Taylor considers the role that book arts may play in Craig’s theories of the new theatre, or the Art of the Future. He expands our understanding of Craig’s design work to include print culture, examining his engravings for the monumental editions of Hamlet published by Count Harry Kessler’s Cranach Press in 1929–30. Taylor explores the relationship of Craig’s designs for the 1912 Moscow Art Theatre production of Hamlet to his engravings for the German and English-language Cranach Press editions of the play. He suggests that it was only with this print publication that Craig finally achieved the absolute artistic control that he sought as a director-designer
Early twentieth-century Europe witnessed a particularly intense moment in the long debate concerning...
Craig’s vision of theatre making was one of ongoing reinvention; to turn over what had been and to l...
Whereas most genealogies of the puppet invariably conclude with robots and androids, this dissertati...
Abstract This paper discusses select rare woodcut illustrations of Edward Gordon Craig, an English ...
Haskell focuses on Craig’s work with art books in this essay. He offers a wealth of visual images to...
A roadmap to this Special Issue of Mime Journal. This issue emphasizes the tissue of influences that...
Gold contextualizes his performance piece Hamlet’s Last Act (video will be available on the Action, ...
Taking up the topic of puppetry, Orenstein forges connections between Craig’s vision of the übermari...
In the 1920s and 1930s, Craig drafted two essays on Shakespeare, neither of which was completed nor ...
During World War I, the stage-director Edward Gordon Craig wrote a cycle of comic plays for puppets,...
Edward Gordon Craig (1872-1966) is known as one of the 20thcentury’s most influential theatre the...
Between 2005 and 2007, my design company Casson Mann worked on a project in Moscow about Stanislavsk...
In this edited transcription of his remarks at the 2013 Pomona College (California) conference “Acti...
A previously unpublished essay by Edward Gordon Craig which elucidates his ideas about the “right” w...
During World War I, the stage-director Edward Gordon Craig wrote a cycle of comic plays for puppets,...
Early twentieth-century Europe witnessed a particularly intense moment in the long debate concerning...
Craig’s vision of theatre making was one of ongoing reinvention; to turn over what had been and to l...
Whereas most genealogies of the puppet invariably conclude with robots and androids, this dissertati...
Abstract This paper discusses select rare woodcut illustrations of Edward Gordon Craig, an English ...
Haskell focuses on Craig’s work with art books in this essay. He offers a wealth of visual images to...
A roadmap to this Special Issue of Mime Journal. This issue emphasizes the tissue of influences that...
Gold contextualizes his performance piece Hamlet’s Last Act (video will be available on the Action, ...
Taking up the topic of puppetry, Orenstein forges connections between Craig’s vision of the übermari...
In the 1920s and 1930s, Craig drafted two essays on Shakespeare, neither of which was completed nor ...
During World War I, the stage-director Edward Gordon Craig wrote a cycle of comic plays for puppets,...
Edward Gordon Craig (1872-1966) is known as one of the 20thcentury’s most influential theatre the...
Between 2005 and 2007, my design company Casson Mann worked on a project in Moscow about Stanislavsk...
In this edited transcription of his remarks at the 2013 Pomona College (California) conference “Acti...
A previously unpublished essay by Edward Gordon Craig which elucidates his ideas about the “right” w...
During World War I, the stage-director Edward Gordon Craig wrote a cycle of comic plays for puppets,...
Early twentieth-century Europe witnessed a particularly intense moment in the long debate concerning...
Craig’s vision of theatre making was one of ongoing reinvention; to turn over what had been and to l...
Whereas most genealogies of the puppet invariably conclude with robots and androids, this dissertati...