Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://www.um.edu.mt/library/oar/handle/123456789/21596
Title: Making visible the invisible : Ingemar Lindh's practice of collective improvisation and Etienne Decroux
Authors: Camilleri, Frank
Keywords: Theater
Lindh, Ingemar, 1945-1997
Decroux, Etienne, 1898-1991
Swedish literature
Theater -- Sweden -- Reviews
Issue Date: 2013
Publisher: Routledge
Citation: Camilleri, F. (2013). Making visible the invisible: Ingemar Lindh's practice of collective improvisation and Étienne Decroux. Contemporary Theatre Review, 23(3), 390-402.
Abstract: Swedish theatre maker Ingemar Lindh (1945–97) can be regarded as a prime example of Étienne Decroux's paradoxical absent/present impact in late twentieth-century theatre. The article looks at links, overlapping concerns, and differences between the two practitioners with the principal aim of shedding contextual and conceptual light on Lindh's research. It also contributes to our knowledge of the corporeal mime master, especially about the nature of influence and transmission. Due to the intentional low profile that both practitioners kept, as well as to the lack of documented and critical material on Lindh, identifying links is a complex task. The article strategically reconsiders this obstacle as an opportunity to discuss the more latent (and therefore less visible) aspects of influence, specifically between the two practitioners, but symptomatically also of twentieth-century laboratory theatre. The main aspects discussed in the article are: personal histories and trajectories of influence; holistic pedagogical dimensions as a way of life; the role played by improvisation in training and performance processes; and the nature of mental phenomena in the actor's work.
URI: https://www.um.edu.mt/library/oar//handle/123456789/21596
Appears in Collections:Scholarly Works - SchPATS

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