Waiting For Godot in New Orleans: A Field Guide (Enhanced Version) - Paul Chan

Waiting For Godot in New Orleans: A Field Guide (Enhanced Version)

By Paul Chan

  • Release Date: 2011-03-07
  • Genre: Art & Architecture
Score: 4.5
4.5
From 8 Ratings

Description

Praise for Waiting for Godot in New Orleans 

“Spellbinding” — Artforum 

“An unforgettable example of ephemeral public art.” – The Nation 

“An art project that had everything, or at least a lot: objects, words, images, ideas, emotions, discourse, actions, lessons, beauty, politics, criticality and generosity.” – The New York Times 

“The most moving and meaningful ‘Godot’ we are ever likely to see.” – The Times-Picayune, New Orleans 

In November 2007, artist Paul Chan collaborated with the Classical Theatre of Harlem and New York public arts group Creative Time to mount free performances of Samuel Beckett's Waiting for Godot on the streets of New Orleans. Two years after Hurricane Katrina, New Orleanians were still waiting for help to recover and rebuild. Godot rang with fierce immediacy, and thousands attended the play, which starred New Orleans native and television star Wendell Pierce (HBO's The Wire). 

Waiting for Godot in New Orleans: A Field Guide, publishes for the first time the research materials, photographs, drawings, writings, and documents produced and gathered during the making of this multifaceted project, which included the free outdoor performances; theater workshops, educational seminars, conversations, and dinners; a Shadow Fund; and a short film. 

Reflecting how the project was organized, the book is divided into eight chapters: Remember, Picture, Relate, Organize, Appear, Play, Film, Reflect. Waiting for Godot in New Orleans: A Field Guide is designed to introduce the key ideas, strategies, and histories that motivated the making of the project, in order to create an imaginative roadmap of how public art can respond to and reflect upon what it means to be a public today. It also features new essays and interviews from thinkers, writers, activists, artists, and community members involved in the project. 

This enhanced e-book edition includes new audio compositions by Chan that accompanied the premiere of the Waiting for Godot in New Orleans archive at the Museum of Modern Art (MoMA) in June 2010.

Reviews

  • Wow

    4
    By Soojmooj
    Waiting for Godot is one of my favorite plays. Its minimal staging and structure always left a lot to context, and i can't imagine a more uncanny place than New Orleans. This gorgeous ebook illuminates the complex choreography behind the scenes--the organizing of people and the building of allegiances necessary to enact even this most modest of plays in such a fragile and fraught place. The elegant design of the ebook echoes this sensitivity, but also carries a dense power in its exhaustive display of documents, notes, and ephemera.
  • Who knew an ebook could look this good??

    5
    By Hova art lover
    This is by far the most substantial and handsome ebook in my iPad library. Unlike 99% of other ebooks out there, waiting for Godot in NOLA is really a historical, practical, and aesthetic document, couched within an immersive, visually rich reading experience. It takes the form of a how-to guide, detailing firsthand the organization of the play, from conception to planning to staging. But more than that, the ebook gives a concrete sense of the wide matrix of people, research materials, and aesthetic decisions that reveal the project to be more than just the staging of beckett's legendary play, but an on the ground account of social and cultural immersion in an alien landscape. For anyone who's been waiting for ebooks to be both substantive and gorgeous and finally look like they come from the 21st century, the wait is over!!
  • Waiting For Godot to download

    5
    By PW983
    An attractive digital translation of a text that is itself a translation of sorts. While I didn't make it down to NOLA for a performance, this book seems to be a comprehensive document of the impetus and ethos behind the project. Highly recommended to those interested in Beckett, New Orleans, or both.