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Arab Winter

Lebanese performance artist Rabih Mroué leads a creative rebellion in his U.S. debut.

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Originally published January 2012. A text, a tweet, a cellphone photo: these were the weapons of the Arab Spring, wielded by young, tech-savvy revolutionaries who issued a call to action—a call for freedom—with Silicon Valley technology. As rebellion simmered on Facebook and spilled into the streets of Egypt, Tunisia, and Syria, Rabih Mroué took notice from his home in Beirut. The 44-year-old performance artist has long had an eye for political theater; ever since his native Lebanon ended its own 15-year civil war in 1990, Mroué has played the provocateur, using monologues and video installations to probe his country’s troubled history. The 2005 performance piece Who’s Afraid of Representation, based on the true story of a civil servant who went on a killing spree after losing his job, earned Mroué a phone call from the office of the interior ministry. They demanded a rewrite.

“To use the words of the censorship department, they tell us: We don’t censor you, we just play with the contrast, we make it less sharp, just make it more gentle, not so violent or provocative,” he told CNN last year. In turn, Mroué has worked alongside his fellow avant-guardians on the fringes of Beirut’s theater scene. His performances are more pop-up than popular, but they’ve earned him international respect, including a 2010 Spalding Gray award issued by a U.S. consortium of museums and theaters. Quite the honor for a man who’s never performed stateside before—until now.

Find out about Mroué’s upcoming show at On the Boards in our full article.

Rabih Mroué
On the Boards, January 19–22

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Tags: Theater, On the Boards, Performance Art

Visual Art Preview

Fantasy Frye-land

Oil paintings to the right, “whimsically disturbing” performance art to the left.

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Photo: Courtesy Bruce Tom

Degenerate Art Ensemble, Sonic Tales, 2009.

(Originally published in March 2011 issue.) Bet Charles and Emma Frye never saw this coming: Sixty years after donating their collection of late nineteenth-century German paintings to Seattle, wildly surreal multimedia now shares a wall with bucolic landscapes. And around the corner from the gilt-framed oil paintings stands a ceiling-high sculpture—a coy giantess who lifts the hem of her skirt and beckons you to browse a video collage beneath the folds.

The latest avant-garde explosion at the Frye is courtesy of Degenerate Art Ensemble, a Seattle-based performance art group that defies definition… They embrace all disciplines—with influences ranging from punk rock to Butoh to fairy tales—to create theater that’s been called “whimsically disturbing” and eminently memorable.

For its museum debut, DAE will showcase costumes, props and video clips from past performances— including 2006’s Cuckoo Crow and 2009’s Sonic Tales—plus new work (such as the aforementioned giantess). Frye deputy director Robin Held and DAE coartistic directors Haruko Nishimura and Joshua Kohl will hold an informal conversation about the exhibit on its opening day, Friday, March 19, at 2pm, but you can also get the rundown on DAE in Suzanne Beal’s article ‘Fantasy Frye-land’ in our March issue.

Degenerate Art Ensemble will showcase its work from March 19-June 19 at Frye Art Museum. Admission is free.

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Tags: Visual Art, frye art museum, Degenerate Art Ensemble, Performance Art

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