Stalker
Theatre
SEGUE 2015Street Theatre 8 – 9 May 2015
Reviewed by
Bill Stephens
An abstract
work combining interactive 3D images and audio technologies with contemporary dance
and physical theatre skills, “Encoded” proved an appropriately tantalising entrée to “Segue 2015”, a weekend festival
of cutting edge European and Australian theatre works.
Conceived
and directed by David Clarkson, “Encoded” begins in the darkened theatre, when,
to the accompaniment of an electronic soundscape , two figures emerge from
either side of the theatre wearing
praying mantis-like attachments which project vibrating patterns on to their
bodies. They slowly make their way down to the stage, and are met by a third
figure in similar attire. Reaching the stage, they turn ominously towards the
audience. The effect is unnerving, but at the same time exhilarating and laden
with anticipation as to what will follow.
The figures
discard the attachments as though emerging from chrysalis, and are joined by a
fourth. We can now see that there are two men and two women, Timothy Ohl,
Lee-Anne Litton, Joshua Thomson and Miranda Wheen. They begin to dance slowly
among projected black and white snowflake images, and as they do, the images swirl
around them like scattered autumn leaves on water.
Among the kaleidoscopic
changes, ropes descend from the ceiling.
One of the men takes a rope and uses it to walks up the back wall,
creating a disconcerting change of perspective which suggests the audience is
now observing him from above. Occasionally
the performers simply sit among the images. At other times they swing out over
the audience, or perform manoeuvres on the ropes. The effect is beguilingly dream-like and
seductive, and while no particular narrative suggests itself, there is
satisfaction in simply indulging in the beauty of the changing images as if
observing some dreamy mobile artwork,
and at the same time admiring the
imagination of the creators and the skill of the performers.