Leverage and language were the
theme, with youth arts practitioners and administrators from all over Australia and
beyond concentrating on questions of communicating what the arts are about for
the young. And communicating not just in a vague ‘arts are good for you’sense
but in ways that would have potential audiences, funders, governments, schools,
parents and the young understanding how vital this area is and how it changes
perspectives and lives. There’s a search on for the right language that
positively communicates the worth of the arts for the young. As Jim Lawson,
Director and CEO for YPAA (Vic) said when he quoted Cathy Hunt of Positive
Solutions (www.positive-solutions.com.au) in the
Symposium’s programme, ‘…the question arises for the arts sector: How do we
articulate the value of what we do?’
Suzanne Lebeau, playwright and
artistic director of Le Carrousel Theatre (www.lecarrousel.net)
in Quebec , Canada discussed the need for
toughness in youth arts, raising questions of censorship and self-censorship
for a playwright yet placing against this evidence of the great capacity of
children to understand difficult ethical questions. One of her recent plays (Le bruit des os qui craquent/The Sound of Cracking Bones 2006)
concerns the matter of child soldiers, not the first time for Lebeau to tackle
challenging subject matter.
Out
in the centre of the Powerhouse dozens of younger kids were absorbed in
building their Paper Planets, in a smaller space Maysa Abouhzheid performed
Nest, a piece about her perceptions of the world, with her guide dog nestled
quietly at her feet and in an even tinier space The Plastic Bag Ladies of the
Sea introduced miniscule audiences to the knitted underwater world of Spinning
a Yarn.
Outside the performances there
was a sea of talk with much in the way of positive suggestions for broadening
the youth arts sector’s communication of what it does coming from people like
Chicago Arts Partnerships in Education’s Arnold Aprill.
(Time and time again he would drop an eminently
sensible viewpoint or tactic into the discussions.)
There was also a very healthy
approach to the use of media in youth arts going on. ATYP’s Fresh Ink – Writers
Online Tel It Like It Isn’t showcased on film a couple of tough monologues by
writers under 26, all revolving around a dire teenage driving scenario. (http://www.freshink.com.au/the-voices-project/)
There was even a rather exciting live cross to Manchester
and Baba Israel , artistic
director of Manchester ’s CONTACT where the
Contacting the World Festival involved youth companies from the UK , Trinidad/Tobago, Thailand
and Nigeria .
(http://contactmcr.com/) It’s clear from
their web site that they have a strong on line presence full of powerful up to
the moment work.
With national curriculum for
the arts thundering down on the country’s education systems none of this is any
bad thing. But there still seems to be a bit of a chasm between all this
gorgeous stuff and education systems. YPAA is aware of this and ran an
educators’ seminar at the Opera House on the Monday following the Symposium
which might have opened a few doors. Putting arts squarely to the fore in busy
and complex education systems remains, however, a challenge. Deep training for
specialist performing arts teachers and a hard look at the reality of
facilities in schools might be achieved if decision makers were as versed in
the language of the arts as YPAA would like them to be.
Meanwhile, back in Canberra , the July break contained some good
examples of theatre by children and for children. Child Players’ ACT ‘s The
Lion The Witch and the Wardrobe, the first of C.S.Lewis’ Narnia stories was a
sensibly unfussy and unsentimental version with good brisk playing and
excellently clear voices, well directed by B.J.Anyos. Child Players have an
intriguing set up in which the participants rotate through backstage and
onstage roles, giving them a chance at a broad and realistic theatrical
experience that resists the temptation to only nourish ‘stars’.
Although William Walton’s
Funeral March for Olivier’s Hamlet was an odd aural choice to introduce the
White Witch (who would seem to be more of an Oriental despot than a Danish
royal) the rest of the show mostly hit a very satisfactory mixture of clear
approaches to characters and straightforward imagery. The set changes used the
ubiquitous Rock Eisteddfod rotating triangle flats that is occasionally a slow
way of doing things but no bad idea if approached with style. It certainly
solves the problem of a wardrobe that has to contain a whole world.
CYT, who were ably represented
at the YPAA Symposium by artistic director Karla Conway, put on Insomniac
Attack, a lovely dark piece about the terrors of the night complete with Genty
style illusions supported by neatly selective lighting by Michael Foley and
lots of IPods floating around in the dark with little films of eyes running on
them in a delicious visual pun. Director Cathy Petocz had the CYT Junior
Ensemble deeply immersed in a world of bedclothes that come to life and the
faint lights of the IPads and IPods that shine underneath them just as years
ago the late night readers would use their torches. Only now it might be
technology that’s evoking the nightmares. Which the young insomniacs in this
piece overcome in a brusquely practical manner.
Does the draft National Arts
Curriculum (high on rhetoric but low as yet on vital matters like teacher
training and school facilities) have the capacity to ensure that students in
schools can be actively part of similar good performing arts experiences?