The category of presence plays a major role in the most accepted definitions of performance art. This centrality of the ephemeral presence of the artist’s body has prevented an appreciation of performance documentation in all its importance. Taking Peggy Phelan’s position as representative of the prevailing paradigm, this article presents its main objections and intends to broaden the concept of presence in its application to performance to accommodate the documentation processes.La présence, en tant que catégorie, joue un rôle majeur parmi les plus acceptées des définitions de l’art de la performance. Le caractère central que prend la présence éphémère du corps de l’artiste a empêché que l’on puisse apprécier la documentation de la perform...
This thesis investigates performance as an embodied practice. It draws on theories of embodiment, wh...
"Performing Archives/Archives of Performance contributes to the ongoing critical discussions of perf...
In this work, we depart from the understanding that the co-presence of performers and spectators in ...
The category of presence plays a major role in the most accepted definitions of performance art. Thi...
The category of presence plays a major role in the most accepted definitions of performance art. Thi...
There is a broad consensus in the art world that performance can be defined as an action that takes ...
This text presents an approach to the artist presence as a relation by offering a perspective about ...
In this article I intend to reflect upon a specific experience: my participation in a performance cr...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Taylor & Francis via the...
This article proposes a reflection on the notion of stage presence. In reviewing the terms frequentl...
The performance ‘Oral/Response’ joins an artist, Angela Bartram and a theorist, Mary O’Neill in rese...
First coined in the United States, 'performance art' became during the 1970s a transnational term cl...
Concerned with the ephemeral and how it is perceived when lost to the fractures of time, Peggy Phela...
In this dissertation I explore the phenomenon that Hans Ulrich Gumbrecht calls presence effects as...
Thistext presents a few notes about themanner through which the Studies on Presence define and delim...
This thesis investigates performance as an embodied practice. It draws on theories of embodiment, wh...
"Performing Archives/Archives of Performance contributes to the ongoing critical discussions of perf...
In this work, we depart from the understanding that the co-presence of performers and spectators in ...
The category of presence plays a major role in the most accepted definitions of performance art. Thi...
The category of presence plays a major role in the most accepted definitions of performance art. Thi...
There is a broad consensus in the art world that performance can be defined as an action that takes ...
This text presents an approach to the artist presence as a relation by offering a perspective about ...
In this article I intend to reflect upon a specific experience: my participation in a performance cr...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Taylor & Francis via the...
This article proposes a reflection on the notion of stage presence. In reviewing the terms frequentl...
The performance ‘Oral/Response’ joins an artist, Angela Bartram and a theorist, Mary O’Neill in rese...
First coined in the United States, 'performance art' became during the 1970s a transnational term cl...
Concerned with the ephemeral and how it is perceived when lost to the fractures of time, Peggy Phela...
In this dissertation I explore the phenomenon that Hans Ulrich Gumbrecht calls presence effects as...
Thistext presents a few notes about themanner through which the Studies on Presence define and delim...
This thesis investigates performance as an embodied practice. It draws on theories of embodiment, wh...
"Performing Archives/Archives of Performance contributes to the ongoing critical discussions of perf...
In this work, we depart from the understanding that the co-presence of performers and spectators in ...