Theatrical Gestures

Theatrical Gestures | Group Exhibition from the Angel Collection

Curators: Dalia Levin, Tal Bechler
Jan. 26, 2013 - Apr. 20, 2013

Theatrical gestures are nonverbal signals presented on stage: bodily movements, mimics, tone of voice, dress, music, and stage sets. Such gestures are signs which mediate between the character’s actions, his mindset, and his relationships with other characters and with the audience; it is a sign intended to convey information to the audience about both the character and the narrative. The exhibition explores theatrical gestures in contemporary art which are articulated through diverse media.

Theater and the visual arts have been intertwined since time immemorial. Scenes from Greek drama were depicted on vases in ancient Greece; the tableau vivant technique-human figures posed silent and motionless on stage to represent a narrative scene or a well-known painting-was incorporated in European theater in the 16th-18th centuries; 19th century great masters, such as David, Ingres, Delacroix, and Degas, were enchanted by the power of the theater, and attempted to capture its appeal in their paintings.

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