an antonym for what is found in a museum. Yet theatres and museums have increasingly become symbolic and actual neighbours, sharing the task of providing entertaining and educational experiences that draw people to a district, a city, a region, and even a nation. As components of the cultural landscape, theatres and museums alike play a role in creating and enacting place-based identity. No wonder, then, that so many cities in the world have turned to them in order to sell their brand both at home and abroad. Examples as geographically disparate as London s South Bank, Las Vegas s The Strip, and Abu Dhabi s Saadiyat Island illustrate what has already become a twenty-fi rst-century consensus, that theatres and museums are crucial to a city s vitality and appeal. Methodologically, too, theatre and museums share common ground. When Janet Marstine, in New Museum Theory and Practice (2006), describes the decisions that museum workers make about mission statement, architecture, fi nancial matters, acquisitions, cataloguing, exhibition display, wall texts, educational programming, repatriation requests, community relations, conservation, web design, security and reproduction (p. 2), she elaborates a 3

theatre & museums collaborative process comprising these myriad activities, almost all of which have an analogue in theatrical production. Museums are, as Carol Duncan observed in The Art Museum As Ritual, complex totalities that include everything from the building to the selection and ordering of collections and the details of their installation and lighting (1995, p. 10). In short, both theatre and museums require an infrastructure supported by a diverse range of technical and intellectual skills, acts of interpretation and mediation, and, eventually, an audience. Barbara Kirschenblatt-Gimblett makes an even more explicit comparison: Exhibitions are fundamentally theatrical, for they are how museums perform the knowledge they create (Destination Culture, 1998, p. 3). Traditionally, of course, museums arranged their collections in predictable, linear narratives, committed to organizational categories intended to be defi nitive. Theirs was a stage of authority. Nowadays, however, museums are invested in challenging those heretofore unexamined principles of organization, shifting from display to experience and inviting a more collaborative process with visitors. Contemporary exhibitions often constellate around questions rather than a seamlessly presented point of view, or choose to lay bare the history behind a particular collection or acquisition. Thus, institutions strive to develop more animated and less rigid modes of delivery. To this end, as Kirschenblatt-Gimblett proposes, today s museum is a theater, a memory palace, a stage for the enactment of other times and places, a space of transport, fantasy, dreams (p. 139). Museums are now charged 4

by stakeholders to increase access and deliver education in entertaining ways, so little wonder, then, that they adopt performance strategies that evoke different kinds and qualities of experience. Demographic analyses of cultural activity show that people who go to the theatre, concerts, and movies are also museum visitors (John Falk and Lynn Dierking, The Museum Experience, 1997, p. 16), and the clustering of cultural venues in entertainment districts or neighbourhoods adds to the likelihood of shared visitor communities. In their discussion of Museums As Flagships of Urban Development (2003), Chris Hamnett and Noam Shoval comment: In post- Fordist economies where cultural images and attributes are now a key element in inter-urban competition, prestige museums are increasingly a desirable commodity to be funded, sought, and competed for, rather than simply being seen as a drain on the budgets of hard-pressed city governments (p. 233). Within that economic model, both theatres and museums have become increasingly attentive to market segmentation, looking to differentiate themselves from competitor institutions, often by way of self-promotion that emphasizes accessibility, creativity, and the spectator s experience. Yet museums traffic mostly in material designated as representing the past, while theatrical performance takes place resolutely in the present, ephemeral, resistant to collection. I will look at how museums have dealt with the knotty problem of staging theatre s ephemerality as exhibition, but the intricately enmeshed relationships between theatre and 5

theatre & museums museums that contextualize the history of performance art provide a rich starting place for thinking through commonalities and differences. Early twentieth-century artists who posed radical challenges to both realist theatre and representational art fi gure predominantly in the museum: what major collection of twentieth-century art would not hold works by artists of Dada, the Italian futurists, surrealism, or the avant garde? These same artists informed the development of performance art and theory, especially in the United States (from Allan Kaprow s Happenings in the 1960s and the intermedial work of Fluxus through to a performance such as Abramović s The Artist Is Present in 2010). One generic quality of performance art has been to move between drama and art, stage and museum, so that theatre and performance studies scholars and visual arts scholars have each claimed the practice for their own discipline. Kaprow, according to performance studies scholar Richard Schechner, wanted to demystify art, debunk the establishment that controlled museums, and make arts that could be performed by anyone (Performance Studies, 2006, p. 166), objectives that have an unanticipated resonance with mission statements for theatre and museums at the beginning of this twenty-fi rst century. This book engages a recent history of museums that starts with mid-twentieth-century attempts to de-institutionalize cultural practices of display and ends with theatricalized experiences, often aggressively promoted for their popular appeal: according to Abigail Levine s review Marina Abramović s Time, more than 750,000 people 6

visited MoMA to see Marina Abramović, and many more followed a real-time web feed. Theatre and museums both are coveted commodities in the marketplace and, as I hope to show here, are productive interlocutors in thinking about contemporary performance practices. In writing about the social turn in contemporary art, Shannon Jackson asks whether new practices break institutional boundaries or set the scene for the recuperation of sociality by a service economy hungry for de-materialized encounters? (Social Works, 2011, p. 44). This suggests at least some of the stakes in putting theatre and museums into the same conversation, and, in this context, I explore crossover critical issues that include paradigms of presentation and engagement, authenticity and re-presentation, and liveness and memory. The subject of theatre in museums runs parallel to the interests of this book. Recent scholarship on this topic has addressed, both practically and critically, the use of live performance by museums to provide an encounter with a past that is brought to life, peppered with events and advertised through a list of What s On (Anthony Jackson and Jenny Kidd, Performing Heritage, 2011, p. 1). Whether through fi rst-person interpretation or larger-scale re-enactment, this kind of theatrical activity functions as a challenging living history education method in which interpreters transform themselves into people of the past (Stacy Roth, Past into Present, 1998, p. 3) and enhance the visitor s appreciation and critical understanding of heritage (Anthony Jackson, Engaging the Audience, 2011, p. 23). Notwithstanding the proliferation of museum 7

& index Abramović, Marina, 1 2, 6, 7, 23 9, 34 5, 73 5, 80 1 The Artist is Present, 1 2, 6 Imponderabilia, 24, 27, 76 aesthetic experience, 12, 21, 23 American Museum of Natural History, 13 14, 27 archive, 1, 13, 25, 27 40, 46, 48, 52, 60 1, 68, 70 2, 74 5 Bal, Mieke, 11, 15, 19, 79 Beckett, Samuel, 28 Bennett, Tony, 9 10, 12, 13 14, 19, 79 Blackfoot Crossing Historical Park, 68 73 Brâncuşi, Constantin, 15, 37 British Museum, 9, 10, 15 Bruce, Chris, 21, 40, 42, 44 8 Casey, Valerie, 21, 49, 54, 57, 73 collection, 4 6, 8 14, 16 17, 20, 23, 29 32, 35, 39, 42 3, 45 8, 50, 60 1, 63 4, 79 80 colonialism, 11 13, 18, 61 71 Connerton, Paul, 59 Davis, Tracy C., 57 economics, 5, 12, 18 21, 23, 67, 77 Eno, Brian, 37 8 Experience Music Project, 42 50, 63 Gehry, Frank, 43 4 Globe Exhibition, 39, 41 2 Heard Museum, 64 8, 72 Hoerig, Karl, 65 8 Jackson, Shannon, 7 Jewish Museum Berlin, 50 5, 76 87

theatre & museums Kadishman, Menashe, Shalekhet, 52 Kennedy, Dennis, 30 Kirschenblatt-Gimblett, Barbara, 4 Levine, Abigail, 6, 25 7, 29 Liebeskind, Daniel, 50 3 London Theatre Museum, see Victoria & Albert Museum Low, Theodore, 17 19, 45 McClellan, Andrew, 20, 42 memory, 4, 7 8, 13, 19, 26, 28, 30, 37 8, 47, 50, 52, 54, 57, 59, 65, 68, 75 mission statement, 6, 21, 31 2, 45, 63, 69 museology, new, 8, 20, 72 museum buildings, 4, 10 11, 17, 21, 28, 35, 43 4, 50 3, 61, 70 1, 76 Museum of Tolerance, Simon Wiesenthal Center s, 50, 54 9 National Museum of the American Indian, 61 4 Patraka, Vivian, Spectacular Suffering, 54 8 Pearson, Mike, 71 pleasure, 19 22, 27, 37, 49, 67 popular, 6, 17 20, 32, 36 7, 45 6, 48 re-performance, 1, 7, 22 9, 35, 37, 47 8, 51, 59, 66, 73 6, 80 1 see also re-presentation repertoire, 28 30, 34 5, 37, 46, 52, 60 1, 68, 70 2, 75 6 re-presentation, 7, 15 16, 27 see also re-performance Rude Mechanicals, 74 Schneider, Rebecca, Performance Remains, 75, 80 1 Sehgal, Tino, 74, 79 Serota, Nicholas, 11 Shakespeare, William, 1, 3, 39, 41, 73 Struth, Thomas, 22 3 Taylor, Diana, The Archive and the Repertoire, 28, 34 5, 60 1, 70, 72, 75 Theatre and Performance Galleries, see Victoria & Albert Museum theatricality, 8, 21, 23, 25 6, 40, 73 United States Holocaust Memorial Museum, 50, 54 8 Victoria & Albert Museum, 31, 35, 39, 41 London Theatre Museum, 31 5, 42 Theatre and Performance Galleries, 35 9, 42 88