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PROXIMITY Artist Profile: Interview with Renae Coles, creator of THE UNION

Thursday, January 12th, 2012

It’s a brand new year and a brand new beginning for a rather unique and intimate venture in Perth. Proximity, Australia’s first micro-festival of one-on-one art, is set to take over The Blue Room  in Jan/ Feb 2012 during Fringe World and The Blue Room Theatre Summer Nights. Forget the crowds and whether you are seated in A or F row. Proximity = a performance made just for you.

Proximity artist Renae Coles gives us the low-down on this fascinating genre of performance custom-made for an audience of one and tells us about her latest work THE UNION,  a live-art performance for those who have suffered a small injustice and have a minuscule axe to grind.

Untitled (PICA Residency) Renae Coles

Words: Renae Coles (RC) and Performing Lines WA (PLWA)

PLWA. First up, briefly tell me about yourself.

RC. I grew up in both Perth and Albany, studied at ECU and am currently working on three projects for FRINGE WORLD. In addition to THE UNION for Proximity, I’m co-curating an exhibition called The Conservatorium and performing with my collective SPATULA. I also manage PICA’s Front of House affairs and at the moment am really enjoying embroidery and bicycle riding!

PLWA. What is it like being a part-time artist / part-time arts administrator?

RC. It’s a constant negotiation, of both time and of two entirely different head spaces. I’ve found the admin side of my work has unlocked an organisational side of myself that I didn’t know existed- this has been invaluable in better organising my own practice.

PLWA. Your latest work THE UNION is an interesting amalgamation of your ‘two lives’. How has your work as an administrator influenced your practice and vice versa.

RC. I think I’ve become a little enamoured with the interpersonal exchange and care systems of customer service. A large part of THE UNION has been based on both the inter-industry universality of customer service systems and the bitter rage we’ve all experience when these systems fail us.

PLWA. It’s two weeks before your first performance of THE UNION in Proximity. What are you currently working on to finish the work?

RC. I’m currently figuring out formulas for punk songs- somewhat of a hilarious contradiction I know!

PLWA. What is special about one-on-one theatre for you?

There’s something a little more real about it than a performance with a larger audience. There’s not much room for a fourth wall. The two people, audience and performer, can’t help but to acknowledge each other and to initiate some sort of exchange with this acknowledgement.

The Foundational Experiment (SPATULA develepmont, McNess Studios), 2010
PLWA. What can an audience member expect to take away from your work?

RC. Hopefully a few laughs and a wandering sense of curiosity and excitement as to where their, perhaps unexpected, contribution to this project will end up.

PLWA. I love the honesty of your work and how there is a follow up with your audience or “union” members small injustice. Can you tell me a bit about this?

RC. For most very small injustices there is most often no hope for any resolution. THE UNION exists to offer that resolution in the form of a punk song. After interviewing my audience (or potential union) member, my very talented senior union members will use their rattling instruments and wailing accusations to create a punk song directed at my audience member’s very small oppressors. These songs will be posted on THE UNION’s website (currently being constructed) and available for download.

PLWA. How do you feel about self-funded work?

RC. I think there will always be the hint of revolution in self-funded activity. The idea that something is so important that you will give your own money and time to see it happen is dynamic and the beginning of a potential that operates outside of most self-serving systems.

4-Person 3-Wheeled Macadamia Nut Processing Vehicle-Osbourne Park to Perth (SPATULA), 2011

PLWA. What advice would you give to young aspiring artist looking to develop their craft?

RC. Hmm… that’s hard for me to answer as I think I AM a young aspiring artist looking to develop my craft! With that in mind though my advice would be: People are kind- ask for collaboration, advice, opinions and assistance and in my experience, people will be happy to be involved. The other thing I’ve learned is to keep applying for things you think are out of your reach- soon enough something unexpected will happen.

PLWA. What’s the most exciting thing that has happened to you in your career?

RC. I recently discovered that I was selected for the 2012 JUMP Mentoring Program- this is hugely exciting for me. I will be undertaking a mentorship with playground designer Andrew Reedy, learning how to make climbable sculptures for public spaces!

Check out THE UNION during Proximity (Program C)
Dates: Sun 29 Jan, Sun 5 Feb, Sun 12 Feb, Sun 19 Feb 2012
Times: 3pm, 4pm, 5pm
Venue: The Blue Room Theatre, 53 James St, Northbridge WA
Tickets: $25 (4 shows in 1 hour) $66 (12 shows in 3 hours)
Book online: www.blueroom.org.au Phone: 9227 7005 In Person: The Blue Room Theatre

Proximity Festival  also introduces performances by 11 other independent West Australian artists, including works by Proximity Co-curators James Berlyn and Sarah Rowbottam.  James is a Performing Lines WA core artist.  Sarah, like Renae,  juggles her own artistic practice with her part-time work in arts management as our Associate Producer.

Download the Proximity Program.

PERFORMING LINES WA RE-FUNDED TO SUPPORT INDEPENDENT WA ARTISTS FOR NEXT THREE YEARS

Thursday, November 24th, 2011

Twyping
Twyping by James Berlyn Photo: Caitlin Worthington

Performing Lines WA is excited to announce their creative partnership with dynamic West Australian independent dance and theatre artists continues for a further three years until July 2014. They also welcome theatre artist James Berlyn to the core client base alongside Chrissie Parrott Performance Company, Sue Peacock and Sally Richardson.

Performing Lines WA delivers managing and producing services for theatre and dance artists in WA (Maps for Artists), a joint initiative of the Australia Council for the Arts and Western Australia’s Department of Culture and the Arts.

Initially funded as a three year trial, Performing Lines WA has proved itself a critical service provider for the independent performing arts sector in Western Australia. Since 2008 Performing Lines WA has produced eight world premieres, assisted development of 15 projects and delivered four national and one international tour by WA artists. Around $1,000,000 is managed in project funds on behalf of 13 artists.

In its three years of operation over 80 WA independent artists have had access to the financial, producing, touring, fundraising, marketing, mentoring and advisory services provided by Performing Lines WA.

Allanah Lucas, Director General at the Department of Culture and the Arts said, “West Australia’s independent artists greatly enrich the cultural life of this State. Partnering with the Australia Council to renew the Maps for Artists initiative in WA allows us to continue to support a great range of innovative new performances.”

The company is led by national CEO Fenn Gordon with WA based Producers Fiona de Garis and Rachael Whitworth and Communications Manager Sarah Rowbottam. Fenn Gordon said “Clearly the services provided by Performing Lines WA are in great demand by independent theatre and dance artists. In the new triennium we’re looking to build on the work of the past three years with a focus on securing broader touring opportunities for WA work.”

South Perth artist James Berlyn has already benefited from the expertise of Performing Lines WA who produced his one-on-one performance Tawdry Heartburn’s Manic Cures for the 2010 Perth International Arts Festival, and then in 2011 toured it to WOMADelaide and Tasmania’s Ten Days on the Island festival.

Currently presenting Twyping as part of the 2011 AWESOME Festival, Berlyn said “This is a tremendous opportunity for me. I look forward to pursuing international touring opportunities and creating exciting new work in partnership with the expert team at Performing Lines WA.”

In 2012 Berlyn co-curates Proximity, Australia’s first one-one-one micro-festival of art. He performs in Sue Healey’s premiere of Variant and Matthew Lutton’s new production of Elektra presented in the 2012 Perth Festival. He also continues to develop his solo performance Crash Course and new one-on-one performance Sweet Life.

Week 3 Shiver Rehearsals with Sound Designer Kingsley Reeve

Tuesday, November 15th, 2011

The ultra charming Kingsley (Kings) Reeve brings an impressive track record of awards and sound design compositions to Shiver. Before taking out the WA Equity Guild Awards, Ausdance Awards and WA Screen Awards he was nominated for a Helpmann for Best Theatre Sound Design on Black Swan’s Zastrozzi, the Master of Discipline. Kings has collaborated with Danielle Mcich on Shiver since its humble beginnings in 2007. Between making new music for the highly anticipated premiere this Thursday 17 at The Dolphin Theatre, Kingsley took a moment to share what’s been happening in the rehearsal room as the team prepare for Production week.

Kingsley Reeve, Shiver Sound Designer

Words: Kingsley Reeve, Sound Designer Photos: Sarah Rowbottam

Week three began on a Monday the way all good rehearsals should begin. the things we knew we were certain of and the things we didn’t know remained utterly uncertain. We had a big goal ahead of us – to get to the final bell by the end of the week without being pile-driven by a wrestler much heavier and sweatier than we were. So we took each day as it came. We bashed our heads together and asked each other the seemingly hard questions: “is this working?”, “does this bit suck?” and importantly, “are we making sense?”

Being brutally blunt and forthrightly honest was what we had to be to push the show into a new gear. And blunt we were. New things were added, some things had to go and we reconsidered things that we might have loved previously but had to give way for a tighter, leaner performance. We reworked one section in particular that had been evading us and the solution came via random express. I can’t give it away but let’s just say that my offer to string a piñata up didn’t meet with instant refusal…
Shiver Rehearsals

Shiver Rehearsals

Shiver Rehearsals

Shiver Rehearsals KSAC

As the week progressed we started to stretch our sea-legs and we ran what we had from whoa to go. To our relief, things were making sense and the road-blocks now seemed more like roundabouts or at worst, small speed humps in a 40 zone.

Each day was met with new understanding of the material, both on the interior and from the all-important audience perspective. We were consolidating each time we ran it and by Saturday, we were starting to feel its groove.

For myself, I enjoyed the daunting task of transferring quantities of semi-coherent sound improvisations into the final tracks to be played in the master sequence. So no mini-golf for me this weekend, I stayed strapped to my headphones until I had a something worth putting through the PA.

This week begins the final frontier; horses shod, stops pulled out and top-lip waxed… it’s game on and we have our first audience on Thursday. No pressure. None whatsoever…

Shiver
17 – 19 November 2011
The Dolphin Theatre, UWA
Tickets: www.bocsticketing.com.au

PLWA. Tell me a little bit about yourself.

Kings. I am a sound nerd, self-confessed. I basically can’t help it. Somewhere in my DNA is a molecular love affair with moving air and it does something to me, I can’t really articulate it elegantly but it’s a big part of who I am.

I’m a lover of silence too. Nothing is as beautiful and painfully terrifying as the absence of sound, so I look for it actively in our world and rejoice in it’s scarcity.

I love the idea of music and again, I have no words for it’s complexity. I don’t know why a note can mean so much, it’s frankly beyond me but I’m happy to bask in it’s supreme influence over me.

PLWA. What is your role in Shiver?

Kings. Shiver and I have a long-standing relationship. Lately of the long-distance kind, but still connected. I began this process with Dank back in 2007 when it was called something else and inhabited a completely different space structurally and conceptually. The piece has evolved from humble beginnings, grew to a bloated excess of big ideas and techniques and now occupies a position poles apart from it’s original instigation. It’s a lean, hungry animal now and my job as always is to tell the story, either in the front of the frame or in the blurry bits off to the back and sides through sound. My task has the ironic impression of playing some (hopefully agreeable) music under the movement and text. If only it were that easy and the sound was only answerable to my own desires. No. The sound, music or otherwise, has as much dramaturgical responsibility as the choreography, the text, the set, the lights, in fact, everything… So when charged with this duty I have to come up with a palette of sounds that are not only ‘appropriate’ but have something to say in our story. The task then is to add a bunch of these until it makes sense and gives the clearest meaning. This often means eventually stripping away so many of these sounds until you can honestly know that what is left is necessary and purposeful. If I can’t justify it in the action, it gets cut. Treating silence as a sonic tool is also a big part of the job, knowing when to shut up and earn the next cue.

It’s an ongoing negotiation and adherence to a strict ‘less is more’ mantra. Hopefully we get it right and the quiet bits are quiet and the loud bits are loud…

PLWA. What has been the most exciting day in the rehearsal room thus far?

Kings. That would have to be Monday to Friday this week, not a single day but a collection of five that had great upwards momentum the more we worked. It’s thoroughly satisfying when things take their proper shape and you start to land these ideas and concepts that may have been eluding you. A lot of that happened this week. We solved, cleaned and trimmed and from that came the smiling face of coherence.

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Kingsley Reeve graduated from WAAPA in 1995 with a Diploma in Sound and from the Theatre course in 1998 as an actor. Now based in Sydney he works regularly with Sydney Theatre Company (STC) and teaches Sound Design at NIDA. In Perth he has designed sound and music for Black Swan (2002 – 2008) and for Perth Theatre Company since 2003. In 2005 he was nominated for a Helpmann Award for Best Theatre Sound Design on Black Swan’s Zastrozzi, the Master of Discipline. Recent designs include Barking Gecko’s The Red Tree, STC’s Ruby Moon, Deckchair’s The Modern International Dead and Yirra Yaakin’s Waltzing the Wilarra. He has designed sound and music for Danielle Micich since 2006.

Production Week – They ran ’til they stopped with Performer Whitney Richards

Monday, November 14th, 2011

Whitney Richards ain’t just a pretty face. She knows how to rough it backstage with Black Swan and bring out the charisma onstage (and on camera.. okay and offstage) with independent film and theatre companies. She can also make funny sounds, run pretty fast and dodge cornflake rain. On her day off, Whitney took the time to write about production week for They ran ’til they stopped – now showing at PICA until Saturday 19 November.

They ran 'til they stopped Arielle Gray & Whitney Richards

Words: Whitney Richards Photos: Donna Ferreri & Sarah Rowbottam

Hello reader. This is a blog for you to read. I have diarised my adventures during production week for They ran ’til they stopped (TRTTS). I hope you will find this educational.

I have spent the last six months assistant stage managing for Black Swan Theatre Company. I’m not a trained ASM, but they were willing to give me a go because I was keen to work and keen to learn. Hence, production week as a performer for TRTTS was the least stressful I’ve had for a long while.

Production week ain’t really about the performers. It’s about fitting together all the other equally important elements of the production. It helped that the designers were amaze ballz and knew exactly what they were doing. Will Slade (noises), Mike Nanning (globes) and Alissa Claessans (furniture) were true professionals.

They ran 'til they stopped Whitney Richards, Lawrence Ashford & Arielle Gray

They ran 'til they stopped Arielle Gray & Whitney Richards

Monday: Actors had a day off. I saw the film Drive. So good. Go see it.

Tuesday: Plotting. Actors stand around in places they’re told to stand in. It’s pretty fun. Also the day we learnt Lawrie does a mean step ball change.

Wednesday: Tech and first dress run. Also the day I remembered I have to pretend I don’t have cornflakes riiiiiiight down my pants for half the show. Wednesday was also the day we were semi-attacked at lunch by the “gentleman who was having a bad day.”

Thursday: Final dress run and preview. The dress run was incredibly low in energy. But it was the run we needed to have before we got an audience. Also the day myself, Arielle and Katt chaperoned Lawrie to a questionable looking barber to get an emergency hair cut. Turns out his face is pretty nice. Preview went fairly smoothly, aside from a few rogue props. The show wasn’t as comfortable and fun as it has been in rehearsals. Nerves McGreg! The audience response was great, although I confess it was made up mostly of our close friends.

Friday & Saturday: Final preview and OPENING NIGHT! Great responses and not just from our friends. Also the days we battled with the slippery floor. You’ll have to come see the show to learn why.

They ran 'til they stopped Opening at PICA

We’ve gotten all the scary things out of the way now. Arielle, Lawrie, Alice and myself are now fairly comfortable with the show and can just have fun. I’m thoroughly looking forward to it.

Things I have learnt this week: don’t laugh during your final dress run, it’s incredibly unprofessional. Be careful in Northbridge even at midday. Good teams make the most enjoyable production weeks.

Things you (the reader) have learnt: Be careful in Northbridge even at midday. See Drive. Come see They ran ’til they stopped, there’s cornflakes.

They ran ’til they stopped
10 – 19 November 2011
Perth Institute of Contemporary Arts
Tickets $18 – $28 www.pica.org.au
CHEAP TUESDAY $15 Tickets for 6.30pm Tue 15 Nov performance. CODE: Duckies.

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Whitney Richards graduated in 2008 from Curtin University with a BA (Film/Television & Performance). She has since worked in over 20 professional and independent film and theatre productions, including the feature Little Sparrows. In 2012 Whitney will perform in two main stage Black Swan State Theatre Company shows.

Week 3 They ran ’til they stopped Rehearsals with Performer Lawrence Ashford

Wednesday, November 9th, 2011

Lawrence Ashford (Lawrie) is a bit of a champ in our books. Not only did he stand on a podium for two hours in the middle of Perth Cultural Centre whilst strangers covered him with post-it notes saying “nice ass” and “cares like a mother would”, he was just named Perth’s best storyteller at the inaugural Barefaced Story Battle. In between tech runs and RTR interviews, Lawrie took a moment to share what Week 3 rehearsals have been like for They ran ’til they stopped which previews at PICA this Thursday.

They ran 'til they stopped rehearsals

Words: Lawrence Ashford, Performer Photos: Sarah Rowbottam

It is with a touch of sadness that we say goodbye to Week 3, and full time rehearsals. As excited as I am to get into the PICA performance space, I shall miss the fun days we spent in the Blue Room Theatre’s Kaos Room.

In fact, that room is aptly named, because at times rehearsals have bordered on unmitigated chaos. Working with Katt, Whitney and Arielle has been an absolute blast, and several times over the last few weeks we have found ourselves looking around, as the fits of laughter subside, and wondering if perhaps we are having too much fun. Fortunately Whitney has kept us on track, repeatedly reminding what page of the script we are up to, and how much more work is ahead of us.

They ran 'til they stopped rehearsals
Pictured: Arielle Gray, Whitney Richards and Lawrence Ashford

They ran 'til they stopped rehearsals
Pictured: Lawrence Ashford and Arielle Gray

Although, it has never really felt like ‘work’. Katt has maintained a fine line between chaos and control, and has encouraged us to play with almost every piece of text, which has lead to some exciting, and sometimes hilarious discoveries. We have also discovered a lot about each other. For instance, I had always known that Whitney was a talented performer, but it wasn’t until one of our first rehearsals when she burst into tears whilst working on a scene, that I realised she is in fact, a young Meryl Streep! She has been known as Meryl ever since (much to her displeasure). Arielle can also turn on the waterworks should the occasion call for it, and has been known as Natalie Portman since mid last week. If you see either Whitney or Arielle on the street, or at the theatre, please refer to them with their new names. Many thanks.

Working with this team, and with our hardworking production team, has been such a wonderful experience. I look forward to finally opening later this week, and only hope that the audience has as much fun watching this show, as we did making it.

My castmates and I are already plotting a possible sequel. Some titles that have been suggested so far are: “They started running again”, “They ran til they required a hip replacement”, and “I know where you ran last summer”.

They ran ’til they stopped
10 – 19 November 2011
Perth Institute of Contemporary Arts
Tickets through PICA

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Lawrence studied a Bachelor of Arts at Curtin University, with a Major in Performance Studies, and a Minor in Creative Writing. He furthered his training whilst living abroad in London, taking short courses at the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art and the Theatre Royal Haymarket. Theatre credits include Unidentified Human Remains and the True Nature of Love (Hayman Theatre), Terrorism (Hayman Theatre/Be Active BSX-Theatre), and Jack and Jill (The Blue Room Theatre/Red Rabbit Collective). In 2011 Lawrence collaboratively developed and performed in new work: Flirt Fiction (Red Rabbit Collective), which toured to the Edinburgh Festival Fringe before returning to Perth for a three week run as part of The Blue Room Theatre’s Personal season. Lawrence is also an active participant in Barefaced Stories, a regular storytelling series in Perth, and in October 2011 took out the inaugural Barefaced Story Battle, beating a field of thirty four to be named Perth’s best storyteller.