Friday, October 25, 2019
A Painting by Paula Rego called The Family - The Stimulus for our Dram
A Painting by Paula  Rego called The Family - The Stimulus for our Drama Piece    INTRODUCTION    In this essay I will be discussing the work that I have done in the  first module of performance studies.    The aim of this module was to develop technical skills in dance, drama  and music and using the performance process of improvising, rehearsing  and performing and then applying these skills to four performance  pieces. We carried out several skills workshops to help develop  confidence in all 3 thematic areas to a more even consistency as some  members of our group had never done dance, music and some hadn't taken  expressive arts GCSE.    In this module I developed skills in all three areas, some completely  new skills (for example in dance) and those skills, which I already  knew but developed them to a higher standard of performance. I also  learnt the processes of constructing a performance piece in  performance studies and skills that are applicable in all three  thematic areas. I will elaborate on how I have developed these skills  during this module in this essay.    THE DRAMA PIECE    The stimulus we were given for our drama piece was a painting by Paula  Rego called "The Family" which contained a lot of ideas for  interpretation, especially work on proxemics, which we had previously  studied in our skills workshops. "The Family" shows an ambiguous  relationship between men, women and children and the variation in the  'traditional' status of a father, mother and daughter figures. It is  important to bear in mind during stages of improvisation that  character and plot development are not always the most essential part  of a drama piece. More advanced performance skills should be taken  into account, such as tension, proxemics and physicality and the  subtext created as a result of the effective use of these techniques,  which our drama piece evolved around. We decided that the most direct  way of communication was to produce a distinct sexual subtext between  two characters, and in our case this was the father and the daughter.    Initial brainstorms we had were focused on light, physicality and  gesture in the picture and we didn't want it to be 'story - led' as we  felt this would be too simplistic and wouldn't allow us to explore our  skills and techniques as performers. In the early stages of  improvisation, we decided that tension was vital in our scene, so this  had to be created by si...              ...med our dance to a structured rhythm sequence to show  the evolving of the evil dominating the pure and good. But as I said  before, there seemed to be no real motivation behind our piece. I did  feel thought that although we had no dialogue, it was unnecessary to  do so and I think that the studying of Boal and Pinter really helped  with this. I think that, as a group we realised that plot and  character development weren't important at that stage. By not having  any characters but just acting the gestus of our role, we portrayed  the mannerisms, which as a result created tension because of the  content of the scene. I do feel that because we didn't have characters  such, the other skills we had refined were lacking. This is the one  piece that I actually would like to do again as I don't feel we  devised and performed this to the best of our abilities. I think I  would've liked to keep the music and dance pieces but adjusted the  drama to include the kind of energy we had had in the drama piece  where the piece was 'loaded' with subtext. This I feel was not  dramatic and didn't convey the ideas to the audience that we wanted  to. I don't believe this piece was as successful as it could have  been.                      
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