If the philosopher has an analogue in the theatre, perhaps it is not with the performer, the one who shows, but with the stage-hand, the one who sets the stage. This is not, as some might argue, because the stage-hand has some special access to what is behind-the-scenes, or because she knows that what is on-stage is only illusion. The stage-hand’s work is not hidden. It is exactly the opposite: the work is there for all to see. It is because it is there that all can see. It is the work that makes the seeing possible
Theatre is an art of infinite possibility and is created and viewed from a variety of different lens...
"The Routledge Companion to Performance Philosophy is a volume of especially commissioned critical e...
Object-Oriented Ontology presents stark implications for the process of the artist. If all matter is...
If the philosopher has an analogue in the theatre, perhaps it is not with the performer, the one who...
The history of philosophy is widely considered as the history of exercises in speculation. However, ...
This paper problematizes the ways in which performance art might be philosophy, and vice versa, that...
This presentation-paper discusses my own live art practice in terms of the relationship between perf...
Was Plato the first philosophical dramatist to explore philosophical ideas through dramatic content,...
Staging the Encounter: the Work of Art as a Stage is a practice-led PhD project that consists of a ...
Hannah Beatrice, THE ARTIST IS NOT PRESENT: A strategic investigation of psychological complexity t...
NEW EDITION Exploring the use of live performance and the moving image in contemporary art practi...
In my short manifesto I consider the interrelation of the emergence of performance philosophy and th...
This article begins from the premise that a ‘critical turning point’ has been reached in terms of th...
The Philosopher and The Dancer is an act of spontaneous, solo, movement improvisation; offered here ...
This article critically assesses the position of the spectator in philosophy and (participatory) per...
Theatre is an art of infinite possibility and is created and viewed from a variety of different lens...
"The Routledge Companion to Performance Philosophy is a volume of especially commissioned critical e...
Object-Oriented Ontology presents stark implications for the process of the artist. If all matter is...
If the philosopher has an analogue in the theatre, perhaps it is not with the performer, the one who...
The history of philosophy is widely considered as the history of exercises in speculation. However, ...
This paper problematizes the ways in which performance art might be philosophy, and vice versa, that...
This presentation-paper discusses my own live art practice in terms of the relationship between perf...
Was Plato the first philosophical dramatist to explore philosophical ideas through dramatic content,...
Staging the Encounter: the Work of Art as a Stage is a practice-led PhD project that consists of a ...
Hannah Beatrice, THE ARTIST IS NOT PRESENT: A strategic investigation of psychological complexity t...
NEW EDITION Exploring the use of live performance and the moving image in contemporary art practi...
In my short manifesto I consider the interrelation of the emergence of performance philosophy and th...
This article begins from the premise that a ‘critical turning point’ has been reached in terms of th...
The Philosopher and The Dancer is an act of spontaneous, solo, movement improvisation; offered here ...
This article critically assesses the position of the spectator in philosophy and (participatory) per...
Theatre is an art of infinite possibility and is created and viewed from a variety of different lens...
"The Routledge Companion to Performance Philosophy is a volume of especially commissioned critical e...
Object-Oriented Ontology presents stark implications for the process of the artist. If all matter is...