Publications

short form, Costume Rachel Hann short form, Costume Rachel Hann

Can bad costumes do good things?

Any discussion of bad costume is therefore a discussion on how costumes are judged to behave in line with expectations, whether agreed or implicit. Yet, I want to suggest that bad costumes can reveal the work of costume that may have otherwise been unseen or dismissed as frivolous. Bad costumes can offer a method for investigating how costumes are judged, understood, and politicised.

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Ada M. Patterson – in conversation with Rachel Hann

Interview with trans artist Ada M. Patterson (b. 1994, Bridgetown) based between Barbados, London and Rotterdam. She works with masquerade, performance, poetry, textiles and video, looking at the ways storytelling can limit, enable, complicate or abolish identity formation.

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Staging Trans Feelings: tactical atmospherics and cisgenderism in We Dig (2019)

To talk about ‘trans performance’ is to talk about performances that enact and investigate trans as a political act of affirmation, self-determination, and the felt affects of cis regulation. This paper is a working statement on the stakes at play in arguing the vitality of trans voices and perspectives for our collective social thriving.

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short form, Scenography, Scenographics, Open access Rachel Hann short form, Scenography, Scenographics, Open access Rachel Hann

Notes on Beyond Scenography

Reflecting on writing Beyond Scenography, this essay in English and Portuguese documents the lecture ‘Scenographic Futures’, presented as part of the session PQ TALKS, at PQ 2019, a position statements called ‘Changing the Question’is presented to reflect if rather than asking what is scenography, now the question is what does scenography do?. How scenography affects, channels, and orientate experiences of stage, place, and world.

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architecture, Open access, short form Rachel Hann architecture, Open access, short form Rachel Hann

Hellerau Returned

The Festspielhaus Hellerau (1911) is recognized as the first purpose-built “studio “performance space. Scenographer Adolphe Appia and architect Heinrich Tessenow’s architectural legacy is once again an active site of experimentation following a2006 renovation. Moreover, the current artistic residency of William Forsythe’s dance company has continued Appia’s vision for afuture performance practice through an intermedial approach. Importantly, the body, within the work of Forsythe and Appia, remains alocus of artistic convergence as it encompasses the “open “architecture at Hellerau.

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