Posts Tagged ‘cupidandpsyche’

. . . but win the war

Tuesday, September 19th, 2006

Well, the IT Awards were last night. I didn’t win but I did get a nice consolation prize. One of the presenters was a former teacher of mine, so after the ceremony, at the after party, I got to sit at the big kids table. At the table were Lanford Wilson, Marylouise Burke, ML Geiger among others. It was quite a fun time. The bar was radically underprepared for such a large crowd on a Monday night and they quickly ran out of Martini glasses and certain brands of vodka. How apropos of a function for off-off-broadway, cutting corners on the props budget! Still it can’t beat the broken air conditioner at the nomination ceremony.

I have a meeting at INTAR this morning for Windows. It is the first read through with the cast. I love these. I love them because I hate reading plays, but love listening to them. But more, there is a kind of raw truth to a play, the script and the cast, that one finds in a first reading. I have worked on many new plays and this is always the case. No one quite knows what will happen, it is new for everyone. And it is awesome. I think the play is quite beautiful, and am really looking forward to hearing it come alive.

Regarding new plays I have two new translations that I am lighting in the next few months. Twenty Years of Agnes is a spanish play by Juan Riquelme, directed by Camilo Fontecilla and produced by my friend Shoni Currier who I have worked with a number of times. In November I am lighting a new translation of Anouilh’s Antigone produced by QED Productions. Madness of Day is neither a new play nor a new translation, but it is new in the sense that it has never before been adapted to the stage.

Jay Aubrey, producer of Cupid and Psyche, has asked me to light another play for the Themantics Group, although the details are not yet nailed down, so I do not know how it fits in with my schedule as it currently stands.

Today is a good day.

More Cupid and Psyche

Tuesday, August 15th, 2006

I just got some new photos from the costume designer. Here they are.

apaph

graveyard

hell

Outstanding News

Tuesday, July 18th, 2006

I have been nominated for Outstanding Lighting Design for Cupid and Psyche by the Innovative Theatre Awards. My fellow designer on the show (and NYU alum) Michael Moore was also nominated for Outstanding Set Design. He is a fabulous designer and infinitely pleasant to work with. One of the most cheerful under pressure personalities I have ever encountered. His work was truly fantastic on the show. I sadly do not have any pictures of Cupid and Psyche yet, so if you did not see it you will have to imagine.

I did not stay very long at the event as the air conditioning was broken and it was uncomfortably hot inside. Too bad because it could have been quite a fun evening, but it seems that most of the folk left shortly after the announcements. I ran into my director for Ajax on the way out. One of her actors was nominated for best solo performance for In Delirium. The three of us left right after the announcements and got food across the street at the falafal place formerly known as Cinderella on 2nd Ave. They do an amazing falafal, I survived on them for two years when I worked for the NYU Dance Department.

The greatest thing about the evening was seeing a new misspelling of my name. I have seen Lukas, Luca, Benjamin, Kreche, Kresh, Crech, Krecsch and Kresch. This new one was a misspelling of my middle name, it was “Bengaminh.” For the record, the correct spelling of my name is “Lucas Benjaminh Krech.” I once had a program corrected three times by two different people and they still got it wrong in the final printing. So much for cut and paste.

un/conventional

Wednesday, July 12th, 2006

So far for next season I have been hired for two shows because of a reputation I have for “unconventional” lighting. I understand the intent behind this categorization, but I find it curious that my work is seen as unconventional. Perhaps this comes from the fact that I do not think, initially about theatricalizing the text, but approach my work at a more formal visual level. When I am lighting a show I do not think first about lekos and fresnels and gobos and gels. Rather I think visually in terms of what quality of light do I wish to create. Are we interested in directional lighting or soft diffuse lighting? Do we want a compressed grey scale or something very chromatic. Should the light be solid or dappled? This is why I love using images to discuss lighting a show. It keeps the conversation focused on what the lighting should look like rather than technical execution. That part comes later, much later. At the beginning of a process it is about looking and reacting.

Because of this approach I get sold on the look rather than the technique. As a result I use a mixture of traditional theatrical lights and other types of lighting instruments. Heather Carson taught at NYU my first year of graduate school and I had the pleasure of assisting her at San Francisco Opera this past season on a production of Norma. Heather is a designer known for her “unconventional” lighting. How she came about it is quite interesting. Working on a lot of European opera with Paul Steinberg, who creates large architectural sets, she began exploring architectural lighting. This search has led her to embrace an aesthetic composed almost exclusively sodium and mercury flood lights as well as fluorescent lighting. For those of you who are unfamiliar, sodium lights are the yellow street lamps and mercury, the white/green parking lot lights. Her work is quite stunning and very powerful.

Working and studying with her gave me a strong appreciation of the power and beauty of a much wider array of lighting instruments than I had previously explored. Let’s think of a lamp post at night. Most of us have probably seen some scene in a play that takes place outside where the characters are supposed to be standing under a street lamp. The lighting designer took a spot light, made the edges very soft and colored it some shade of yellow or amber. The effect feels little to nothing like a streetlight. An actual street lamp has a very beautiful quality to it. The light is very intense when you are close to it. Harsh and almost disorienting. As you move away the light thins out and dissipates rapidly. Far away there is a thin breath of light, barely visible. Certainly there is something here to be said for dramatic effect, but if what one wants is a streetlight, nothing can do that better than the real thing.

In Cupid and Psyche I was expressly interested in the quality of light. I was exploring the relationship between the formal quality of light and the creation of psychological space. We had quite a number of locations to deal with on a single set, so delineating the location came down to lighting. Two of the most important locations in the play were Cupid’s cloud where he laments his lovelstruck woe and the Apolo’s palace where Cupid takes Psyche to woo her. These two physical locations simultaneously represented psychological spaces as well. The palace was lit with 23 large tear shaped incandescent bulbs. They gave off a warm glow and reflected the other lights in their glass. This gave a kind of jewel like sparkle to the palace. The cloud on the other hand was a space of lovesick anguish. It was lit in a diffuse, soft, cold, grey light. Fluorescent tubes hidden behind the fabric walls of the set were the primary lighting for this location.

Had I limited myself to the conventional palette used by a theatrical lighting designer for Cupid and Psyche, the show would have been just that, conventional. In Suspendida we lit the entire piece in bare lightbulbs laying on the ground. Here the lights on the ground pulsed like breath, slow and deliberate, It was actually a very complex random sequence of programming, such that every time we performed the piece, the lighting was different. Looking beyond the conventional means of working a scene or an entire piece can be very difficult. A lot of the tradition has come about precisely because it works. But the sad reality is that a lot of work ends up looking very similar.

What I have found interesting is that as a result of doing a lot of “unconventional” lighting, I am able to take a conventional piece and give it a kind of unique quality. This is why I love working in a variety of mediums as well as in both traditional entertainment and more avant garde work. The different works talk to each other through me and inform one another in often surprising ways.

I was once working on a piece that wanted to be very “old-fashioned” in style, so I went back to the work of Stanley McCandless. What I ended up with was a modern interpretation of his ideas. And that research led me down some very interesting and exciting avenues of thought specifically in the realm of color theory that I might not have otherwise explored. The old and the new are often surprisingly close to one another. Both McCandless and Carson’s work is concerned with a kind of economy of volume. That is how to fill a stage both efficiently and beautifully. While the final product could not be more different, in many ways they stem from the same origin.

It is because of this that I find labels like ‘unconventional’ to be rather strange. In fact the whole idea of an Avant Garde sounds hopelessly mid-century to me. If for no other reason than the rate at which information is disseminated and absorbed into culture, the idea of an advanced rank of artists or producers of culture is just plain silly. Any work that has reached completion is already old and dead. The revolution is not a single event. It is not a deed or an act. Rather it is like the Aristotilian notion of Praxis, it is an underlying motivation that must and will continue until it has reached its final goal. If that final goal is a product then the revolution will die. If, rather it is a way of Being, a mode of existence, then it will continue on forever, always finding new sources of fuel and new means of expression.

Another Review

Saturday, April 22nd, 2006

Full text here:

Director Alex Lippard has done an admirable job blocking the play, aided by Lucas Benjaminh Krech’s imaginative lighting design and Michael Moore’s set. Scenes on Earth take place at the back of the stage within a gigantic gilt frame surrounded by sheer white veils. Other scenes occur on the stage proper, where large, tear-shaped lightbulbs drip down like icicles and two smaller gold frames on both sides of the stage contain sources of misty, aqua-green illumination.

No really, someone ELSE wrote this

Tuesday, April 18th, 2006

Full Review here.

One cannot even begin to discuss The Themantics Group’s latest production, Cupid and Psyche, without first mentioning the glorious technical team. Michael Moore’s set is a delightful symphony of white, with a large gold frame at the back of the stage. The mortal world is confined by the frame, while the immortal world has all the space and unconstricted movement of center and downstage. Erin Elizabeth Murphy’s bright and colorful costumes offset the white netherworld of the gods, and the subtly powerful lighting design (especially the soft candle lights that hang from the ceiling, almost like stars) by Lucas Benjamin Krech really bring this mythological world to life. It is an impressive and astonishing achievement.

Aesthetic Relativity and Fractal Networks

Sunday, April 9th, 2006

When I wrote the other day about the quality of light I took a rather extreme approach. I placed the difference between quality and angle and color as though they approached a kind of mutual exclusivity. Certainly this is not the case. Some of what makes the colors, angles and the qualities of light interesting in their transformation is the reconfiguration of similar elements we have seen before. The same color coming out of two kinds of light creates a different feel. In a way, this is its own kind of Network. It is a relational system of signs with no inherent meaning. Its meaning comes from its relation to bodies and text and to itself over time. Elements take on significance as time goes on. As they relate to each other. As this four dimensional network expands in time and space.

Relational Networks.

Relational networks of meaning come in many forms. Friendships are a kind of binary network with various ties to external beings. The business world is a Network, politics, art etc. etc. The idea of Networks does not hold much meaning on its own. Rather its meaning is derived from the context in which it is used. As a conceptual tool then it becomes a very strong and powerful idea. Networks then are part of a network and rely on their own networks for meaning.

Joseph Albers in The Interaction of Color states that “In visual perception a color is almost never seen as it really is – as it physically is. This fact makes color the most relative medium in art.” This point would become obvious to anyone who studied color even briefly. White can appear white, green, red, blue, or any number of colors. Saturated colors can appear dull just as white or black can appear rich and lush. It is relational. It is a matter of contrast. And as a drawing teacher of mine once said “Contrast equals interest.”

Aesthetic Networks.

Why is Rothko so interesting? Well there are many reasons for this perhaps, but one thing for me is how his work stands in relation to the whole history of art and oil painting. When you think ‘painting,’ names like Vermeer or Ingres and the images associated with them come to mind. Rich and powerful images with a meticulous attention to detail. Full palette of colors utilized to outline and give texture to a myriad forms. And then there is Rothko whose blank canvas is like a snapshot of emotion. The color, if there is any, is simple and clear. We look at these works and see them in relation to everything we know about painting and everything we expect and suddenly, their power overwhelms us and we stand before them in awe.

Fractal Networks.

Aesthetic networks exist in the larger world of art, but also exist on a micro scale within an individual work. Mediums that are time dependent or linear make this very obvious. In a play, or a film or a novel, characters evolve and visual symbols become more and more filled with meaning and significance as the network of relations within the work expands and develops. In the film Hero we might at first be struck by the beauty of the colors and cinematography of the work, but as it goes on and we learn more and more of the story, we begin to see a stronger visual element of story telling. Suddenly we find ourselves immersed in a world where the story is told through image and movement and the words spoken become like a backdrop, a beautiful and necessary element, though not sufficient to tell the story.

Emotional Networks.

Last night a former teacher of mine, Paul Steinberg, came to see Cupid and Psyche and we got into quite a discussion at the intermission. The set designer has created a highly abstracted space. A simple, clean environment that gives a lot of room for the actors and the audience to create the world of the play in their minds. Our discussion centered around how much visual information to give an audience. The point was made that too much information is boring. It leaves no room for the imagination. The audience will be able to imagine something far more fabulous and wonderful than anything that could be put on stage. This is the power of the networked stage. This is the actor reacting to something he sees and inviting the audience in to participate and see what he sees. And when they do, what he sees becomes even more clear and powerful and real. And then the exchange begins.

Theatre is a dialog. It is not a closed system, but an ever growing network of relations that build and feed upon one another. It is not about illusions so much as it is about the imagination. Ingres might give us the beautiful illusion of fabrics and jewels and woods on a two dimensional surface, but Rothko provides a springboard for emotion and the imagination.

Upcoming Show

Wednesday, April 5th, 2006

Cupid & Psyche Front

Cupid & Psyche Back

Come check it out if you are in New York.

Today was a good day

Friday, March 24th, 2006

Busy and unpredictable. I like it like that.

This morning I had a meeting with the director for Cupid and Psyche. It was quite productive. We are in a rather limited situation and of course have ideas about the show stretching well beyond the dollar sign. But a lot was figured out.

Its a good thing I can read a piece of drafting since I am always dealing with matters of scale. Huge budget one week, nothing the next. Tall spaces, small spaces. Lots of light ques or very few. Every show is so different. And if you can figure out the key to the situation then you can have a very successful product. Throw money at a bad script and it doesn’t get any better. Yet very limited resources can be an asset with a strong script, cast, director and design team. Innovative ideas are often borne of limitations.

After the meeting I ran into my friend Zay in the East Village and we wandered around a bit before I had to go to lunch. He is in town for an interview at the New School’s dramatic writing MFA program. The interview is Saturday afternoon. Let’s all go wish him luck.

Lunch was with my good friend, the wonderful and talented costume designer, Oana Botez-Ban. We had a very nice time catching up. This business is so strange. You make very strong friendships with people in a very short amount of time working on a show and while those friendships continue to evolve over the years you often go months or more without seeing them due to all the hectic scheduling. But the reconnections are always so great.

After lunch I had an hour and a half before I needed to be up at the Riverside Church for The Crucible rehearsal. I decided to walk. 8th Street to as far as I could make it. Uptown along 5th avenue, then Broadway. I love watching the architecture and the people change with the weather, clouds and faces transforming as I walk uptown. I ran into my friend Mark near Lincoln Center. We worked together for a year at NYU in the dance department, he is quite a talent in the lighting field. We run into each other a few times a year. Staying in touch with other lighting designers is a truly difficult task since you never work together. But occasionally you meet around 68th street, each taking a long walk through Manhattan. At 72nd I ducked into the subway so as to make it to rehearsal on time.

Tech was only four hours today. We got through lighting the first scene. I was quite pleased. Its always a mystery until you start turning things on or off. A dull void. Empty and waiting. Shape and shading ready to be applied. This play is so much about subtlety. It is fascinating. Miller is so clever in who he makes sure is on stage when so you can see their reaction. Who hears what and who sees what.

The Crucible is very much a play that benefits from the proverbial fourth wall. The message is so clear and Miller’s use of language and construction of relationships so complex that the message is clearer if the illusion is maintained. When we let ourselves be observers of this slice of 17th century colonial American life the play’s real power comes about. John Proctor could makes his speech, on the sanctity of his good name, to the audience. Reverend Hale could let us all in on the secrets of the witches. But when he simply addresses the judge and his fellow citizens we hear his words more strongly.

Some people might mistakenly argue that ‘fourth wall realism’ is contributing to the marginalization of theatre in our culture. But the shocking news is that theatre has always been marginalized. It has always been dying. So too has it always been essential to culture. So too has it always been reinventing itself. This is why there are so many styles. This why the creators in this medium must constantly change and find new ways of expressing ourselves. This is why we now have so many styles available to us. For every Avant-Grizzly there is a chorus behind them creating change with their art.


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