ABSTRACT

Aesthetics of Absence presents a significant challenge to the many embedded assumptions and hierarchical structures that have become ‘naturalised’ in western theatre production. This is the first English translation of a new collection of writings and lectures by Heiner Goebbels, the renowned German theatre director, composer and teacher. These writings map Goebbels’ engagement with ‘Aesthetics of Absence’ through his own experience at the forefront of innovative music-theatre and performance making.

In this volume, Goebbels reflects on works created over a period of more than 20 years staged throughout the world; introduces some of his key artistic influences, including Robert Wilson and Jean-Luc Godard; discusses the work of his students and ex-students, the collective Rimini Protokoll; and sets out the case for a radical rethinking of theatre and performance education. He gives us a rare insight into the rehearsal process of critically acclaimed works such as Eraritjaritjaka and Stifters Dinge, explaining in meticulous detail the way he weaves an eclectic range of references from fine art, theatre, literature, politics, anthropology, contemporary and classical music, jazz and folk, into his multi-textured music-theatre compositions.

As an artist who is prepared to share his research and demystify the processes through which his own works come into being, as a teacher with a coherent pedagogical strategy for educating the next generation of theatre-makers, in this volume, Goebbels brings together practice, research and scholarship.

chapter 1|7 pages

Aesthetics of absence

How it all began

part I|37 pages

Texts on work(s)

chapter 2|6 pages

Description of a picture, table-parties and comparative degrees

About the opera Landscape with Distant Relatives

chapter 3|8 pages

‘You notice some things only because they're not connected to anything’

Questions on constructing Eraritjaritjaka

chapter 4|8 pages

Real time in Oberplan

On Stifters Dinge – A theatre of deceleration

chapter 5|5 pages

Peculiar voices

On working on I Went to the House But Did Not Enter

chapter 6|8 pages

The space as invitation

The spectator as the object of art

part II|28 pages

Texts on artists

chapter 7|5 pages

‘But I wanted this to be a narrative’

Jean-Luc Godard as a composer

chapter 8|6 pages

What we don't see attracts us

Four theses on Call Cutta by Rimini Protokoll

chapter 9|5 pages

The mystery of signs

For Robert Wilson

chapter 10|4 pages

Trust no eye

For Erich Wonder 1

chapter 11|6 pages

‘To comprehensively build up a society with modest prosperity’

The Ensemble Modern as an example

part III|30 pages

Texts on education

chapter 12|5 pages

Research or craftsmanship?

Nine theses on the future of an education for the performing arts

chapter 13|5 pages

If I want an actor to cry, I give him an onion

On working with actors

chapter 14|7 pages

A giant wooden pistol

Theory and practice in Gießen 1

chapter 15|6 pages

Organizing hearing and seeing

Die Angewandte Theaterwissenschaft 1

chapter 16|5 pages

Compromise is a bad director

Theatre as museum or laboratory