For our first idea, we wanted our performance to have strictly no speaking or verbal communication. However, when it game closer to the performance and our rehearsals became much more developed, we decided it would be best not to limit ourselves, and that we had no reason to neither talk nor not talk, so that rule was revoked and we just decided to let whatever happens happen. We also decided that it would be best if the majority of our piece were improvised. We decided this, as we believed that when a child plays, they don’t plan out what they are going to play, or while they’re playing. So again, why limit ourselves to set blocking when we can truthfully play like children. The music we wanted to use changed quite a lot, mostly because the entire feel of our piece changed during the development. At first we wanted a minimalistic piano piece with a train station soundscape in the background. We thought that it was the wrong pace for our playful physical decisions. For our final piece we decided on doing a repeated playlist consisting of these songs:
FKJ - Tokyo Improv
Mura Masa - Firefly
FKJ & Tom Misch - Losing My Way
We thought these were lighter, more playful songs to go better with our piece.
Materials we used:
- Multi-coloured tape
- Post-it notes
- Assortment of toys
- Pens
- Large sketch paper
- Phone torch lights
- Written messages on walls and floor,
Here is an interview with Marwan, the curator of the map art and some quotes I find interesting:
http://www.berlinartlink.com/2016/12/25/beirut-shifting-power-an-interview-with-marwan-rechmaoui/
"‘Beirut Caoutchouc’ is a highly critical work that is concerned with issues about urban planning in terms of distribution, volume and accessibility"
"Inspiration is usually the beginning of a creative process that ends up somewhere way beyond the initial idea."
"In times of crisis like these today, when economy and identity feel threatened, people tend to worry more, and that can lead in many cases to conservatism and extremism."
The map of Beirut that we used is a really relevant piece, because of the political situation right now with ISIS and the huge divide of the city, this keeps our piece relevant.
We did some more development of our piece and decided that we would have a helipad made out of tape, symbolising the 'launch' of childhood. We would get people to write their favourite childhood memories on a post-it note and we would stick on the floor. We would connect the post-it's to the helipad and each other, and eventually the tape would creep up the wall to the spider web that we had created. We decided it would be much more efficient to create the web before the performance. We wanted some audience participation and we wanted the audience to feel nostalgic and think back to a time when they used to be playful and infantile and free. Every now and again we would input our physical sequence of the 'spider' running along the wall. We will also have toys laid out and play with them during the piece. We want to convey a message that makes the audience feel nostalgic and happy about their times as a child.


