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I La Galigo: The
Colour of Heaven
By Anne-Marie Peard
One
of the most anticipated events of the 2006 Melbourne International Arts Festival is the
Robert Wilson epic I La Galigo. I have only seen one of Wilsons works (Einstein
On The Beach, MIAF1992). Visceral, mesmerising and visually addictive, it was enough
to change my concept of what theatre can be. Last week I spoke with I La Galigo
Assistant Director, Rama Soeprapto, about working with Wilson, the international reception
of this work and the colour of Heaven.
With a cast of over 50 of Indonesias finest performers, I La Galigo
was developed through a workshop process in Bali. Uniting theatre, dance, music and
poetry, it is inspired by Sureq Galigo, a centuries old epic poem of the Bugis
people of South Sulawesi.
Working with a traditional narrative is an unusual course for director Robert
Wilson. He has been described by The New York Times as A towering
figure in the world of experimental theatre. Since the late 1960s his productions in
the US and Europe have defined the avant guard, whilst questioning and shaping the look of
theatre and opera.
Rama Soepraptos respect and admiration for Bob is very clear, as
is his love for this production. His background is dance, visual arts, film and video, and
told me he got the job by convincing Wilson that, Im here to learn and I
really want work hard.
His primary role was to translate Wilsons vision to the artists of the cast.
This not only involved translating language, but explaining contrasting, and somewhat
contradictory, concepts of theatre and performance.
Sureq Galigo has traditionally been told through dance. Soeprapto
explains that the traditional Indonesian way of dance is based on feelings. Dances
use their feelings to perform in the moment. A performance is flexible, personal and
unique.
This is very different from the Wilson tradition, where every nuance of the
slightest gesture is an integral part of the performance. This visual language developed
through his determination to give context and meaning to artists who are unable to express
themselves in a text based world. Having overcome his own childhood learning disability,
he started working in hospitals and schools, using theatre games to enable and encourage
communication with patients and children unable to communicate. It was here that Wilson discovered the power of the
smallest gesture and begun his ongoing investigation into the structure of simple
movement.
Soeprapto says, Bob is very precise
very detailed about how you stand
and move. There is no room for an artists changing emotional interpretation in
a Wilson work.
Fortunately the melding of western avant guard and the traditional Indonesian has
created something stunning. I La Galigo
has received critical acclaim in Singapore, Amsterdam, Barcelona, Madrid, Lyon, Ravenna and New York, but it was the reaction of the
Jakarta audience that has established this production as truly remarkable.
The Indonesian audience know and love this story. Soeprapto says the Sureq
Galigo is something
they know from their ancestors and have in their minds. There was
naturally some concern about the Wilson interpretation.
Fortunately, the Indonesian audiences were flabbergasted, when
they saw their story done in such a good way.
I La Galigo is one of the many works in the 2006 MIAF program that focus on
collaboration among differing art forms and the creation of new aesthetics. Artistic
Director, Kristy Edmunds, described I La Galigo as inventing colour right
before our eyes. Intrigued by her description I asked Soeprapto about colour.
He simply replied that the genius side of Bob Wilson is how he brings
colour into a performance. He will spend a week perfecting a colour. Inspired by the natural world, he will also make
artists go outside and feel the grass. To recreate the colour, the image and the feeling
of grass they have to know what it physically feels like. Finally Soeprapto asked me if I could imagine
what colour blue Heaven looks like. Wilson
knows, and I am very looking forward to seeing the blue, the green and every other colour
of I La Galigo. |