Theatre is a socially and politically aware artform. It participates in the construction – and,\ud potentially, the contestation – of a community’s history, identity, and ideals. It does this live,\ud in the moment, where artist, artwork and audience meet here, now, together. This, most\ud theatre makers think, gives theatre special power to make spectators think about the stories\ud it stages. But it also creates challenges
What constitutes an artistic community? Why do people come together and form a group to make art des...
A symposium that followed The Common Guild’s productions of 'At Twilight' by artist Simon Starling i...
A reflection - in the current Brexit climate - of what it means to be a European, collaborative thea...
Redefining Theatre Communitiesexplores the interplay between contemporary theatre and communities. I...
This graduate paper deals with the phenomenon of the theatre spectacle that truly becomes alive no s...
This article investigates the development, purpose and value of co-creation in theatre. Through a qu...
What does theatre do for – and to – those who witness, watch, and participate in it? Theatre& Audie...
Theatre theorists and practitioners around the world have taken on the challenge of developing strat...
The twenty-first century is redefining the political relationship between performance and participat...
A possible focus for this workshop could be the interdependence between the political and (in a broa...
Creative participation in the arts is a complex and abstract concept that bridges the gap between cu...
More and more North-American artists create collective works in collaboration with members of stigma...
The theatre artist must communicate to and be relevant in the society, bearing in mind that “an inco...
The desire to transform the scene into an interface of cultural inscriptions, of specific sounds, of...
Theatre can be broadly construed as a cultural system for collectively modelling and experiencing l...
What constitutes an artistic community? Why do people come together and form a group to make art des...
A symposium that followed The Common Guild’s productions of 'At Twilight' by artist Simon Starling i...
A reflection - in the current Brexit climate - of what it means to be a European, collaborative thea...
Redefining Theatre Communitiesexplores the interplay between contemporary theatre and communities. I...
This graduate paper deals with the phenomenon of the theatre spectacle that truly becomes alive no s...
This article investigates the development, purpose and value of co-creation in theatre. Through a qu...
What does theatre do for – and to – those who witness, watch, and participate in it? Theatre& Audie...
Theatre theorists and practitioners around the world have taken on the challenge of developing strat...
The twenty-first century is redefining the political relationship between performance and participat...
A possible focus for this workshop could be the interdependence between the political and (in a broa...
Creative participation in the arts is a complex and abstract concept that bridges the gap between cu...
More and more North-American artists create collective works in collaboration with members of stigma...
The theatre artist must communicate to and be relevant in the society, bearing in mind that “an inco...
The desire to transform the scene into an interface of cultural inscriptions, of specific sounds, of...
Theatre can be broadly construed as a cultural system for collectively modelling and experiencing l...
What constitutes an artistic community? Why do people come together and form a group to make art des...
A symposium that followed The Common Guild’s productions of 'At Twilight' by artist Simon Starling i...
A reflection - in the current Brexit climate - of what it means to be a European, collaborative thea...