Under the Water – the Journey between Taipei and Copenhagen

photo: Carl Emil Carlsen

Written by Siraya PAI

Edit by National Taichung Theater

 

 

“We began with looking for the differences between us, but at some point we came to realize that we were so similar.”– Kasper Daugård Poulsen

 

It will take 16 hours for a direct flight, if there is any, from Taipei to Copenhagen, but if you plunge into Port Keelung, the next moment you reach the surface, you will soon find yourself miraculously next to the statue of the Little Mermaid in Copenhagen – at least it was what Very Mainstream Studio/Very Theatre and The CultureYard in Elsinore Denmark fantasized when they began the cross-culture project.  Chronical of Light Year: Taipei-Copenhagen, as its title suggests, is a collaboration between artists from Taiwan and Denmark to explore the theme of space and time, but following the 2 time-travelers, Derrick Wei from Taiwan and Kasper Daugård Poulsen from Denmark, we are transported by the Culture Yard format - 4D Box on stage to adventure into the mysterious dimension of memories and dreams.

 

 

Where the story began

Before we dive deeper in the dreams, let us first go back to the timeline of the production.  The story began in Cardiff, at the 2013 WSD, where Mikael Fock, the director of the Culture Yard and producer of Click Festival, met Chou Tung-yen who just presented and got an award for Emptied Memories. “I was doing a workshop with hologram technology, and was looking for new narratives that could challenge the media… so we started talking about doing a project together,” said Mikael.  Soon, the conversation in the bar (“yes, it was in a bar”) turned into a cross-culture project joined by Kasper, who with a background in dance still felt a little self-conscious when being characterized as an actor (“simply because I have big respect for the profession,” said the dancer) in spite of the experiences he had in performances with texts and movements. 

It was indeed a long journey as it took them 5 years to present the final version of Chronical of Light Year: Taipei –Copenhagen before our eyes at the 2018 Taipei Arts Festival.  Consequently, time, the major theme of the story, has become one of the most cherished privileges for this production. “Normally in theatre, you would have like 2 months of rehearsal (at least it is the case in Denmark), premiere, then you play it for 8 weeks, and you have to have a good box office, to make it commercial,” said Mikael. However, Chronical of Light Year is different.  Having the Danish group to stay in Taiwan for a month and vice versa to know the cities and cultures where both come from as well as giving work-in-progress presentation to continue working on things “not really finished” becomes an experience, in Mikael’s words, “fruitful, full of satisfaction, of pleasure, as if you walked into a spatial garden.”

 

photo: Carl Emil Carlsen

 

How the elements come together
As you may begin to wonder what this “story” is really about (hopefully not losing your patience), the 2 teams have grappled with the same question during the creative process.  With materials such as Hans Christian Andersen’s The Nightingale (the fantasized Orient in the Western narrative with a metaphor to discuss if machines can duplicate or replace the soul), The Little Mermaid (the sad creature that cannot shed tears), and the idea of happiness (Denmark is “supposedly” the happiest country in the world and Taiwan is rarely associated with “happiness”), the artists first detoured around the differences and then settled in the similarities in between, giving the story enough time to unfold itself with texts and scenarios filled in by Kasper and Derrick, with the help of Chou and the playwright consultant Zhan Jie. The performers who share their stories become 2 time-travelers on stage, unfortunately trapped in their mysteriously overlapped dreams, like the whale singing the lonely song to be connected with one's companion in the sea of consciousness.   

 

photo: Carl Emil Carlsen

 

“The strange sense of poetry”
However, just like how we often get lost in our dreams, a dreamlike narrative is extremely challenging. Mikael, long interested in the circular Asian narratives such as Japanese haiku or Chinese opera, remembers the less positive feedback they have once received after the showcases: “beautiful, but we don’t understand it,” but they were not thwarted for that “although the dreamlike narrative was something we were sure about, since it allowed us to do whatever we wanted, to travel wherever we wanted, we still needed to be generous to our audience, because as if we had passed the mirror, we had to hand the key to the audience for them to pass the mirror too.” That is the risk of working with a new narrative (especially underscored by Chou’s “strange sense of poetry” as how Kasper puts it), and as long as “you are consistent, taking care of every detail, and always feeling curious, things will suddenly move from the big question mark to be merged together into a storyline,” said Mikael.    

Surprisingly enough, the “strange sense of poetry” manifested through the dreamlike narrative is made possible with the 4D Box technology developed by the Culture Yard. But what is this 4D Box? Mikael gives us a simple explanation of this refection technology: “we have a foil which works like a mirror, but you can see through it… the projection on the floor is thus reflected through the foil which is at the angle of 45 degree, making the image not projected on the surface but reflected into the space… free floating in the air.” Putting on the 3D glasses, we can even assume that what we see before our eyes, rather than the spectacle created by video streaming, live projection, and programming, is a phantom or dream enlivened by “playing” with the tools. Here the visual possibilities which support the story actually come from the wrestle against the tools, just like what Carl Emil Carlsen has been doing with his new media and interactive design team:

Many tools have a tendency inspire the same ideas – as if the tool is inviting you to do a specific thing, like a hammer is inviting you to hit nails. Being a media artist is about escaping the will of the tools, to rethink their use, or even make your own tools, to escape the norms and produce works that reveal new creative territory.

 

 

Dig into our inner-selves

Throughout the 5-year journey, the crossing – be it the journey between Taipei and Copenhagen or between arts and technology – eventually brings us back to ourselves, or our origin. I guess both Mikael and Kasper would agree, according to their (although very different) interpretations of the Little Mermaid story: Kasper believes that the fairytale helps us to talk about the “taboos” like death and violence, and sometimes it is the exact distance we need to approach the not-so-beautiful truth, just like we often find ourselves sharing secrets with strangers rather than closer friends; meanwhile, the Little Mermaid, associated with the sirens in Greek myths, is employed in the work “like someone alluring you from under the water, tempting you to speak about things extremely personal, or drowning you into your memories.” If Kasper’s Little Mermaid story is to go deeper to the inner-self, Mikael reads it as a metaphor that “she is looking for happiness through love, through something she can never get, a human being, so she’s striving for something that is impossible... in the end she has to go back to the sea and find the happiness in the persons and things that she is and not in the things she is looking for far away.”   

From the sea port 16 hours away, we see our own stories; from the fairytale, we see the truth of life; from the coordinates and algorithms, we see the extremely poetic way of storytelling. Ultimately, from the difference, we see the similarities.  Is it also part of the circular narrative Mikael is looking for? Does the slowness Carl Emil rarely experiences in any other productions or the amount of emotions on stage -- which Kasper believes it would not have happened if it were a “pure Danish production” – start another adventure back to the origin? The cross-culture journey continues, as the questions resurface, floating in the waters of curiosity and open-mindedness that no premiere will bring an
 end to it.   


 

2022 NTT-TIFA Very Theatre Chronicle of Light Year: Taipei-Copenhagen

Time: 2022/4/8 Fri. 20:00

         2022/4/9 Sat. 14:3020:00

         2022/4/10 Sun. 14:30

Location: Playhouse

Price: 800/1000

Read more👉https://npacntt.tw/n02NvFrj

 

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