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UID:ebc7b6048e866ebdf021c1b125db31a9
CATEGORIES:Journées d’étude
CREATED:20220518T090231
SUMMARY:Reenacting Landscapes
LOCATION:Université Paris Nanterre - 200 avenue de la République\, Nanterre\, \, 920
 23\, 
DESCRIPTION:In the bodiless non-places of accelerated capitalist life, in the anxiety o
 f the Covid present, in the toxic sites of the so-called Anthropocene, what
  does it mean today to get a taste for landscape? Why should one care, and 
 how might the refined ‘palate’, implicit in conservative notion of taste, b
 e reconfigured differently, opened up to democracy and dissensus? We approa
 ch these generic questions via a specific route: namely, by interrogating t
 he performative potential – the theatricality, no less – of reenactment, a 
 mode of artistic intervention that since Rebecca Schneider’s pioneering stu
 dy Performing Remains: Art and War in Times of Theatrical Reenactment (2011
 ) has been a common trope within theatre and performance studies as well as
  art history and visual culture in general. But perhaps now – for the reaso
 ns intimated above – it is time to rethink and reapply the idea of reenactm
 ent, to come terms, somewhat ironically, with its afterlives and possibilit
 ies.\nIn this study day we look to interrogate the relationship between ree
 nactment and landscape precisely because the very idea of landscape was alw
 ays already bound up with repetition and re-doing: the attempt, that is, by
  landscape gardeners in the eighteenth century to transpose images from pai
 ntings into the very material of the landscape itself; to create aesthetici
 sed, tasteful ways of seeing and being. In this study day, landscape is no 
 longer conceived as a primarily visual practice or disposition; rather, it 
 is approached as verb, both active and passive, something that one does as 
 a body, as a skin, a choreography, a performance, a type of theatre. Equall
 y, taste is not a set of rules or protocols that one can apply or discover,
  as if in some manual; it is a sensate experience, an open-ended, always co
 rporeal event, something that fills the perceiver with enthusiasm and affec
 t. To get a taste for landscape, in other words, is to get a taste for life
 , which, in keeping with the uncanny, troubling logic of reenactment is als
 o to pay attention to ghosts, spectres and phantoms, to make kin with the l
 iving dead – all those that refuse to depart the stage (mise-en-scène).\nTh
 is study day will be of interest to academic and practice-based researchers
  in art, theatre, performance, ethnography, geography, archaeology, history
 , politics, philosophy and literature.\nJournée on and off-line organisée d
 ans le cadre du projet RePiT (Labex Les Passés dans le Présent) par Baptist
 e Buob (Lesc), Nathalie Cau (HAR), Carl Lavery (Glasgow University, Ecology
 , Environment and Heritage Hub) et Christophe Triau (HAR).\n[Salle L205, bâ
 timent Ricœur, Nanterre / Lien de l'appel vidéo : https://meet.google.com/a
 dz-crgx-ibn (https://meet.google.com/adz-crgx-ibn)]\nProgramme\n9h30     Ac
 cueil café\n10h00   Carl Lavery : « Reenacting Landscapes »\n10h30   Lee Ha
 ssall : « Reenactment : Transmatic Reanimation »\n11h15   Clare Finburgh-De
 lijani : « Spectral Seascapes : performer les fantômes postcoloniaux en Fra
 nce »\n11h45   Alexandre Koutchevsky : « Théâtre-paysage », dialogue avec C
 hristophe Triau\n12h30 – 13h30 : pause déjeuner\n13h30 – 15h : Workshop men
 é par Simon Whitehead\n15h15   Sophie Sleigh-Johnson : « Disorientation: Re
 ach for the Ground »\n15h45   Emmanuel de Vienne : « Peindre et perdre la c
 ulture : l’œuvre d’Amatiwana Trumai »\n16h30   Annette Becker : « Les paysa
 ges du Rwanda et les reenactments des traumas du génocide des Tutsis »\n17h
 00   Nathalie Cau : « “Dérober au néant noms et figures” : paysages de mémo
 ire, essai filmé (tentative in progress) »\n
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html:<p><img src="https://mail.lesc-cnrs.fr/images/bbuob/Reenacting_Landscapes.j
 pg" alt="Reenacting_Landscapes.jpg" style="margin-right: 10px; margin-botto
 m: 10px; float: left;" width="224" height="300" />In the bodiless non-place
 s of accelerated capitalist life, in the anxiety of the Covid present, in t
 he toxic sites of the so-called Anthropocene, what does it mean today to ge
 t a taste for landscape? Why should one care, and how might the refined ‘pa
 late’, implicit in conservative notion of taste, be reconfigured differentl
 y, opened up to democracy and dissensus? We approach these generic question
 s via a specific route: namely, by interrogating the performative potential
  – the theatricality, no less – of reenactment, a mode of artistic interven
 tion that since Rebecca Schneider’s pioneering study Performing Remains: Ar
 t and War in Times of Theatrical Reenactment (2011) has been a common trope
  within theatre and performance studies as well as art history and visual c
 ulture in general. But perhaps now – for the reasons intimated above – it i
 s time to rethink and reapply the idea of reenactment, to come terms, somew
 hat ironically, with its afterlives and possibilities.</p><p>In this study 
 day we look to interrogate the relationship between reenactment and landsca
 pe precisely because the very idea of landscape was always already bound up
  with repetition and re-doing: the attempt, that is, by landscape gardeners
  in the eighteenth century to transpose images from paintings into the very
  material of the landscape itself; to create aestheticised, tasteful ways o
 f seeing and being. In this study day, landscape is no longer conceived as 
 a primarily visual practice or disposition; rather, it is approached as ver
 b, both active and passive, something that one does as a body, as a skin, a
  choreography, a performance, a type of theatre. Equally, taste is not a se
 t of rules or protocols that one can apply or discover, as if in some manua
 l; it is a sensate experience, an open-ended, always corporeal event, somet
 hing that fills the perceiver with enthusiasm and affect. To get a taste fo
 r landscape, in other words, is to get a taste for life, which, in keeping 
 with the uncanny, troubling logic of reenactment is also to pay attention t
 o ghosts, spectres and phantoms, to make kin with the living dead – all tho
 se that refuse to depart the stage (mise-en-scène).</p><p>This study day wi
 ll be of interest to academic and practice-based researchers in art, theatr
 e, performance, ethnography, geography, archaeology, history, politics, phi
 losophy and literature.</p><p>Journée on and off-line organisée dans le cad
 re du projet RePiT (Labex Les Passés dans le Présent) par Baptiste Buob (Le
 sc), Nathalie Cau (HAR), Carl Lavery (Glasgow University, Ecology, Environm
 ent and Heritage Hub) et Christophe Triau (HAR).</p><p>[Salle L205, bâtimen
 t Ricœur, Nanterre / Lien de l'appel vidéo : <a href="https://meet.google.c
 om/adz-crgx-ibn" target="_blank" rel="noopener">https://meet.google.com/adz
 -crgx-ibn</a>]</p><p>Programme</p><p>9h30&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Accueil c
 afé</p><p>10h00&nbsp;&nbsp; Carl Lavery : «&nbsp;Reenacting Landscapes&nbsp
 ;»</p><p>10h30&nbsp;&nbsp; Lee Hassall&nbsp;: «&nbsp;Reenactment&nbsp;: Tra
 nsmatic Reanimation&nbsp;»</p><p>11h15&nbsp;&nbsp; Clare Finburgh-Delijani 
 :&nbsp;«&nbsp;Spectral Seascapes&nbsp;: performer les fantômes postcoloniau
 x en France&nbsp;»</p><p>11h45&nbsp;&nbsp; Alexandre Koutchevsky&nbsp;: «&n
 bsp;Théâtre-paysage&nbsp;», dialogue avec Christophe Triau</p><p>12h30 – 13
 h30&nbsp;: pause déjeuner</p><p>13h30 – 15h&nbsp;: Workshop mené par Simon 
 Whitehead</p><p>15h15&nbsp;&nbsp; Sophie Sleigh-Johnson&nbsp;:&nbsp;«&nbsp;
 Disorientation: Reach for the Ground&nbsp;»</p><p>15h45&nbsp;&nbsp; Emmanue
 l de Vienne&nbsp;: «&nbsp;Peindre et perdre la culture&nbsp;: l’œuvre d’Ama
 tiwana Trumai&nbsp;»</p><p>16h30&nbsp;&nbsp; Annette Becker&nbsp;: «&nbsp;L
 es paysages du Rwanda et les reenactments des traumas du génocide des Tutsi
 s&nbsp;»</p><p>17h00&nbsp;&nbsp; Nathalie Cau&nbsp;: «&nbsp;“Dérober au néa
 nt noms et figures”&nbsp;: paysages de mémoire, essai filmé (tentative in p
 rogress)&nbsp;»</p>
DTSTAMP:20260514T162731
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Paris:20220524T100000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Paris:20220524T180000
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