This document discusses architect Edouard Autant's Theatre of Space, which was built for the 1937 Paris International Exposition. The theatre was designed to stage urban life by juxtaposing multiple simultaneous scenes that surrounded the audience. Spectators experienced fragments of different performances happening all around them. Autant believed this demonstrated how architecture could shape public spaces through theatrical experiences. He explored using theatre to develop principles of modern urban design. The Theatre of Space proposed an alternative to traditional plazas by modeling the experience of an urban plaza through its performances and design.
This document discusses architect Edouard Autant's Theatre of Space, which was built for the 1937 Paris International Exposition. The theatre was designed to stage urban life by juxtaposing multiple simultaneous scenes that surrounded the audience. Spectators experienced fragments of different performances happening all around them. Autant believed this demonstrated how architecture could shape public spaces through theatrical experiences. He explored using theatre to develop principles of modern urban design. The Theatre of Space proposed an alternative to traditional plazas by modeling the experience of an urban plaza through its performances and design.
Original Description:
Architecture and Drama the Theatre of Public Space
Original Title
Architecture and Drama the Theatre of Public Space
This document discusses architect Edouard Autant's Theatre of Space, which was built for the 1937 Paris International Exposition. The theatre was designed to stage urban life by juxtaposing multiple simultaneous scenes that surrounded the audience. Spectators experienced fragments of different performances happening all around them. Autant believed this demonstrated how architecture could shape public spaces through theatrical experiences. He explored using theatre to develop principles of modern urban design. The Theatre of Space proposed an alternative to traditional plazas by modeling the experience of an urban plaza through its performances and design.
This document discusses architect Edouard Autant's Theatre of Space, which was built for the 1937 Paris International Exposition. The theatre was designed to stage urban life by juxtaposing multiple simultaneous scenes that surrounded the audience. Spectators experienced fragments of different performances happening all around them. Autant believed this demonstrated how architecture could shape public spaces through theatrical experiences. He explored using theatre to develop principles of modern urban design. The Theatre of Space proposed an alternative to traditional plazas by modeling the experience of an urban plaza through its performances and design.
Architecture and Drama: The Theatre of Public Space
Gray Read, Florida International University
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Fig. 1: Interior of Thtre de lespace based on Edouard Autants plan and section. Actors play improvised scenes in lower area between audience bleachers and choreographed drama on upper surrounding stage. Tilted mirrors reflect action behind spectators. (Drawing rendered by Eduardo Luna and author based on sketch by Edouard Autant). Architecture and Drama: The Theatre of Public Space
Gray Read, Florida International University
Many have commented on the essentially theatrical quality of urban life. Here, I offer a model of modern urban life developed in theatre, which explores how architecture might stage events of the city. The Theatre of Space (Thtre de lEspace) built for the 1937 Paris International Exposition and the performances played there can be read as a demonstration of spatial principles for modern public space (Figure 1 & 2). Designed by architect Edouard Autant and actress Louise Lara, performances in the theatre modeled the experience of an urban plaza by juxtaposing fictional narratives, improvisation, and real situations in multiple, simultaneous scenes that both surrounded and were surrounded by the audience. Based in modern performance techniques, the theatre proposed a means to stage urban life that challenged both traditional plaza design and the open-space plazas promoted by modern architects such as Le Corbusier. In the Theatre of Space and other 3
Fig. 2 Building containing the Thtre de lEspace designed by Paul Tournon for the Exposition International des Arts et Metiers, Paris, 1937. View of garden faade and section showing the Thtre de lEspace on top floor. Four other experimental theatres filled this section of a larger building. (Art et Action, Cinq conceptions de structures dramatiques modernes)
projects, Autant and others such as August Perret and Robert Mallet-Stevens developed an alternative modern architecture, which was allied with theatre and emerged out of an optimistic vision of an creative collective society. Ultimately, this vision of an artistic utopia did not prevail and Autants poetic interpretation of urbanism has been largely overlooked until recently. This paper will describe how Autants Theatre of Space defined a modern experience of urban life, touch on its historical significance, and finally posit why this particular model is relevant to the design of public space now. Theatre Genre of Performance Architectural Situation 1. Thtre Choreique (Choral Theatre) Choral Poetry, Vocal Music Atmospheric Space, Constructing space through sound 2. Thtre de lespace, (Theatre of Space) Improvisation Public Plaza, (presented in this article) 3. Thtre du Livre (Theatre of the Book) Literary Readings with Commentary Facades, Display Space, framing and windows 4. Thtre de Chambre (Chamber Theatre) Introspective Drama Experiments in set design Contrasting spatial positions: High/low, Near/Far, or separated by a wall. 5. Thtre Universitaire (University Theatre) Intellectual Drama Space of Analysis (Lab)
Fig. 3 Art et Actions Five Conceptions of Dramatic Structure. Autant designed five theatres that established spatial relationships between audience and actors specific to five types of drama. Each theatre also represented a common architectural situation and proposed a modern spatial solution. Performances enacted how the space might work both socially and symbolically in plays that told mythic stories. In twenty years of work in theatre between the world wars, Architect Edouard Autant embraced performance as a means to explore how spaces act rather than how they look. In the context of their experimental company, Art and Action (Art et Action), Autant and Lara developed a repertoire of poetry, music, and classical literature interpreted through poignant spatial relationships between characters. i In the later 30s, Autant organized Art and Actions performances into five types of drama or conceptions of dramatic structure, some of which were based on performances he and Lara had seen on a trip to Soviet Russia (Fig. 3). ii For each dramatic type, he drew plans, sections and elevations for a theatre building that placed the audience in a strategic spatial relationship with the actors. In each of the theatres, performances were to absorb spectators in a complete experience of action in space. Autants methodical approach to theatre design can be understood as a larger exploration of urban architecture. Each type of drama addressed a spatial situation characteristic of urban 4
life and each theatre proposed how architecture might shape those situations in a modern city. In the experimental realm of theatre, actors and spectators could then activate the space poetically in performance. Among these five, the Theatre of Space explores the spatial performance of the public realm. iii
Fig. 4 Thtre de Lespace Plan, Section and Elevation drawn by Edouard Autant (Art et Action, Cinq conceptions de structures dramatiques) A - Transparent Atmospheric Band (open to fresh air) C Counterweights for moveable ceiling D Scenery (Improvised) E Closed-circuit television screen showing performances in progress F Seating for Audience L Moveable Ceiling (Fresh air and weather protection) O Orchestra funnel P Panoramic Stage R Mirrors V Entry Hall T Advertising Posters For the 1937 Paris International Exposition, Autant built the Theatre of Space performance hall within a temporary exhibition building, which stood for one year (Fig. 1 & 2). He also wrote a cycle of plays for the space that Art and Action performed. iv Autant specified that five independent scenes proceed simultaneously, two scattered among the audience and three on a raised stage surrounding them. Each stage engaged spectators differently, dividing their attention spatially as well as among genres of performance, so what they saw was often a different scene than what they heard. Spectators experienced the scenes juxtaposed with one another, whether in a planned confluence or a chance intersection of sights, sounds, and narrative. In this sense, their experience of the play was not dictated by the playwright, but constructed in each spectators imagination from the fragments that he or she saw and heard. The design of the Theatre of Space As built, the theatre comprised a rectangular hall fifty meters in length that contained the audience in a smaller rectangular pit at the center, surrounded on three sides by a fixed, raised stage (Figure 1, 4 & 5). The exterior walls of the hall were pierced with glazed doors and windows that reached from the floor of the stage to a high ceiling. Panels of scenery were hung in front of the windows yet they never entirely obscured a view to the outside. Most of the roof was a skylight that could be opened completely in good weather, releasing the hall to the sky. 5
Years before the 1937 Paris Exposition, Autant had drawn plans for the Theatre of Space as a complete building (Figure 4 & 5). His sketches suggest that spectators would have experienced seven distinct layers of performance around them, which would have produced a complex spatial interplay (Figure 6). First, spectators would have seen two improvised scenes immediately in front of them (D in Figure 4, also see Figure 7). Autant wrote that scenes in the lower areas among the audience should be improvised and engage spectators directly. v Louise Lara trained a troupe of actors, the Comdie Spontane Moderne, to play from a minimal script, taking roles familiar to spectators: a husband and wife or a tutor with students. At such close range, an actors gestures and facial expressions had to be both realistic and precise, their language colloquial as if they were ordinary people. Surrounded by spectators, the actors appeared close up, in the round, and lit from the skylights above. Their physical presence was emphasized by proximity and consistent shadows so the audience saw their movements in three-dimensional detail. Fig. 5 Isometric view of Theatre of Space showing spectator bleachers which face one another surrounded by large stage with small area for improvisation actors in between. (Drawing by Eduardo Luna and author). Second, behind these two scenes, spectators looked across to the other bank of seating. They could see expressions of others in the audience facing them, and reciprocally that audience saw them. In strong light from skylights and in full view, they were integrated into the performance. Third, on the upper surrounding stage, three scenes appeared: one beyond the facing audience, a second scene to the side requiring spectators to turn, and a third going on behind them, reflected in a mirror so it seemed quite distant as a fourth level of action. Autant wrote that scenes on the upper stage, in contrast to those below, should be choreographed to create an overarching rhythm. Raised above the audience, actors performed in a theatrical style, moving in choreographed dance to create visual tableaux in an expansive realm around the audience. Actors also sang or chanted to create atmospheres of sound. Fig. 6 Spectators view. Improvisation actors in front of facing audience, a scene reflected in mirror, another scene on upper stage, a view through windows, and scenery. (Drawing by author) Autants section shows the stage floor sloped to create traditional up-stage and down-stage positions. However, the effect was the opposite of a traditional stage. The floor was not visible to spectators and its slope followed a spectators line of sight (dotted lines in Fig. 7), so actors positions in depth would be difficult to read. They would appear superimposed on one other. vi
Windows behind the actors on the panoramic stage threw the figures into silhouette, further abstracting their movements. The windows also offered a view through the windows to trees and sky of the local landscape, 6
constituting a fifth layer of view. Above the actors, painted scenery presented a fictional setting as a sixth layer in juxtaposition with the real scene outside. Finally the open ceiling allowed a view of the sky that established the plays position under the heavens, a position the script sometimes mentioned directly (Fig. 8). This layered set of spatial relationships, from direct conversation to public performance to cosmic locale, recalls simultaneous experiences one might encounter in a city square. For example, the improvised scenes close at hand might be considered parallel to caf conversations or discussions overheard at the next table, yet emphasized and explored in performance. The audience seated on the opposite bleachers heighten the sense of the reciprocal quality of seeing others and being seen. The choreographed scenes on the upper stages represent the repetitive daily rhythms of life in the city that form a background for what we perceive as our own spontaneous movements. The view out the windows is a reminder of the theatres location in Paris, while painted scenery, like building faades, refer to distant places and ideas. Architecture implicitly juxtaposes the here and now with formal or figurative references to elsewhere. Finally the skylights opened to the cosmos, locating all action in a real world ordered by the universal cycles. Fig. 7 Cross Section of Theatre of Space based on Autants sketches and photos of the built hall. Actors perform at the lowest level between sections of spectators and on the upper surrounding stage. Dotted lines show the view reflected in the mirror. Note that the audience would not see the floor of the upper stage. (Drawing by author) In the parallel world of the theatre, Art and Action heightened the formal qualities of this layered urban experience so conversations were more vivid, distant scenes more composed, and the views of landscape and sky more lyrical. In the Theatre of Space, movements were composed in depth architecturally so a spectator saw most of them juxtaposed in one view, as if the city were compressed. Performances also made connections between the scenes, so words and gestures in one were answered in another scene beside or behind it, to build a web of correspondences that reflected poetically on similar correspondences one might encounter in the city. Performances had the quality of urban festivals, both in the experience of being surrounded by multiple scenes and in the drama of performance. Art et Action built this layered architectural/theatrical model of urban life at the same time that many modern architects proposed similarly layered cities that separated pedestrian and vehicular traffic. However, Autants purposes were poetic rather than utilitarian. In theTheatre of Space Autant separated the elements (the scenes), then juxtaposed them with each other and with real views so they might interact to comment upon urban life. In this sense, plays in the Theatre of Space recalled ancient epic dramas staged outside in natural landscapes or city squares, where the moral and spiritual dilemmas explored in the story were played within the settings of civil society and under the heavens. vii
Environmental Theatre in the 1930s 7
Autants construction of performance and of public space were linked with a Socialist philosophy of art in which theatre and architecture were allied as models for a new society. viii In theatre, Erwin Piscator in Germany and Vsevelod Meyerhold in Russia lead a movement to do away with the box stage, to cross the proscenium arch, and to bring performances into the hall with the audience. They engaged architects Walter Gropius and El Lissitzky respectively to design environmental theatres that would engulf the audience spatially, erasing theatric distance. Spectators, they argued, should no longer be induced to project themselves into an enframed fictional world but should live theatre as they live in public in the city. Bringing audience and actors into the same space challenged the boundary between fiction and reality and constructed plays not as fantasy, but as meaningful stories, parables, or allegories that have a real effect in the world. ix This role for art was particularly pointed in post-revolutionary Russia where theatre specifically strove to engage the populace both physically and intellectually in revolutionary cultural dialogue. x Theatre cast both actors and audience in roles that modeled the new society in which daily work was heroic and meaningful. Meyerhold wrote, We have a new public which will stand no nonsense each spectator represents, as it were, Soviet Russia in microcosm. xi In this type of theatre, neither the audience nor the actors respond as individuals but as universal character types whose actions are real and present. The emotions of both audience and actors should be roused, not by losing themselves in fiction, but by sharing passions revealed in the drama. In modern theatre, the actors were tangible and their actions were larger than life. They stood among people to represent Everyman, exposing truths embedded in ordinary lives that touched a higher level of reality.
Fig. 8 View from stage showing scenery panels overlapping windows above the heads of actors. Retractable ceiling and skylights flood theatre with sunlight during the day and frame view of heavens at night. Layered scenes, views and light proposed spatial experience of a modern public plaza. Structure of a Modern Public Space: Lessons for Today Autant and Lara shared Meyerholds view that theatre could model the essential structure of a modern life through representation. xii In light of this agenda, the architecture of the Theatre of Space might be read as a demonstration a testing ground for modernity that stands 8
opposed to both traditional theatres and urban spaces. For example, traditional urban plazas defined the theatre of public life in a sharp hierarchy which elevated and enframed public figures so their words could be heard and their actions appear large and significant. Traditional proscenium theatres then mirrored urban squares by separating a large audience from few actors who performed from a script written by an invisible author. The design and performance of the Theatre of Space presents an alternate situation. The five scenes were equally weighted in importance, yet in different genres: music, dance, or drama. No single scene offered a total experience. In between the scenes, spectators discovered compound rhythms and poignant concurrences, like in a festival. The scenes on the lower stages modeled the casual, even private interactions of citizens while the upper stages raised actions to the level of performance where they became symbolically significant. On the upper stage, a variety of architectural tricks such as sloped floors, mirrors, and backlighting crafted how the performances looked. However the two areas remained linked. A word or action on the lower stage could affect actions on the upper stage, and characters could traverse from one to the other, changing their roles in the story. In the Theatre of Space, modern public urban space was still hierarchical yet a hierarchy broad enough to include many different kinds of actions by many different authors. And the boundaries between strata were permeable enough for drama in motion from one to another. In Autants plays, both spectators and actors had parts facing one another in conversation, while some rose to the upper stage to set the rhythms that ordered life and made it meaningful. The theatrical, urban model offered here by Autant, Lara and Art and Action raises several questions for contemporary architects. I have focused on two of them: How might architecture more effectively, or honestly, stage contemporary urban life to make our roles and relationships more vital? How might theatre and performance serve architecture as a testing ground for ideas?
i Art et Action published several small books including plays, descriptions of five theatrical types, and a course in improvisation. Most of these are collected in Art et Action, Cinq conceptions de structures dramatiques modernes, 13 parts in one volume vols. (Paris: Corti, 1952). The only comprehensive study of their work is Michel Corvin, Le thatre de recherche entre les deux guerres: Le laboratoire Art et Action, Thtre annes vingt (Paris: La Cit-LAge d'Homme, 1976) I have found only one mention of their work in English: Arnold Aronson, The History and Theory of Environmental Scenography (Ann Arbor: UMI, 1977) p. 128. The principal resource for this work is the Art et Action archive located at the Archives des Arts du Spectacle, Bibliothque Nationale de France. This archive includes typescripts of plays, a treatise on theatre by Autant, models of five theatre buildings, and scrapbooks containing notes and photos of performances. Art et Action performed modern works including plays by Paul Claudel, Max Deauville, Ren Ghil, and Louis Aragon. Autant wrote plays that reinterpreted classic literary characters and stories including Voltaires Micromegas, Swifts Gullivers Travels, and Rabelais Gargantua and Pantagruel. ii Autant and Lara went to Moscow in 1928. They describe Russian theatre dedicated to recitals of literature, Theatre of the Book In Cinq Conceptions de Structures Dramatiques. Lara described improvisation and childrens puppet theatre in Louise Lara, L'Art dramatique russe in 1928 (Paris: Bergerac; imprimerie de la Lemeuse, 1928). They saw Chamber Theatre presented by Alexandre Tairov both in Moscow and when Tairovs company performed in Paris. In 1933, they visited Poland to see an environmental theatre (or Theatre of Space) designed by Szymon Syrkus and Zygmunt Tonecki. iii Autant described the Thtre de lespace, and explained his intentions and precedents for the design in Art et Art et Action, Cinq conceptions de structures dramatiques modernes . Art et Action also collected manuscripts for the plays, correspondence, and photos of the building in a scrap book : Art et Action, "Theatre de l'espace," in Fond Art et Action, Archive des Arts du Spectacle, Bibliothque Nationale de France (Paris: n.d.). iv While Autants texts were preserved in the archive, there are few photos of the performances. The Thtre de lespace did not receive the budget or attention of other areas of Tournons building. It was finished late and the performances were underfunded and rushed. v Art et Art et Action, "Theatre de l'espace," p. 46. vi In a 1929 performance of Cain by Lord Byron, Autant built an upper platform for celestial scenes and specified that a skirting board should hide the actors feet so they would appear suspended in air. Art et Action, "Cain," in Fond Art et Action, Archive des Arts du Spectacle, Bibliothque Nationale de France (Paris: n.d.), p. 30. 9
vii Autant acknowledged influence by British director Edward Gordon Craig in Edouard Autant and Louise Lara, "La philosophie du thtre," in Fonds Art et Action (Paris: 1925) Craig wrote repeatedly, we should play in open air. See Edward Gordon Craig, The Theatre--Advancing (London: Constable, 1921), p. 19. Meyerhold also wrote that theatre should get out into the open air, we want our setting to be an iron pipe or the open sea or something constructed by the new man. Vsevolod Meyerkhold, Meyerhold on Theatre, trans. E. Braun (NY: Hill & Wang, 1969), p. 174. viii Roann Barris, "Culture as Battleground: Subversive Narratives in Constructivist Architecture and Stage Design," Journal of Architectural Education 52, no. 2 (1998) See also Catherine Cooke, Russian Avant-Garde: Theories of Art, Architecture and the City (London: Academy Editions, 1995), p. 17. ix Barris. Culture as Battleground p. 111. Vsevelod Meyerhold used such techniques in the early 1920s. Epic drama was developed as a theoretical genre by Erwin Piscador in the 1920s in Germany and is better known in the US through Bertoldt Brechts plays. See C. D. Innes, Irwin Piscador's Political Theatre: the development of Modern German Drama (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1972) x In the context of Soviet Russia, Meyerhold asked how theatre could imbue spectators with that life-giving force (to quote Comrade Stalin) which will carry the masses forward to a world of new revolutionary creative effort? In The Reconstruction of the Theatre in Braun, Meyerhold on Theatre, p. 270. xi Meyerhold, On the Staging of Verhaerens The Dawn (1918) in Meyerhold on Theatre p. 170. xii Autant and Lara, "La philosophie du thtre," p. 5. He was referring to the broad role of art as an experimental field that seeks truth. He quoted Oscar Wilde, There are times when art attains the dignity of manual labor. 10