Posts Tagged ‘silence’

From the Archives: Vital Silence

Friday, March 19th, 2010

Note: This post originally appeared here in June of 2006.

The other day I spoke about the quality of the word ‘Deadly’ in Peter Brook’s The Empty Space. The Deadly Theatre is seen not as a place but as a way of being. A kind of incomplete work. Or a superficial treatment of the subject matter. The subject of course being nothing less than the spirit of Life itself. While the ‘deadly’ comes up quite a bit in the book, there are two other words that appear with quite some frequency; silent and vital. I would argue that it is only through a vital life affirming silence that the deadly can be resisted. By listening to that necessary silence we can hear the authentic impulse that denies the deadly for one moment longer.

The artistic impulse comes in many forms and from many directions. For me it is a way of delving deeper into my own understanding of the world. The World. Such a multifaceted place. But as one explores “The World” one finds that it is not a singular place, but rather a complex of relationships and dependencies. Child is dependent upon mother like the tide is dependent on the Moon. The Lover needs the Beloved in order to live completely. Each of these relationships is its own world. Contained within it are differing rules of physics and indeed life. The world of ‘blogs’ has its own constellations, galaxies and black holes. Every actor within that system effects the gravitational pull of every other being. Sure some are more massive than others, but it is all part of an interconnected gravitational dance.

In “The World” we often find these many and various worlds colliding with one another. They crash into each other vying for dominance. Which world or Worldview will win out? What perspective shall carry the day? These constantly shifting paradigms of reality create a great chaotic mass of noise. The cacophony becomes such that it is nearly impossible to let our ears rest. Yet there are moments of silence. Brief moments between the crash and thunder where we might for a minute, a second, an instant know the tranquility is noiseless bliss.

The Vital Silence is not so much a literal silence, just as the Deadly Theatre is not a physical institution. The Vital Silence is that moment when all the noise and chaos of daily life becomes, for an instant, background. The perspective shifts and there standing before you, clear as day, is that essential thing you had lost in the mass of movement. The Vital Silence is a return to that core of self that is so dangerous to inhabit. It is the place we build walls and defenses against every day. For to walk around in that place would be to get caught in a hurricane without any skin, every inch of your body crying out in pain.

The Vital Silence is the space after the final bell rings in Arvo Part’s Cantus in Memorium Benjamin Britten. It is that place where we hold still and watch as the colors of the world become a little richer. Finding this place inside of us, learning to see from that perspective, is a difficult enough task on its own. Bringing it forth into the light of day is something entirely other. When he talks of The Immediate Theatre, Brook is getting at that place. The artist must live in that liminal space between objectivity and authenticity. She must be both authentic in her action and objective in her work at the same time. It is a double calling and one where the more intensely one aspect is carried forth, so much more difficult becomes the other.

And in this way it transforms into a dance of the self. Mind and Heart partnering across the dance floor of life creating the authentic [Heart/Mind] of creative action. The music that fills the dance floor is that silence that is so essential to life, so vital, that we almost become blind to it. The beating of our own hearts we do not notice until it gets out of phase with our activity, not strong enough at the beginning of a run or pounding too hard as we take a rest.

Silence, stillness and shadow

Friday, July 21st, 2006

John Cage in his essays on silence writes extensively about the role of silence in music. They are essays, but in a very real sense they are musical compositions without noise. In fact, his discourse on silence is so powerful precisely because it forces the reader to focus intently upon the subject matter at hand. The words themselves are in a way immaterial. They serve to guide the mind into that still point of silence.

Th modern world is one of constant frantic energy. The pace of everything increases daily. Minute by minute we move faster and faster. A perfect symbol for this is Times Square. I love watching films from the fourties or fifties when they show their fast paced Times Square imagery. I think of the opening sequence in The Sweet Smell of Success. That fast paced Times Square would be such a relief today. If only we could go that slow!

The modern world is about movement. It is about action. Frantic action. Chaotic and uncontrolled.

Growing up I studied Aikido. For about eleven years I went once or twice a week to the Dojo and trained. Aikido grew out of Judo and is a technique of controlling and redirecting one’s opponent’s energy. At one level Aikido is all about movement and energy. You step inside a dojo and you see people fly through the air and fall in the ruffle of a roll or the crash of a hard landing. But in reality Aikido is about stillness.

The founder of the Martial Art, O Sensei, was a tiny Japanese man. There is some wonderful film footage of him, old and white haired, being attacked by his students. These rather large young men come rushing at him full bore. With hardly a flick of the wrist he sends them flying through the air and crashing to the ground.

the_sun
Sunset Distortion Copyleft 2002

I find a lot of designers think lighting is about writing light cues. Sure that is what we do and without them the house lights would never go down and there would never be a blackout at the end of the piece. The writing of light cues is integral to the work of a lighting designer, but to say that is what lighting is about is like saying the point of writing is constructing a plot. Sure this is necessary, even if the plot is no plot, but it is hardly the core essence of the written word.

There was a line from Cupid and Psyche, “It is in the silence that the gods reveal themselves.” So too is it in the stillness that the light reveals itself. Watching a sun set is a gloriously beautiful thing. Growing up on the West Coast we would get these amazing sun sets over the water, the sun falling behind the Golden Gate Bridge in midsummer, or behind the Marin headlands in the winter. I strongly recommend this experience to anyone with a passing interest in light.

There is a moment in every sunset, where the pace at which the sun is falling increases and then, just before it goes away, it appears to stop. Time stands still. The last sliver of sunlight clutching the horizon.

And then gone.

It is in that moment of stillness that the sun reveals all its secrets. It whispers them out over its long extended fingers, and if you are very very quiet, you might just hear a little. The trees understand. Like John Cage they stand there silent and still, waiting to hear the grand symphony of the setting sun.

Vital Silence

Thursday, June 1st, 2006

The other day I spoke about the quality of the word ‘Deadly’ in Peter Brook’s The Empty Space. The Deadly Theatre is seen not as a place but as a way of being. A kind of incomplete work. Or a superficial treatment of the subject matter The subject of course being nothing less than the spirit of Life itself. While the ‘deadly’ comes up quite a bit in the book, there are two other words that appear with quite some frequency; silent and vital. I would argue that it is only through a vital life affirming silence that the deadly can be resisted. By listening to that necessary silence we can hear the authentic impulse that denies the deadly for one moment longer.

The artistic impulse comes in many forms and from many directions. For me it is a way of delving deeper into my own understanding of the world. The World. Such a multifaceted place. But as one explores “The World” one finds that it is not a singular place, but rather a complex of relationships and dependencies. Child is dependent upon mother like the tide is dependent on the Moon. The Lover needs the Beloved in order to live completely. Each of these relationships is its own world. Contained within it are differing rules of physics and indeed life. The world of ‘blogs’ has its own constellations, galaxies and black holes. Every actor within that system effects the gravitational pull of every other being. Sure some are more massive than others, but it is all part of an interconnected gravitational dance.

In “The World” we often find these many and various worlds colliding with one another. They crash into each other vying for dominance. Which world or Worldview will win out? What perspective shall carry the day? These constantly shifting paradigms of reality create a great chaotic mass of noise. The cacophony becomes such that it is nearly impossible to let our ears rest. Yet there are moments of silence. Brief moments between the crash and thunder where we might for a minute, a second, an instant know the tranquility is noiseless bliss.

The Vital Silence is not so much a literal silence, just as the Deadly Theatre is not a physical institution. The Vital Silence is that moment when all the noise and chaos of daily life becomes, for an instant, background. The perspective shifts and there standing before you, clear as day, is that essential thing you had lost in the mass of movement. The Vital Silence is a return to that core of self that is so dangerous to inhabit. It is the place we build walls and defenses against every day. For to walk around in that place would be to get caught in a hurricane without any skin, every inch of your body crying out in pain.

The Vital Silence is the space after the final bell rings in Arvo Part’s Cantus in Memorium Benjamin Britten. It is that place where we hold still and watch as the colors of the world become a little richer. Finding this place inside of us, learning to see from that perspective, is a difficult enough task on its own. Bringing it forth into the light of day is something entirely other. When he talks of The Immediate Theatre, Brook is getting at that place. The artist must live in that liminal space between objectivity and authenticity. She must be both authentic in her action and objective in her work at the same time. It is a double calling and one where the more intensely one aspect is carried forth, so much more difficult becomes the other.

And in this way it transforms into a dance of the self. Mind and Heart partnering across the dance floor of life creating the authentic [Heart/Mind] of creative action. The music that fills the dance floor is that silence that is so essential to life, so vital, that we almost become blind to it. The beating of our own hearts we do not notice until it gets out of phase with our activity, not strong enough at the beginning of a run or pounding too hard as we take a rest.


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