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Kenneth Macgowan and the Aesthetic Paradigm for the New Stagecraft in America
Details
The American theatrical critic Kenneth Macgowan fashioned an aesthetic defense for a new visual style of scenic design that began to appear on the American stage during the second decade of the twentieth century. Macgowan's defense for this new visual style, which he labeled the «new stagecraft», was modeled after the British art critic Clive Bell's aesthetic theory of «significant form» in art. Bell's formal theory of art, which favored formal abstraction over visual representation, provided Macgowan with an attractive premise upon which he could formulate his own theory of the simplified or abstracted new stagecraft style. Shaping his theory of the new stagecraft from an aesthetic theory devised for the static two-dimensioned space of the painting, Macgowan sought to apply the visual aesthetic of significant form to the four-dimensioned theatrical process. The contradictions caused by the application of Bell's theory to the dynamics of scenic design reanimated the dispute between the preeminence of form or content, picture or word in the theater.
Autorentext
The Author: Thomas Alan Bloom is an associate professor of Drama at the University of Virginia. He received his Ph.D. in Theatre from The University of Michigan-Ann Arbor. He is a recipient of the State of Michigan's Association of Governing Boards Distinguished Professor Award, 1991.
Weitere Informationen
- Allgemeine Informationen
- Autor Thomas A. Bloom
- Titel Kenneth Macgowan and the Aesthetic Paradigm for the New Stagecraft in America
- ISBN 978-0-8204-2308-1
- Format Fachbuch
- EAN 9780820423081
- Jahr 1997
- Größe H230mm x B14mm x T160mm
- Gewicht 440g
- Herausgeber Lang, Peter
- Auflage Neuausg.
- Genre Kunst
- Anzahl Seiten 184
- GTIN 09780820423081