Ilman ja liikkeen fenomenologiasta
Ellen Thesleff, Isadora Duncan, Edward Gordon Craig
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.23995/tht.88670Abstract
This article discusses Ellen Thesleff’s artistic practice and suggests that it is informed by a minimalistically phenomenological attitude. Minimalist phenomenology is a term introduced by Dominique Janicaud to describe artistic practices as translations of embodied perceptual experiences comparable to philosophical efforts to define experience. It is further suggested that air and gravity play an important role in her work. Her artistic thinking is also seen in connection with the artistic practice of dancer Isadora Duncan and theatre theorist Edward Gordon Craig. The role of antiquity as imagined in early 20th century modernism is reinterpreted as a phenomenological point de repère for these artists in their pathbreaking practices
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Articles: CC BY-SA 4.0 (images not included; see captions for copyright details), Metadata: CC0 1.0. Tahiti permits authors to post items submitted to the journal on personal websites or institutional repositories after publication, while providing bibliographic details that credit, if applicable, its publication in this journal.

