巴洛克现代性:约瑟夫-切尔马托里的《戏剧美学》(评论)

IF 0.8 3区 艺术学 0 THEATER
David Krasner
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引用次数: 0

摘要

以下是内容的简要摘录,以代替摘要:评论者: 巴洛克现代性:巴洛克现代性:戏剧美学》,约瑟夫-切尔马托里著,大卫-克拉斯纳译。约瑟夫-切尔马托里著。巴尔的摩:约翰-霍普金斯大学出版社,2021 年;298 页。在桑顿-怀尔德(Thornton Wilder)于 1938 年首演的《我们的小镇》中,导演杰德-哈里斯(Jed Harris)在剧中安排了这样一个场景:十几位扮演小镇居民的演员在光秃秃的舞台上高举着撑开的雨伞。这个装饰性的画面--一片盘旋的黑色雨伞的海洋--传达了剧作家对巴洛克式戏剧的偏爱。怀尔德是格特鲁德-斯坦因(Gertrude Stein)的密友和同事,他吸收了斯坦因不透明、神秘和风格化的表现概念,借鉴了巴洛克的特质和历史。怀尔德和斯坦因参与并推动了巴洛克式的现代性,他们将平凡 [尾页 584]的事物与视觉上深刻、不谙世事和超戏剧化的事物结合在一起;他们对现代化的巴洛克式戏剧有着共同的愿景,在这种戏剧中,生动奇观的空间组合和动态的舞台形象创造出奢华、俏皮、折衷、奔放和时间上即时(活在当下)的戏剧性。我们的小镇》的伞形舞台与约瑟夫-切尔马托里(Joseph Cermatori)的《巴洛克现代性》(Baroque Modernity)不谋而合,后者是一部出色的巴洛克戏剧史著作,重点介绍了现代巴洛克美学的四位大师:该书以弗里德里希-尼采、斯特凡-马拉美、瓦尔特-本雅明和斯坦因这四位现代巴洛克美学大师为中心。通过研究这四位大师的理论、思想和舞台表演,该书记录了 "使怀尔德的巴洛克现代主义愿景成为可能的历史、艺术和哲学环境"(6)。Cermatori 的目标是将巴洛克从其被认为是文艺复兴时期的复古主义中挖掘出来,并将其牢牢地、充满活力地置于现代主义(特别是 1875 年至 1935 年)的欧美潮流之中。这种对巴洛克的重新解读极大地改变了我们对现代戏剧的看法,使其从时间戏剧转变为 "空间艺术"(9),其中实体戏剧融合了建筑、音乐、舞蹈、雕塑、灯光、工程("特效")以及大量的视觉空间美学。切尔马托里称,巴洛克主题对于这四位思想家和作家来说,"蕴含着一种解放的希望,可以与十七世纪巴洛克艺术的反动纲领背道而驰"(26)。Cermatori 并没有接受现代主义走向现实主义或模仿性戏剧的自然轨迹,而是在尼采、马拉美、本雅明和斯坦因倡导的反模仿性、狄奥尼派倾向和以巴洛克为中心的视觉壮观戏剧的指导下,提供了另一种现代性。他在书中对巴洛克风格进行了新颖而发人深省的解读,重新发现了这四位原创艺术家和哲学家的魅力所在,因为他们常常克服重重困难,试图将戏剧重新塑造为灵感的源泉。尼采在书中成为现代巴洛克戏剧的初步评论者和实践者。Cermatori 称,尼采的目标是用 "补充性和非语言性的动觉行动领域 "取代语义学(以语言为中心)和模仿学(亚里士多德)对戏剧的强调,其中包含 "运动中的肉体强度,将触觉冲动从化身表演者传达给化身观察者"(37)。尼采崇尚视觉戏剧而非戏剧,他努力用狄奥尼式的狂喜来点缀舞台,也就是 Cermatori 所说的巴洛克式非模仿舞台,"目的是放大戏剧自身的力量"(40)。尼采抵制 "自我作为一个稳定而居中的主体的安慰性、身份主义概念"(60),意在撼动现状。Cermatori 声称,尼采通过在舞台上强加流动的、神秘的、非矩阵式的戏剧姿态和意象,通过建立一种不稳定的、表演性的、非中心化的性别和性身份,影响了二十一世纪的后现代戏剧和同性恋理论。他通过强调情色的感官性和肉体性以及戏剧性的厚重质感、舞台体验的奢华和内涵修饰,"通过艺术媒介达到感官刺激效果的戏剧性风格意志"(42),得出了这一论断。下一章的重点是马拉美,尤其是他的戏剧《Hérodiade》,该剧 "展开了一种感性的、唯物主义的、最终是寓言式的戏剧性形式,它既为新的表演前卫主义(如莫里斯-梅特林克、F. T. 马里内蒂、约翰-凯奇和其他许多人所探索的表演前卫主义)设定了条件,自身又带有巴洛克风格的历史痕迹"(67)。在马拉美的戏剧和诗歌中,复杂性和奇观照亮了巴洛克风格的点缀......
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Baroque Modernity: An Aesthetic of Theater by Joseph Cermatori (review)
In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:

Reviewed by:

  • Baroque Modernity: An Aesthetic of Theater by Joseph Cermatori
  • David Krasner
BAROQUE MODERNITY: AN AESTHETIC OF THEATER. By Joseph Cermatori. Baltimore: John Hopkins University Press, 2021; 298 pp.

In Thornton Wilder’s inaugural 1938 production of Our Town, director Jed Harris staged a moment in the play where over a dozen actors portraying townspeople hold open umbrellas aloft on an otherwise bare stage. The decorative image, a sea of hovering black umbrellas, conveyed what was in keeping with the playwright’s penchant for baroque theatricality. Wilder, a close friend and colleague of Gertrude Stein, absorbed Stein’s conceptualization of opaque, esoteric, and stylized representations that drew from the qualities and history of the baroque. Wilder and Stein engaged in and promoted baroque modernity by combining the commonplace [End Page 584] with the visually profound, unworldly, and hyper-theatrical; they shared a vision of a modernized baroque theatre in which the spatial comportment of vivid spectacles and dynamic stage images created extravagant, playful, eclectic, exuberant, and temporally immediate (living in the moment) theatricality.

The umbrella staging of Our Town aligns with Joseph Cermatori’s Baroque Modernity, a brilliantly written history of baroque theatre that focuses on four doyens of modern baroque aesthetic: Friedrich Nietzsche, Stéphane Mallarmé, Walter Benjamin, and Stein. By examining the theories, ideas, and staging of these four figureheads, the book documents “an account of the historical, artistic, and philosophical circumstances that made Wilder’s vision of baroque modernism possible” (6). Cermatori’s objective is to excavate the baroque from its perceived recidivist Renaissance antiquity and situate it firmly and dynamically in the modernist (specifically 1875 to 1935) Euro-American zeitgeist. This re-reading of the baroque significantly shifts our perspective of modern drama from a temporal drama to “also an art of space” (9), where the physical theatre incorporates architecture, music, dance, sculpture, lighting, engineering (“special effects”), and a plethora of visual-spatial aesthetics.

Baroque themes for the four thinkers and writers, Cermatori claims, “held out a liberatory promise, one that can be read against the grain of the frequently reactionary program of seventeenth-century baroque art” (26). Rather than accepting modernism’s natural trajectory as leading towards realism or mimetically representative theatre, Cermatori provides an alternative modernity guided by Nietzsche, Mallarmé, Benjamin, and Stein’s advocacy for a lavishly anti-mimetic, Dionysian prone, and visually spectacular baroque-centered drama. His book offers a fresh and thought-provoking take on the baroque, rediscovering the appeal of these four original artists and philosophers as they tried, often against great odds, to refashion the theatre as a source of inspiration.

Nietzsche emerges in the book as prima facie commentator and practitioner of the modern baroque theatre. Nietzsche, Cermatori claims, aimed to displace semantic (verbal centered) and mimetic (Aristotelian) emphasis on drama with a “supplementary and nonverbal field of kinesthetic action” that incorporates “the corporeal intensity of flesh in motion, communicating haptic impulses from an embodied performer to an embodied observer” (37). Nietzsche embraced visual theatre over drama, striving to embellish the stage with Dionysian ecstasy, what Cermatori calls baroque’s non-mimetic staging “for the purposes of magnifying the theater’s own power” (40). Nietzsche intended to shake up the status quo by resisting “a consoling, identitarian notion of the self as a stable and centered subject” (60). By imposing instead fluid, enigmatic, non-matrixed theatrical gestures and imagery onstage, Nietzsche, Cermatori claims, influenced twentieth-first century’s postmodern drama and queer theory by establishing an unstable and performatively decentered gender and sexual identity. He arrives at this claim by emphasizing the sensuality and physicality of the erotic and thick texture of theatricality, the lavishness and visceral embellishment of the staging experience, “a stylistic will to theatricality through artistic media used to sensual, exciting effect” (42).

The next chapter focuses on Mallarmé, especially his play Hérodiade, which “unfolds a sensuous, materialist, ultimately allegorical form of theatricality that both sets the terms for the new avant-gardism in performance (such as would be explored by Maurice Maeterlinck, F. T. Marinetti, John Cage, and many others) and carries within itself historical traces of baroque style” (67). In Mallarmé’s plays and poetry, complexity and spectacle illuminate baroque embellishment...

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来源期刊
THEATRE JOURNAL
THEATRE JOURNAL THEATER-
CiteScore
0.40
自引率
40.00%
发文量
87
期刊介绍: For over five decades, Theatre Journal"s broad array of scholarly articles and reviews has earned it an international reputation as one of the most authoritative and useful publications of theatre studies available today. Drawing contributions from noted practitioners and scholars, Theatre Journal features social and historical studies, production reviews, and theoretical inquiries that analyze dramatic texts and production.
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