Publications

reset filter

Type:

books
articles
forewords
short form
open access
phd thesis

Research theme:

scenographics series
atmospherics
transness
nonbinary
climate crisis
digital practices
practice research
architecture
costume
scenography
Books, Scenography, Scenographics, Costume Rachel Hann Books, Scenography, Scenographics, Costume Rachel Hann

Beyond Scenography

Beyond Scenography offers a manifesto for a renewed theory of scenographic practice for the student and professional theatrical designer. With sections on installation art and gardening as well as marketing and placemaking, this book is an argument for what scenography does: how assemblages of scenographic traits orientate, situate, and shape staged events.

Read More
Articles, Costume Rachel Hann Articles, Costume Rachel Hann

Costume Politics

Costume is subversive. It subverts the rules of a fashion system and exposes the theatricality of dress. Accordingly, the politics of costume are arguably a politics of ‘othering’: how the conscious subversion of appearance serves as an act of bodily estrangement. Yet, as evident in the Prague Quadrennial (PQ) tribes in June 2015, this othering is an active process that is undertaken equally by those engaged in the event of costuming and those who witness this act.

Read More
Articles, Costume, practice research Rachel Hann Articles, Costume, practice research Rachel Hann

Editorial: Critical Costume

Costume is critical. It is critical to making performance, critical to spectator- ship, critically overlooked within scholarship, notable when in crisis, and a means of critically interrogating the body. It is therefore critical that we discuss costume. Yet, it is equally imperative for costume to find appropriate methods and frameworks to support new forms of practice. A critical discourse of costume aims to promote new questions and scholarship on the intersections between body, design and performance. This is the concern of critical costume.

Read More
architecture, Open access, short form Rachel Hann architecture, Open access, short form Rachel Hann

Hellerau Returned

The Festspielhaus Hellerau (1911) is recognized as the first purpose-built “studio “performance space. Scenographer Adolphe Appia and architect Heinrich Tessenow’s architectural legacy is once again an active site of experimentation following a2006 renovation. Moreover, the current artistic residency of William Forsythe’s dance company has continued Appia’s vision for afuture performance practice through an intermedial approach. Importantly, the body, within the work of Forsythe and Appia, remains alocus of artistic convergence as it encompasses the “open “architecture at Hellerau.

Read More