Posts Tagged ‘patterns’

Texture, angle and the curse of open spaces

Tuesday, June 2nd, 2009

I often find myself designing the same show twice. No I am not talking about being hired by two different producers for the same play, I am talking about lighting in spaces that have a lower orchestra level roughly in line with the stage and a balcony (or two) that is much higher up and thus a very different angle from and view of the stage.

I have sat through far too many shows in the balcony where the lighting designer had essentially forgotten anyone was not sitting in the prime orchestra level. These shows had houses where the lovely light through the trees miraculously did not light the roof of the house. Where, in fact, the sun itself did not light the roof of, say, the house or upstage of a large piece of scenery. Sure, lighting for the critics who sit in these prime seats is a good idea, but to ignore half to more of your audience is insensitive at best. The experience will never be the same for the people sitting in these respective seats. The viewing angle is different, one is closer than the other, etc. However, while not the same, they can and should be equally interesting and engaging experiences for the audience.

Many shows, once you get up into the balcony levels, immediately become wide open blank spaces of boring dull color. This is because too often the lighting designer ignores the floor as a potential canvass. It is interesting that a designer who will spend countless hours designing a sky that will only be seen by a minority of patrons seated in the orchestra misses an amazing opportunity to provide an equally powerful experience to the rest of the audience.

If the sky is the background for the orchestra, the floor is the background for the balconies. There is nothing incredibly special about how floors need to be treated. The fundamental problem is that they are too often simply ignored. The same or similar techniques apply to floors as apply to skies. Color serves as a major component of the tool box available. On equal or greater footing is texture. Patterns, as well as areas of light and dark, become critical to the visual storytelling necessary to give a satisfactory experience to the balcony audience.

A well designed floor is very much like a well designed sky. It furthers the storytelling and heightens or reveals otherwise hidden aspects of the performance. This may be most obvious in a musical, but the same rule applies to dramatic works as well. Perhaps the lighting on the floor is not textured, but then the use of strong and dramatic areas of light and dark may be employed. Perhaps strong shafts of light cutting across the stage are cast. Perhaps pools of light that contain word and action tightly bound.

What the balconies do not have access to is a lot of the sculptural work designers enjoy doing on the performers. Because of the relative angle of viewer and performer, the subtlety and nuance of angle changes often gets lost. What replaces this is the use of shadows. Too often I find a muddy and unclear use of shadows. Again, this is a product of designing for the orchestra, without concern for the balconies. Having a clear and clean vision of where the performer’s shadows will land helps to give a more valuable experience to the balcony audience.

This kind of floor work is very strong among German opera designers and European designers in general. More often than not I find the work of these designers to be as much or more about shadow as it is about light. This is in sharp distinction to much of American design where the emphasis is on the light. Even shadows are treated with some faint light or color as though exploring pure darkness were too frightening a proposition.

By clearly using shadows, one is also making strong choices in key lighting scenes and performers. I find far too many designers and/or directors and choreographers who are afraid of exploring darkness. Who are afraid of shadow. But embracing shadow leads to a stronger visual image. This is true not only for those seated in the balconies but those in the orchestra as well. In my experience, the more one balances these two seemingly competing demands, the more each one is strengthened.

In the end, by taking into account the visual needs of the whole audience, the designer is giving a better and more enriching experience to the whole audience. Providing the best possible work to the audience necessitates this kind of holistic design approach. One must ensure that no aspect of the work is left unattended. The floor is a critical design element from the scenic perspective and must be treated as such from lighting designers as well.

sometimes you WANT to talk about the weather

Saturday, October 28th, 2006

Yahoo Mail has a page called “My Yahoo” that has various things you can set up like news feeds, horoscopes, baseball scores and weather. When I set it up I included where I lived and worked at the times, New York and Brooklyn. Since then I have added a new city every time I have lived or worked in a different city.(I excluded all the cities from a ballet tour because it would have got out of hand too quickly). Its fun. I get to see what the weather is like in these different places I know. I just added Williamstown, MA.

Now that I am going back to Norfolk, VA in January I already have the weather set up, so I can track that without having to set it up again. It lends a sense of continuity to an otherwise fragmented experience.

I am helping a Romanian Theatre Company with a little show they are doing next week in Manhattan. It is sponsored by the Romanian Cultural Institute. What is funny to me about this is that I am going to a production meeting for a production of Mad Forest, an English play about the Romanian Revolution. The theatre, where the Romanian company performs is in a bar that used to be owned by Ceausescu’s son before the revolution.

I love it when there are these moments of synchronicity. Freelancing, I get to say yes or no to projects but I do not get to pick what comes my way. Yet, definite patterns emerge and that is always enjoyable to notice. There are similar synchronous events related to Queen Coziah and the Williamstown dance show.

In the end I find that life itself carries with it a definite pattern that we only get glimpses of from our perspective inside it. We have moments of recognition, but rarely much beyond that. Art is a means of raising our perspective, beyond the myopic moment of self reflection as is meditation. It is important to get above the maze from time to time and clear out the senses.

When I was in Williamstown, I looked out the window and for a moment imagined the seasons as perceived on the geological scale. These rapid fire explosions of orange and red followed by white and dark brown that explodes again in pink and yellow and then into green and back again to orange and red. On the human scale it all happens so slowly, yet to the mountains it must be like a wonderful fireworks display. And us humans are barely noticed, except perhaps as a temporary, if very nasty rash.


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