A Thousand Seasons Past: Rehearsal (Act 1) 5
A Thousand Seasons Past: Rehearsal (Act 1) 5
Emma Smith, 'Rehearsal (Act 1), 2015. Photo © Emma Smith, courtesy of the artist and Ginkgo Projects.

2015

A Thousand Seasons Past: Rehearsal (Act 1)

By

Synopsis

Rehearsal (Act 1) was an interactive rehearsal to create a unique playlet. The event invited the audience onto the stage to rehearse, direct and participate in a unique experiment to consider the possibilities for public rehearsal and audience participation. This work was a rehearsal for a rehearsal; an experiment into the possibility of rehearsal as a space of agency in which questions, histories, and behaviours can be addressed, posed and unfolded. 

A Thousand Seasons Past: Rehearsal (Act 1) 3
Emma Smith, 'Rehearsal (Act 1), 2015. Photo © Emma Smith, courtesy of the artist and Ginkgo Projects.
A Thousand Seasons Past: Rehearsal (Act 1) 4
Emma Smith, 'Rehearsal (Act 1), 2015. Photo © Emma Smith, courtesy of the artist and Ginkgo Projects.

For this work members of the public were invited to join a full tech rehearsal on the theatre stage supported by a professional crew. Everyone present was simultaneously protagonist within and audience to the work, which unfolded through the decisions of the group. Commencing with script and set, all elements of the work were offered up to the public for alteration and direction with the final experience created being entirely specific to those that take part. 

The script for this work was a contemporary adaptation of a real story from 1820 of a tragic relationship that led both parties to their deaths. The script is set in a house party and explores the nuances of non-physical violence in relation. 

The script was developed together with writer Mike Akers as he produced the script for A Thousand Seasons Past. Emma Smith and Mike worked closely during the development of the wider project and this was a rare opportunity for members of the public to explore the themes of the drama on the Bristol Old Vic stage; it was open to all and the diverse range of participants added to the process. Rehearsal (Act I) created a space for public engagement and authorship over the final outcome in a supported environment. 

A Thousand Seasons Past: Rehearsal (Act 1), is a temporary art work that was commissioned as part of the Wapping Wharf public art programme, a series of permanent and temporary art works funded by Umberslade as part of a public art obligation for the site. Further information on the Wapping Wharf arts programme can be seen on this website. 

  • A Thousand Seasons Past: Rehearsal (Act 1) A Thousand Seasons Past: Rehearsal (Act 1)

    Image Caption

    Emma Smith, 'Rehearsal (Act 1), 2015. Photo © Emma Smith, courtesy of the artist and Ginkgo Projects.

  • A Thousand Seasons Past: Rehearsal (Act 1) 1 A Thousand Seasons Past: Rehearsal (Act 1) 1

    Image Caption

    Emma Smith, 'Rehearsal (Act 1), 2015. Photo © Emma Smith, courtesy of the artist and Ginkgo Projects.

  • A Thousand Seasons Past: Rehearsal (Act 1) 2 A Thousand Seasons Past: Rehearsal (Act 1) 2

    Image Caption

    Emma Smith, 'Rehearsal (Act 1), 2015. Photo © Emma Smith, courtesy of the artist and Ginkgo Projects.

Emma Smith has a performance based social practice, creating public platforms for experimentation and research through site-specific actions, events and installations. Smith’s work explores human forms of connectivity, looking in particular at those that operate on a subconscious level through resonance, molecular activity, energetics and tacit behaviour. 

Smith’s working process is research and production based and often involves the bringing together of multi-disciplinary teams including academics, professionals and hobbyists, using the gallery space as an active laboratory for experimentation and collective action. 

Working with the format of rehearsal and public participation, Smith creates ephemeral experiences particular to those who are there, as well as props and games for non-durational performance to be activated at any time. Often site specific, her work investigates local historic behaviours in relation to the present, collapsing notions of time to challenge sedentary notions of place relation, considering how we might all relate to any place at any time through transitory modes of belonging and practices of place being.