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Artist Scholar Propaganda

An independent artist scholar whose art research spans image-making, site specific theatre, investigative journalism, writing, and other disciplines. Most recently my work focuses on toxic landscapes and using site responsive theatre practices to reveal the history of a particular environment while exploring the means to imagine alternative futures.  This Artist Scholar Propaganda page contains an Artist Statement; Jamie Lyons C.V.; Jamie Lyons Bio; a Theatre Photography Bibliography; and a Site Specific Bibliography.

 

Artist Scholar, Jamie Lyons, site specific theater, theatre performance, Art Research, director, stanford, theater and performance studies,  san francisco, theater bay area, dance, Jamie Lyons Bio, Propaganda, Artist Statement, Santa Cruz

Note Bene: The photographs displayed on this website are a mix of digital (full frame or iPhone) and film: 6×6 negative (1952 Rolliflex, Holga) and 4×5 (1958 Speed Graphic Pacemaker) for archival purposes.

Artist Scholar Statement

Theatre holds an ancient resonance originating from its birth in caves. From the moment theatre was born, religion was born. This is not a nostalgic statement, nor is it some attempt at an archaeological attitude. In no way is theatre a structure that belongs to the past. I view it as a force, a practice of ritual, an ancient spirit that can be located at the core of all Live Art. Theatre’s aesthetic meaning remains contemporary. Mine is an artistic and scholarly enterprise that questions itself; repurposes itself with each occasion; offered in real time with no barriers; and founded on an act of presence.

What is site responsive theatre? Put simply, artists producing work in collaboration with a unique environment. Fundamental to my approach is a 
concern for working in the present while simultaneously collaborating with the remains of the past: the accumulated histories a site contains and the ethereal elements that remain ever present. My artistic practice centers itself with these connections and relationships. Uniting past, present and future and fusing artists, structures, with the remnants left by ghosts.

Regarding photographic images: on their own they are complicated and fascinating. Synthesized with thought and taken individually they contain stories and provide epiphanies. As a collection they convey a performance or work of Live Art into the future. Chronicling material change and temporal impermanence. Marking the order and entropy.

This system of making, consuming and discarding translates and transforms the experience of witnessing into something sober and sacred: a document. A text that exists as an inventory, narrative, or for some a memory while for others an explanation.

For both theatre-making and photography, there is nothing to invent. Rather, there are things to edit and things to focus on. The citing inherent in the work is infinite. The invention is finite.

Giotto solved the problem of bodies in space
.
Carvaggio … chiaroscuro
Rembrandt … light
Piranesi … inside/outside
Van Gogh … color
Warhol … the reproducibility of the image

The spectator is the key and the foundation of both practices. They are a presence impossible to disregard, a pantheon of Gods able to create and give life. Without a witness, without that experience, without that memory, without that emotion, without the life of the spectator… all we have are bodies, geometries, sound and light, with no meaning and little purpose.

These phenomena are part of a nourishment that belongs to everyone.

C.V.

I. EDUCATION:

Ph.D., Stanford University, Drama and Humanities, 2007
Dissertation: The Image of Tragedy

A.B., Stanford University, 1997

II. SCREENWRITING PROJECTS

2019: Revival
2015: The Land of Tears
2012: The Bikini Atoll War
2011:  Danger is My Destiny
2010: Al Khatun
2009: Tragedy of Hoffman
2008: Compadre
             The Lost Patrol
2007: The Traveling Beekers

III. THEATRE DIRECTING/PERFORMANCE/ART RESEARCH PROJECTS

……………………………….2020
Sophocles, Laocoön, Berkeley Art Museum and Pacific Film Archive

The Man Who Knows (Euripides #115), Santa Cruz

……………………………….2019
Aeschylus’ Mysians, Kauai

……………………………….2018
Aeschylus Danaids at The Pulgas Water Temple

Paths of Steady Success (Euripides #259), East Palo Alto

……………………………….2017
Sophocles’ Oedipus The King, trans. Anthony Burgess
(staged reading) in Fort Mason Chapel
for San Francisco International Arts Festival

Savage Blasts (Sophocles #116) at Wave Organ

……………………………….2016
Sophocles, Nausicaä at Pillar Point

Love is The Fullest Education (Euripides #91) on Slacker Hill

……………………………….2015
Speechless Fish (Sophocles #110) at San Gregorio

Cloud Talk (Sophocles #137) Ryan’s Bathtub

Aeschylus, The Argo at San Francisco Maritime

No Man’s Friend (Euripides #266), Aquatic Park

Aeschylus’ Glaucus of Potniae at Golden Gate Fields

Sophocles’ Sinon at Emeryville Mudflats

Aeschylus’ Daughters of Helios at Año Nuevo State Park

The Balcony by Jean Genet, Old Mint, San Francisco, Collected Works

……………………………….2014
King Fool, We Players

……………………………….2013
On The Harmful Effects of Tobacco by Anton Chekov, Franconia Performance Salon

……………………………….2004
The Blue Room by David Hare, Stanford University

……………………………….2003
Stray Cats by Warren Leight, Stanford University

Night of the Burning Pestle, Stanford University

……………………………….2002
True West by Sam Shepard, Stanford University

……………………………….2001
Marat/Sade by Peter Weiss, Stanford University

……………………………….2000
The Revenger’s Tragedy by Cyril Tournour, Stanford University

Footfalls by Samuel Beckett, Stanford Repertory Theater

What Where by Samuel Beckett, Stanford University

Come and Go by Samuel Beckett, Stanford Univiersity

……………………………….1999
Mountain Language by Harold Pinter, Stanford University

Cowboy Mouth by Sam Shepard, Stanford University.

……………………………….1998
Aya no Tsuzumi, a Noh play, The Pulgas Water Temple, San Francisco Water Department

……………………………….1997
Rat by Sarah Warren, P.S. 122, New York City

Drain, a radio play by J.C. Lyons, KPFA Public Radio
Homeplus, by J.C. Lyons, Upstairs Garage, New York City

IV. OTHER PROFESSIONAL EXPERIENCE

2019-: Lecturer, Film & Digital Media, University of California Santa Cruz

………..Guest Lecturer, Movement for Actors/Acting for Dancers,
………..Theater and Performance Studies, Stanford University

2017-: Co-Instructor, d.school, Stanford University: “The Intersection of Performance, Architecutre & Design”

2017-: Director of Marketing, Alonzo King LINES Ballet, San Francisco:
Responsible for planning and implementing marketing strategies that attract new audiences and students, deepen the organization’s connection with its community, and strengthen its global brand and international position.

2017-2019: Trustee, Museum of Perfromance + Design, San Francisco

2016-2020: Communications Lead, Environmental Data Governance Initiative:
a research-based organization founded n 2016 to respond to the Trump administration’s impact on federal environmental policy and data.

2015-: Artist Weather Television

2012-2017: Instructor, Prison University Project, San Quentin

2012-2016  Co-Founding Artistic Director, Collected Works

2009: Founder, False Art

2006-2012:  Creative Producer / Director, Google/Picture Lab
Created, developed, and managed video and digital media content that supported, explained, and told the stories that helped define a diverse array of platforms.

2005-2006: Teaching Fellow, Introduction to the Humanities, Stanford University

2004-2005: Lecturer, Theatre History I & II, Stanford University

2003-2007: Stanford Summer Production Laboratory:
Initiated and organized a summer theater lab, bringing together graduate and undergraduate students for 10 weeks to create 4 graduate-directed works, emphasizing the work of actor and director. Held weekly colloquia examining issues of theory, methodology, and the work of the artist/scholar. Supported with grants from Stanford Drama and the Institute for Diversity in the Arts.

2003-2004: Administrator, Performance Studies international

2003: Stanford Artist Scholar Conference:
Initiated and organized a graduate conference on the artist scholar. The aim of this conference of was to consider the place of theater practice within the research university at the PhD level and beyond, to develop practical strategies for the continued growth and evolution of theater and performance studies programs integrating scholarship and practice, and to foster interdisciplinary collaboration between theater studies and art research in other fields both within and beyond arts and humanities

2002-2004: Instructor, Honors College, Stanford University

2000-2004: Co-Founder Stanford Theater Laboratory:
The Theater Lab’s mission was to promote the interrelationship of artistic practice and academic scholarship and to advocate for the place of practical theatrical research within an academic research university. These artist-scholar activities included performance workshops with international practitioners both overseas and at Stanford; team-taught experimental theater workshops; graduate-directed summer theater laboratory; and a graduate-led conference. This idea of Art Research evolved into the Franconia Performance Salon.

2000-2005: Instructor: Introduction to Acting; Sex Rites and Earth RitualsShakespeare from Stage to Screen; Samuel Beckett’s Late Plays and Prose; Directing and Technology and Art.  Drama Department, Stanford University

2000-2001: Administrator, Stanford Summer Theater (now Stanford Repertory Theater)

1997-2003: Production Manager/Producer, Mabou Mines Productions
I worked first as Technical Director, then Production Manager and later as Producer as we worked Off Broadway and toured nationally and internationally with the company’s productions of Gospel at Colonus, Peter and Wendy, Hajj, Prelude to a Death in Venice, and video installations of their earlier work of developing Lear.

1993: Production Assistant, Anna Deavere Smith’s Twilight: Los Angeles, 1992 for the Mark Taper Forum, Los Angeles

V. PUBLICATIONS

(cover & images) Dillon, Lindsey. Toxic City: Redevelopment and Environmental Justice in San Francisco, Berkeley: Univsersity of California Press, 2024

(images) Hill, Leslie & Paris, Helen. Devising Theatre & Performance: Curious Methods, London: Intellect and Unbound, 2021

(text and images) “the SHIPYARD and the BOMB”, The T-Line News, Summer 2020

(cover/images) Ecumenica: Performance and Religion (Issue 13.1), Spring 2020

(cover image) We Players’ Macbeth at Fort Point, Theatre History Studies, The University of Alabama Press, 2019, Volume 38.

(images) “Alonzo King LINES Ballet Artistic Director Alonzo King”, The Wonderful World of Dance, Act IV, Spring 2019

(images) Eero Laine and Maaike Bleeker, “Performance Studies international”, Critical Stages/Scènes critiques, The IATC journal/Revue de l’AICT – June/Juin 2019: Issue No 19

(images) Anna Halprin’s Sensory Walk, Repères, cahier de danse #41, Fall 2018

The Voice from the 10th Row: Carl Weber and the Berliner Ensemble, co-author, TDR/The Drama Review Fall 2018, Vol. 62, No. 3 (T239), pp. 55–108

(images) “Carl Weber 1925-2016”, Kathryn Mederos Syssoyeva, TDR/The Drama Review Fall 2018, Vol. 62, No. 3 (T239), pps 51-54

(photographer) Inquiry Magazine, UCSC Office of Research, University of California Santa Cruz Press, 2018

(images) “Fantasy on the Clock: The Virtual Cruelty of Collected Works’ The Balcony” by Rebecca Chaleff, TDR/The Drama Review, Summer 2016, Vol. 60, No. 2 , Pages 139-145

(photographer) “The Balcony by Jean Genet (review)” by Kimberly Jannarone, Theatre Journal, Volume 67, Number 4, December 2015, pp. 729-731 (John Hopkins University Press, 2015)

(images) “Performing Body Modifications,” by Andrew Henkes, Contemporary Performance: Theatricality Across Genres (Routledge, 2015)

(images) Performing Proximity: Curious Intimacies by Leslie Hill & Helen Paris (Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan, 2014)

On Time, Performance Research, Volume 19, Issue 3, (Routledge, 2014)

Image of Tragedy (dissertation), (Stanford University, 2007)

“Rethinking the Cambridge Anthropologists.” Journal of Dramatic Theory and Criticism, Winter, 2004

“Lee Breuer’s Hajj as Postmortem Theater.” Journal of Dramatic Theory and Criticism, Winter, 2000

“Image of Scene: Oedipus Tyrannus, Ajax, and Philoctetes”. Comparative Drama, Spring 1998

*(photos) “Bill Ham: The Psychedelic Light Show,” Bomb Magazine, February, 1997

*(with Charles R. Lyons) “The Performance Work of Anna Deavere Smith and Contemporary Critical Theory,” Journal of Dramatic Theory and Criticism, Fall, 1994

VI. PUBLICATIONS FOR PHOTOGRAPHY

American Theatre
Broadway World
Inquiry Magazine
KQED
KQED Arts
Marin Independent Journal
PAJ: A Journal of Performance and Art
Palo Alto Weekly
Palo Alto Daily News
San Jose Mercury News
San Francisco Arts
San Francisco Bay Guardian
San Francisco Bay Times
San Francisco Chronicle
San Francisco Examiner
San Francisco Magazine
San Francisco Museum of Modern Art
SF Weekly
SFist
Stanford Magazine
Stanford Report
TDR: The Drama Review
The Huffington Post
The Idiolect
Theatre Bay Area
Theatre Journal
Wired Magazine
The Wonderful World of Dance
 

VII. OTHER PERFORMANCES & EXHIBITIONS

2022
Guest Lecturer: Visual and Site Specific Design for Aleta Hayes’ Fashion Fable Cantor Arts Center, Stanford University.  Commissioned performance to celebrate the museum’s Gordon Parks exhibit A Loaded Camera.

Guest, What to Be?, KSQD, December 18, 2022

2021
Solo Exhibit, Reunion Island, Téat, Ile de la Réunion, France.

Projection Design, Pole Star, Alonzo King LINES Ballet and Vân-Ánh Vanessa Võ, Téat, Ile de la Réunion, France.

Guest Lecturer: Director of Photography/Design for Riot of Spring, Stanford Under the Stars: Movie Nights at Frost for Stanford Live. Inspired by realized and imagined rites of spring, this intermedia project interpolates “liveness”, seeks communion and finds love. Rehearsed and filmed partially over Zoom and in landmark locations on the Stanford campus.

“Presenting Liveness in the Tech Space.” Presentation and roundtable discussion. Ethics, Society, & Tech Unconference, Stanford University.

Panelist, Art + tech: Salon Showcase. Working at the emerging intersections of Art and Technology, Stanford …………University

2020
Guest Lecturer: Director of Photography/Video Design for Dance 30: “
Traveling in Place“, Stanford Theater and Performance Studies. An online live dance performance project.

2019
Projection Design, Pole Star, Alonzo King LINES Ballet and Vân-Ánh Vanessa Võ, Yerba Buena Center for the Arts, San Francisco

Panelist, Beyond Academia Conference. Beyond Academia, UC Berkeley

Site Specific Design, Chocolate Heads: The Chocolate Ball for Polymaths, Stanford University. A performance as part of the “Leonardo’s Library” Exhibit Reception, a celebration of Leonardo Da Vinci’s 500th Birthday.

Enduring Democracy: The Monterey Petition, Documentary Film, 2019, Actor: Robinson Jeffers, David Schendel, director

Video Design, Chocolate Heads: Night Landing, Aleta Hayes Choreographer Stanford University

2018
Projection Design, Common Ground, Alonzo King LINES Ballet and Kronos Quartet, Yerba Buena Center for the Arts, San Francisco

Group Exhibit, Through-LINES: The Art of Ballet, Gallery 836M, San Francisco

2016
Site Specific Design, Chocolate Heads’ Ghost Architecture: Palimpsest, Stanford University

Visual Artist, Yula Paluy’s Nothing is Sacred? Museum of Performance + Design, San Francisco

Chocolate Heads, Spring Charrette, Stanford University

Chocolate Heads, Flower at Windhover, Stanford University

Playing the role of Bottom in San Francisco Shakespeare Festivals’ Midsummer Nights Dream in Lafayette Park.

2015
MAPP (Mission Arts Performance Project): Breaking Open The Prison Industrial Complex at Adobe Books, San Francisco, curated by Nathalie Brilliant

Building Scene: space launch and performance installation.  Architecture through Dance, Voice & Fashion in Commemoration of the Opening of the McMurtry Art and Art History Building, Stanford University

Video and Photos of The Iota (fragments of Aeschylus, Sophocles & Euripides) for FPS #14, at Museum of Performance + Design

Video and Photos of Collected Works production of The Balcony at The Old Mint for Sublimated Mask, at Museum of Performance + Design

Video Projection, Prototyping Festival, Market Street

2014
Performer, Inhabitant, Ntsoana Contemporary Dance Theatre, San Francisco Museum of Modern ArtYerba Buena Center for the Arts, and Galería de la Raza as part of Public Intimacy: Art and Other Ordinary Acts in South Africa and Live Projects 4

Dante’s Inferno, Cantos 1-7 (film), Franconia Performance Salon #12

2013
DJ/Dancer/Producer in Jerome Bel’s The Show Must Go On, Stanford Live

Video Projection & Lights for Building Score 101b, Performance Art Institute

Producer, Video Projection & Lights for Collected Works production of Gombrowicz’s Princess Ivona

VIII. AWARDS, GRANTS & FELLOWSHIPS

2005: Centennial Teaching Assistant Awards
1999-2006: Stanford University Fellowship
1994: Barbara Thompson Memorial Scholarship.
1994: Robert M. Golden Grant for Humanities and Creative Arts
1994: Appointed to Honors College, Stanford University
1993: James Irvine Foundation Grant
1993: Elston M. Harrison Memorial Scholarship

VIII. ORGANIZATIONS & AFFILIATIONS

National Press Photographers Association (NPPA), Modern Language Association (MLA), Reporters Without Borders, American Society for Theatre Research (ASTR), Performance Studies international (PSi), Association for Theatre in Higher Education (ATHE), Environmental Data Governance Initiative (EDGI).

Bio   ⦽

Bio, Jamie Lyons Artist Statement, Propaganda, Spectaclism, photographer, image maker, journalist, Artist Scholar, Art Research

Artist Scholar Rules

Rule 1
Never screw over a collaborator

Rule 2
Focus on process, not results

Rule 3
Don’t believe what you’re told

Rule 4
Never be unreachable

Rule 5
Never make excuses

Rule 6
Never waste talent

Rule 7
Always work as a team

Rule 8
Put in more than you want out

Rule 9
Never take anything for granted

Rule 10
Always carry a knife

Rule 11
Talking about work and work are not the same thing

Rule 12
Leave the site exactly as you found it

Rule 13
When the show is over, walk away

Rule 14
Never date a collaborator

Rule 15
Consider everything an experiment
(thank you John Cage)

Rule 16
Never involve lawyers

Rule 17
Bend the lines, don’t break them

Rule 18
Instinct is not the same as impulse

Rule 19
Appreciate failure, this is where growth occurs

Rule 20
It’s better to seek forgiveness than ask permission

Rule 21
Protect the time and space in which you work

Rule 22
Always carry a note-book and a pencil

Rule 23
Always carry a camera

Rule 24
Watch those watching

Rule 25
Snacks are suprisingly really important

Rule:26
Always remember we’re doing this because we love it

Rule 27
If you feel like you are being taken advantage of … you are

Rule 28
Avoid wearing shoes, they break your connection with the space

Rule 29
Don’t waste peoples time, don’t let others waste yours

Rule 30
There is no such thing as coincidence, the universe is telling you something
sometimes it’s saying “no”

Rule 31
Be transparent with your collaborators:
they can do more when they have a complete understanding of what is going on
and very helpful when you do not

Rule 32
Clean up any mess you make

(a) the reverese for you: show up clean/leave dirty

Rule 33
Be the first to arrive and the last to leave

Rule 34
Don’t work on Monday

(a): Ghosts exist, give them one day/night a week alone in the space

Rule 35
Don’t work for free; don’t ask others to work for free

Rule 36
Think twice about picking a site that doesn’t allow dogs

Rule 37
Everybody off book: actors, musicians, stage manger, crew

(a) music stands are amateurish

Rule 38
If you have nothing to say
don’t feel obliged to pretend you do

Rule 39
Respect your performers
Their job is 10 times more dangerous than yours

Rule 40
Never expect dogs, cats, birds or any other animals to do what you’d like them to do

(a) Sharka is an exception to this rule

Rule 41
Don’t quote other artists or productions unless you have to

Rule 42
Make up for a lack of (financial) means with an increase in imagination

Rule 43
A tight schedule can be difficult…
having too much time is worse

Rule 44
Less make-up is better

Rule 45
Less words are always better!

Rule 46
The more you know about “performance”
the tougher it gets to leave that knowledge behind
As soon as you do things “because you know how to do them”
you’re fucked

Rule 47
A “beautiful image”
can very well be the worst thing that can happen to your work

Rule 48
If you aren’t making art
you aren’t an artist
Work

Rule 49
If an idea doesn’t terrify you
if you aren’t fairly certain you will fail
it probably isn’t good enough

Rule 50
Know when your work is shit
Never be afraid to throw it all out and start over

Rule 51
Photographing is easy
Directing is hard
Neither is as hard as real work
So, never complain
No one will give you any sympathy anyway

Rule 52
Embrace mistakes
If you are working with good artists
they will use a mistake
make the work richer and more the stuff of life

Rule 53
Most bloggers are not critics
most are guys who can afford a laptop
Take them as seriously as that
even if they love you

Especially if they love you

Rule 54
A lot of critics are not qualified
they are just guardians of normalcy

(a) Susan Sontag was a genius

Rule 55
Don’t have style
Maybe you do
but you should never know what it is

(a) A performance should have a style
your job is to figure out what that is and execute it

Rule 56
Above everything else you are a story teller
Tell the story

Rule 57
When someone tells you something can’t be done
have patience and ask them to try it again

(a) maybe it can
if you just ignore one of your stupid rules

Rule 58
Be grateful
in failure or success

Rule 59
Be brave
if you aren’t brave
you are not an artist
and whether you are artist or not
that’s what you should strive to be

Rule 60
You are never the smartest person in the room
just the luckiest

F.A.Q

What is your artistic approach?

my core ideology maintains deep respect for the source material
and the individuals engaged with that material
a dedication to affordable quality
and consistency with the each performance
a commitment to community and environmental responsibility
a view that my artistic practice
contributes to the advancement and welfare of humanity

at the core of my practice are the following ideals…

a trust and respect for individuals
a focus on a high level of achievement and contribution
work with uncompromising integrity
achieve common objectives through teamwork
encourage flexibility and innovation

How do I find out about plans and future productions?

there’s a little scroll above… on the right
I also announce performances through social media

What does “Site Specific” mean?

New York City’s Guggenheim Museum’s offers this definition:
“Site-specific or Environmental art refers to an artist’s intervention in a specific locale, creating a work that is integrated with its surroundings and that explores its relationship to the topography of its locale, whether indoors or out, urban, desert, marine, or otherwise.”
that’s a good general description

Why do you describe the work as “Site Responsive”?

a sites environment and history informs my productions
artists construct each individual piece for a specific site
as such the productions are non transferable
the performance materials for each production
are constructed by the artists using existing resources within the site
for example
my production of Sophocles’ Sinon
constructed the Trojan Horse from material native to the site

How are you documenting your work?

in documenting my work I do not use Photoshop or “filters”…
I follow The National Press Photographers Association Code of Ethics
Some clauses from this code:

Be accurate and comprehensive in the representation of subjects.
Resist being manipulated by staged photo opportunities.
Be complete and provide context when photographing or recording subjects.
Avoid stereotyping individuals and groups.
Recognize and work to avoid presenting one’s own biases in the work.
Treat all subjects with respect and dignity.
While photographing subjects, do not intentionally contribute to, alter, or seek to alter or influence events.
Editing should maintain the integrity of the photographic images’ content and context. Do not manipulate images or add or alter sound in any way that can mislead viewers or misrepresent subjects.
Respect the integrity of the photographic moment.

Artist Scholar Bibliography

SITE SPECIFIC THEATRE BIBLIOGRAPHY

Acconci, Vito, and Gloria Moure. Vito Acconci. Barcelona: Polígrafa, 2001. Print.

Ackerman, Alan L, and Martin Puchner. Against Theatre: Creative Destructions on the Modernist Stage. New York, N.Y: Palgrave Macmillan, 2006. Print.

Agnew, John A, and James S. Duncan. The Power of Place: Bringing Together Geographical and Sociological Imaginations. Boston: Unwin Hyman, 1989. Print.

Ahearne, Jeremy, and Michel. Certeau. Michel De Certeau: Interpretation and Its Other. Stanford, Calif: Stanford University Press, 1995. Print.
Ahmed, Sara. The Cultural Politics of Emotion. New York : Routledge, 2015. Print.
— Queer Phenomenology: Orientations, Objects, Others. Durham: Duke University Press, 2006. Print.

Artaud, Antonin. The Theater and Its Double. New York: Grove Press, 1958. Print.
Augé, Marc. Non-places: Introduction to an Anthropology of Supermodernity. London: Verso, 1995. Print.

Babb, Genie. ‘Center and edge of the world: Frontiers of site-specific performance in Alaska’,TDR: The Drama Review52(3), 2008. pps. 61–78.

Bacon, Henry. ‘Blendings of real, fictional, and other imaginary people’,Projections3(1), 2009. pps. 77–99.

Bachelard, Gaston, and M Jolas. The Poetics of Space. New York: Penguin Books, 2014. Print.

Badiou, Alain, and Oliver Feltham. Being and Event. London [u.a.: Bloomsbury Academic, 2013. Print.

Banes, Sally, and André Lepecki. The Senses in Performance. New York: Routledge, 2007. Print.

Barba, Eugenio. The Paper Canoe: A Guide to Theatre Anthropology. London: Routledge, 1995. Print.

Becker, Carol. Surpassing the Spectacle: Global Transformations and the Changing Politics of Art. Lanham, Md: Rowman & Littlefield, 2002. Print.

Benjamin, Walter, Hannah Arendt, and Harry Zohn. Illuminations. New York: Harcourt, Brace & World, 1968. Print.

Benjamin, Walter, and Rolf Tiedemann. The Arcades Project. Cambridge, Mass: Belknap Press, 1999. Print.

Berghaus, Günter. Avant-garde Performance: Live Events and Electronic Technologies. Houndmills, Basingstoke, Hampshire: Palgrave Macmillan, 2005. Print.

Berlant, Lauren G. Intimacy. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2000. Print.

Birch, Anna, and Joanne Tompkins. Performing Site-Specific Theatre: Politics, Place, Practice. Houndmills, England; New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2012. Print.

Birch, Anna ‘Performing research, cite, sight, site’, in Leora Farber (ed.), On Making: Integrating Approaches to Practice-Led Research in Art and Design. Johannesburg: Research Centre, Visual Identities in Art and Design, Faculty of Art Design and Architecture, University of Johannesburg, 2010. Print. pp.127–36.

Bishop, Claire. Delegated Performance: Outsourcing Authenticity. October 2012, No. 140, pps. 91-112
— Installation Art: A Critical History. New York: Routledge, 2005. Print.

Blair, S. and M. Truscott ‘Cultural landscapes: Their scope and the irrecognition’,Historic Environment7(2), 1989. pps. 3–8.

Blau, Herbert. The Audience. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1990. Print.
— To All Appearances: Ideology and Performance. New York: Routledge, 1992. Print.

Bleeker, Maaike. Visuality in the Theatre: The Locus of Looking. Basingstoke [England: Palgrave Macmillan, 2008. Print.

Bloch, Ernst. Heritage of Our Times. Berkeley: University of California Press, 1991. Print.

Boal, A. Boal, Augusto. Theatre of the Oppressed. London: Pluto Press, 2013. Print.
— Games for Actors and Non-Actors. London: Routledge, 1992. Print.

Boal, Augusto, Adrian Jackson, and Candida Blaker. Hamlet and the Baker’s Son: My Life in Theatre and Politics. London: Routledge, 2001. Print.

Boon, Richard, and Jane Plastow. Theatre and Empowerment: Community Drama on the World Stage. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, 2004. Print.

Brand, Stewart. How Buildings Learn: What Happens After They’re Built. New York, NY: Viking, 1994. Print.

Braidotti, Rosi. Nomadic Subjects: Embodiment and Sexual Difference in Contemporary Feminist Theory. New York: Columbia University Press, 2011. Print.

Brook, Peter. The Empty Space. New York: Atheneum, 1968. Print.

Brown, Ross. Sound: A Reader in Theatre Practice. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan, 2010. Print.

Butler, Judith. Bodies That Matter: On the Discursive Limits of “sex”. New York: Routledge, 1993. Print.

Cage, John. Silence: Lectures and Writings. Middletown, Conn: Wesleyan University Press, 1961. Print.
Cage, John, and Daniel Charles. For the Birds. Boston: Marion Boyars, 1981. Print.

Calvino, Italo. Invisible Cities. New York: Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, 1974. Print.

Casey, Edward S. Getting Back into Place: Toward a Renewed Understanding of the Place-World. Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1993. Print.

Chaudhuri, Una. Staging Place: The Geography of Modern Drama. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press, 1995. Print.

Cohen-Cruz, Jan. Radical Street Performance: An International Anthology. London: Routledge, 1998. Print.

Collins, Jane. and Andrew Nisbet. ‘Looking: The experience of seeing’, in Jane Collins and Andrew Nisbet (eds),Theatre and Performance Design: A Reader in Scenography. London: Routledge, 2010. Print. pp.5–10.

Connerton, Paul. How Societies Remember. Cambridge [England: Cambridge University Press, 1989. Print.

Coult, Tony, and Baz Kershaw. Engineers of the Imagination: The Welfare State Handbook. London: Methuen, 1983. Print.
Crimp, Douglas, and Louise Lawler. On the Museum’s Ruins. Cambridge, Mass: MIT Press, 1993. Print.

Davis, Tracy C, and Thomas Postlewait. Theatricality. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2003. Print.

Certeau, Michel, and Steven Rendall. The Practice of Everyday Life. Berkeley: University of California Press, 1984. Print.

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PERFORMANCE PHOTOGRAPHY BIBLIOGRAPHY

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jamie lyons, theatre, theater, stanford, university, theater and performance studies, collected works, iota, we players, chocolate heads, san francisco, bay area, director, photography, site specific, art, artist, teacher, drama, tragedy, scholar, academic, performance, live art

Manifesto

i don’t have one
all i have are rules
but why not try one of these?

“Notes to myself on beginning a painting” by Richard Diebenkorn
How to work better Fischli & Weiss
The Stuckists Manifesto
The Dada Manifesto by Hugo Ball
The Dada Manifesto by Tristan Tzara
The Orgasm Manifesto
The Manifesto of Negativity
Permanent Manifesto Art and Communication
John Cage’s 10 Rules
Ten Commandments for Gilbert & George
Manifesto of the Empress Catherine II

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