It is that time of year for final projects, final presentations, final papers, finals, finals, finals! I hear your groaning. Hang in there. You're on the final push. This week I will say my final farewell to formal education. Five years of undergraduate and three years of graduate work are all coming to a beautiful conclusion. The title is quite lovely, too; MASTER of Fine Arts. You can't help but say it with a booming and pretentious voice. It's in the same world as "jedi MASTER yoda" or "MASTERpiece theatre" or... "MASTERcard". I am relieved for the efforts, excited for the future, and a little nostalgic to step out of the "student" classification and leap into adulthood. However, I insist, even if adulthood has followed me and slapped me in the face, I will never forget what if feels like to be 8 years old... and 12... and 16... and 23. I will still swing on the swing set. I will still eat spoon-fulls of peanut butter with my grandpa. I will still call that boy I have a crush on and hang up when he answers. I will still go on spontaneous weekend road trips and pick up every hitch-hiker I come across. I will equally embrace the responsible with the reckless and hope it turns out all right. I can be an adult but I will be a kid, too. Just because I am no longer in school, it doesn't mean I have to stop being a student. The world has many things to teach me and I am ready for the next chapter.
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Pictures are in for Picnic on the Battlefield and I couldn't be happier. This mashup of two absurdist plays has turned out to be one of my favorite projects in a long time.
Here you can see a sample of my research for the project. Since our production was a combination of many time periods and we didn't want a specific war to be the focus of the show, we gathered inspiration from WWI soldiers, silent movie stars, victorian dress, and vaudeville characters.
I absolutely love cardboard and thought this would be the perfect chance to incorporate corrugated into a costume rendering. We produced the show at the Southern Theatre in Minneapolis which is famous for its beautiful distressed brick interior. The corrugated was scored and striped away artistically to give the impression of the environment these characters would live in.
After much distressing and renting and sewing and makeup-ing, here is the final result. An absurd military satire with a touch of vaudeville. Lots of dirty with a bit of pretty.
Photos by Bill Prouty
Picnic on the Battlefield
Theatre Novi Most 2012
Dir. Lisa Channer and Vladimir Rovinksi
Lights. Rob Perry
Set. Annie Rollins
Costumes. Amanda McGee
Photos. Bill Prouty
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