How exercises matter as a dramaturgical approach in performance art education.
Permanent link
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/23089Date
2021-06-30Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Author
Valkoinen, Kristina JunttilaAbstract
This article addresses a university course in performance art at UiT – The Arctic University of
Norway. The aim of this article is to discuss how the exercises and the dramaturgy of the exercises in
the course matter. The author is the teacher of the course and thus the diffractive analysis is informed by her role as a teacher and artist-researcher. The study uses new material feminist theory and
the theory of agential realism from physicist and feminist theorist Karen Barad.
The study investigates how the exercises become agents and get constitutive power. The exercises are material-discursive, in intra-action and entangled with the entire teaching environment,
and they compose a dramaturgical structure that allows the unpredictable to happen. The analysis
describes three examples of exercises from the course and highlights three aspects that matter in
the mediation of the exercises – embodiment, materiality, and site. The results of the study point
toward the importance of mediating exercises that activate the student-participants to experiment
and redefine what the ever-changing field of performance art can be.
Is part of
Valkoinen, K.J. (2023). What Makes us Act? On the Potentials of Exercises in Live Art Education and Performances. (Doctoral thesis). https://hdl.handle.net/10037/28763.Publisher
Nordic Open Access Scholarly PublishingCitation
Valkoinen K. How exercises matter as a dramaturgical approach in performance art education. . Journal for Research in Arts and Sports Education. 2021;5(2)Metadata
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