• 제목/요약/키워드: aesthetic impression

검색결과 62건 처리시간 0.017초

서거정의 '경주십이영(慶州十二詠)'의 의미와 폐허미학적 소통방식 (Landscape Meanings and Communication Methods Based on the Aesthetics of Ruins in the Poem 'Kyungjusipiyung' written by Seo Geojeong)

  • 노재현
    • 한국조경학회지
    • /
    • 제37권2호
    • /
    • pp.90-103
    • /
    • 2009
  • 팔경시 '경주십이영'을 통해 서거정은 고도 경주의 폐허화된 역사문화경관에 대한 감회를 적나라하게 표현하고 있다. '경주십이영'은 신라문화의 대표적 성지인 계림, 반월성, 나정, 오릉 그리고 장소성 깊은 승경인 금오산(남산), 포석정, 문천, 첨성대, 분황사, 영묘사, 김유신묘 등을 중심으로 거기에 깃든 신화와 설화는 물론 관련된 사건과 인물을 회고하는 방식으로 이루어져 기존 '팔경'과는 다른 폐허미학적 메타포가 강하게 전달되고 있다. '경주십이영'은 서거정의 팔경시 뿐만 아니라 그 이전의 팔경시와 비교할 때, 제영 구조와 형식은 물론 내용에 있어서도 차이를 보이는데, 특히 의미와 행위를 부각시킨 인문적 특성이 강하게 나타난다. '경주십이영'의 제영 순서를 추적할 때 2일 이상의 유람시간을 통해 2개 이상의 시각회랑으로 이루어진 것으로 보이며, 봄철에 지어진 시임에도 불구하고 시 속에는 '자연의 아름다움과 생활의 풍류' 그리고 '번성과 풍요'는 배제되고 대부분 오래 되고, 부서져 허물어지고, 늙고, 슬프고 등의 아쉬움과 슬픔의 정조가 지배적이다. 서거정은 '경주십이영'을 통해 경주의 다양한 경승과 경물 등 가시 영역의 문명적 폐허 뿐만 아니라 신화와 전설 등 비가시 영역의 문화적 폐허를 반복, 병렬, 병치 그리고 대조의 수사학적 표현으로 회고와 영탄의 폐허미를 읊고 있다. 이는 서거정이 '경주'를 바라보는 사유방식이자 표현방식이며 기존 회고시의 전형적 특성으로 서거정이 '경주십이영'을 통해 표현하고자 한 폐허 경험은 무엇보다도 그것이 전하는 아우라, 즉 12가지 역사문화경관에 담긴 총체적 신라문화에 편재한 질에 대한 정성적 경험이었다는데 그 특징이 읽혀진다. 기문 등을 근거로 '고도 경주'에 대한 서거정의 긍정적 인식에도 불구하고 '경주십이영'에 담긴 신라와 경주의 이미지는 폐허로 점철되고 있다. 그러나 폐허가 소멸과 몰락의 길을 가리키는 비관주의적 개념임에도 불구하고, 그 폐허의 양상은 조선 전기의 문풍을 좌우했던 인물로서 조선 왕조를 통해 경주를 다시 상승 부흥시키고자 하는 의지를 포괄하는 양가적인 것으로 보인다. 그러므로 서거정의 '경주십이영'에서 발견되는 풍경의 미학은 가장 은유적이면서도 문화적 상징성이 강한 것으로 폐허성을 반성적 경험의 가치로 전환하기 위한 역설적 폐허미학의 소통방식으로 전개되고 있다.

얀 라우어스(Jan Lauwers) 공연의 탈서사적 특징들 -<이사벨라의 방(Isabella's Room)>, <랍스터 가게(The Lobster Shop)>, <사슴의 집(Deer House)>을 중심으로- (The post-epic characteristics in Jan Lauwers' theatre -, and -)

  • 남지수
    • 한국연극학
    • /
    • 제48호
    • /
    • pp.447-484
    • /
    • 2012
  • This study aims to analyze the characteristics of post-epic theatre in the Belgian theatre director Jan Lauwers' trilogy titled in "Happy Face/Sad Face": (2004), (2006) and (2008). I regard that it played a very important junction for him to create his own theatrical style compared to earlier years. From this period, Lauwers has tried to create his original plays in order to concentrate the story of our era and has showed to combine a variety of media such as dance, installation, video, singing etc. In this context, I would like to study his own theatricality from the three perspectives of dramaturgy, directing and acting largely based on Hans-Thies Lehmann's theory of post-epic theatre, who pointed out the significance of Lauwer's theatrical leading role very early. First, from the dramaturgical point of view, we need to pay attention to the theme of translunary death; where the living and the dead coexist on the stage. In fact, death is the theme that Lauwers has been struggling to research for quite long time. In his trilogy, the dead never exits the stage. The dead, who is not a representative tragic character, even meddles the things among or with the living and provide comments to people. As a consequence, it happens to reduce a dramaturgical strong tension, leads depreciation of suspense and produces humanism in a way. This approach helps to create his unique comical theatrical atmosphere even though he deals with the contemporary tragic issues such as war, horror and death. Second, from the directing point of view, it is worth to take a look at the polyphonic strategy in terms to applying various media. Among all the things, the arts of dancing and singing in chorus are actively applied in Lauwer's trilogy. The dance is used in individual and microscopic way, on the other hand, singing shows collective and is a macroscopic quality. The dance is the representing media to show Lauwer's simultaneous microscopic mise-en-scene. While main plot takes place around the center-stage, actors perform a dance around the off-centered stage. Instead of exiting from the stage during the performance, the actors would continue dance -sometimes more like movements- around the off-centered stage. This not only describes the narrative, but also shows how each character is engaged to the main plot or incident, and how they look into it as a character. Its simultaneous microscopic mise-en-scene intends to function such as: showing a variety moments of lives, amplifying some moments or incidents, revealing character's emotion, creating illusionary theatrical atmosphere and so on. Meanwhile, singing simple lyrics and tunes are an example of the media to stimulate the audiences' catharsis. As the simple melody lingers in the audiences' mind, it ends up delivering a theatrical message or theme after the performance. This message would be transferred from the singing in chorus functions as a sort of leitmotive in order to make an impression to the audience. This not only richens their emotion but also creates an illusionary effect. Third, from the acting perspective, I'd like to point out the "detachment" aesthetic which Lehmann has pointed out. The actors never go deep into the drama by consistently doing recognize a theatrical illusion. The audience happens to pay attention to their presence through the actor's deliberate gesture, business, movement, rhythm, language, dance etc. The actors are against forming closed action by speaking in various languages or by revealing deliberately stage directions or acts, and by creating expressive mise-en-scene with multiple media. As a consequent, the stage can be transformed to not a metaphoric but a metonymic place. These actions are the ultimate intention for a direct effect to the audience. So to speak, Lauwers uses the anti-illusionary theatrical method: the scenes of fantastic death, interruption of singing and dance, speaking many kinds of languages, acting in detachment-status and so on. These strategies function to make cracks in spectators' desire who has a desire to construct a linear narrative. I'd like to say that it is the numerous potentiality to let the reality penetrate though and collide the reality with a fiction. By doing so, it induces for spectators to see the reality in the fiction. As Lehmann says, "when theatre presents itself as a sketch and not as a finished painting, the spectators are given the chance to feel their own presence, to reflect on it, and to contribute to the unfinished character themselves". In this sense the spectators can perform an objective criticism on our society and world in Lauwer's theatre because there are a number of gaps and cracks in his theatrical illusion where reality can penetrate. This is also the point that we can find out the artists' responsibility in this era of our being.