Staging decadence: Decadent theatre in the long twentieth century

Lead Research Organisation: Goldsmiths University of London
Department Name: Theatre and Performance

Abstract

This research will address how theatre makers have advanced the aesthetics and cultural politics of decadence. It will be the first focused study of decadent theatre, and will result in two substantive research publications, and an innovative programme of leadership activities addressing specialists and the general public. I aim to show that decadence is a practice that resonates beyond the printed page and canvas, and has much to offer to our understanding of cultural politics both historically, and in the present moment.

While 'decadence' has accrued connotations of indulgence and luxury, in decadence studies - which is now a very active field - the term is linked to ideas of decline and exhaustion, as well as identities, sexualities and desires that transgress normative institutions and traditions. Decadence's transgressive connotations are largely derived from French and English literature and criticism of the fin de siècle, which accounts for the traction that decadence studies has gained in these areas today. However, scholarly research has neglected rich histories of experimentation with the enactment and embodiment of decadence in theatre. This accounts for the fellowship's lines of enquiry: In what ways have theatre makers contributed to the aesthetics and cultural politics of decadence, and what is the value of embodying or enacting decadence in cultural practice?

This project will resist the strictures of a 'Decadent Movement' associated with the European fin de siècle. While it will be engaging with theatre makers and playwrights who were active at the time (e.g. Oscar Wilde, Rachilde, Jean Lorrain, Zinaida Gippius, Paul Fort and Lugné-Poe), I will be approaching decadence as a practice that cuts across time periods, cultures, genres and disciplines. This project looks to transform how decadence is understood by framing decadence as a travelling practice that emerges at the intersection of competing ideologies.

The first of this project's objectives involves leading and pooling expertise from a range of scholarly fields, including decadent theatre at the fin de siècle, cabaret in the Weimar Republic, actionism in the US, UK, and Austria in the 1960s and 1970s, and the international proliferation of live art from the 1990s to the present. Rather than imposing a lens inherited from the nineteenth century, the cultural specificity of these areas will be explored through two international symposia held in London and New York, and a commissioned issue of Volupté: Interdisciplinary Journal of Decadence Studies, which will be the first sustained treatment of the theme. The second objective will build on this groundwork by drawing on my own expertise as a contemporary theatre researcher. This will result in a single-authored monograph focusing on how theatre makers and live artists including Toco Nikaido, Lucy McCormick, Lauren Barri Holstein, Ann Liv Young, Taylor Mac, Made in China, Wunderbaum, Jan Fabre, De La Guarda and La Fura dels Baus, are innovating the aesthetics and cultural politics of decadence today by making a ruinous spectacle of how taste, decency and appropriateness are policed and valued. The fellowship will also develop leadership and public engagement activities centred on three salons modelled on those of the European fin de siècle. The salons will be held at Rich Mix and HERE, which are highly respected arts centres based in London and New York, respectively, and will give specialists and the general public the chance to experience decadent theatre in the flesh. They will also result in two short films accessible via a project website.

These activities and outputs will provide intellectual leadership by establishing and shaping decadent theatre as an emerging research area, enhancing the reach and impact of decadence studies, and providing advocacy for theatre research and practice by forging new partnerships and research collaborations with key stakeholders.

Planned Impact

The proposed fellowship addresses fundamental questions about cultural politics that reach beyond the academy. Charges of decadence have been used to marginalise and oppress artists for over a century. The Nazi Party sought to cleanse what it regarded as a 'culture of decadence' in Germany by demonising artworks that transgressed extremely narrow horizons of taste, and in more recent years queer and feminist artists have had their funding retracted on grounds of cultural decadence in the US, and funding for the arts has been called into question as a decadent expenditure in austerity Britain. In each case, it is not just the work produced by artists that is under threat; to varying degrees, it is their livelihoods as well. But staging decadence as a site of conflict has also been used as a tactic for queering the ideologies that produce marginalisation and oppression. In response, this fellowship will focus on how theatre makers have participated in testing debates about the cultural value of the arts by staging decadence as a practice forged at the interface of competing ideologies. It will benefit theatre makers, cultural institutions, and the general public, and will impact cultural production, cultural programming, and education.

Firstly, theatre makers will be commissioned to create work for three publicly accessible salons modelled on those of the European fin de siècle, which will support theatre makers materially and developmentally, while opening their work out to new audiences in a format that facilitates dialogue and interaction with and amongst academic and non-academic beneficiaries. The salons will also conclude with informal club nights, which will diversify the audience base, and enable scholars to widen the reach of their research by presenting short provocations to a lay public.

Secondly, this fellowship will forge close collaborations with Rix Mix and HERE, which have become key cultural institutions committed to programming experimental and culturally diverse performance in London and New York, respectively. Widening participation sits at the heart of Rich Mix's activities, particularly through its dedicated Learning and Participation department, and supporting work by and for historically under-represented demographics sits at the heart of HERE's mission. Roundtables on 'decadence, theatre and austerity' and 'decadence, degeneracy and the culture wars' will also be held at Rich Mix and HERE as part of each symposium, and will include representatives from Arts Council England and the National Endowment for the Arts to ensure the engagement of key stakeholders in the cultural sector.

Finally, this project will generate educational impact that will benefit the general public and Higher Education teachers and students. Two short films will be commissioned that will introduce the cultural politics of decadence and of decadent theatre especially to a lay audience, and will be designed for use as a teaching resource. The films will be available via a dedicated project website, which will also present a blog featuring short and accessible posts by scholars and artists. The general public will benefit by appealing to interest groups invested in decadent art and literature, and to the cult followings that many of the theatre makers directly or indirectly involved with the project have accrued. A selection of cutting-edge research articles will be disseminated via an open-access journal, Volupté; Interdisciplinary Journal of Decadence Studies, which will be the first publication of its kind addressing decadent theatre, and will facilitate the establishment of a new area of significant cultural interest.

Publications

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Adam Alston (2021) Survival of the sickest: On decadence, disease and the performing body in Volupté: Interdisciplinary Journal of Decadence Studies

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Adam Alston (2021) Carnal Acts: Decadence in Theatre, Performance and Live Art in Volupté: Interdisciplinary Journal of Decadence Studies

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Alston A (2021) Decadence and Performance

 
Title Decadence @ Iklectik 
Description This event marked an unanticipated and fruitful collaboration with the London-based arts centre Iklectik, and involved the delivery of a live performance club night featuring artists including Oozing Gloop (Germany/UK), Sigi Moonlight (UK), Hasard Le Sin (Finland), Coco Deville (UK), Miss HerNia (UK), and Gin (UK). Audiences reported enjoying the sense of community created over the course of the event and the influence it had on their own thinking and practice, and artists reported a desire to explore the theme further. Details of the partnership with Iklectik can be found in the partnership section of this portfolio. 
Type Of Art Performance (Music, Dance, Drama, etc) 
Year Produced 2022 
Impact A detailed account of this event's impact can be found under 'Narrative Impact'. 
URL https://iklectikartlab.com/decadence-iklectik/
 
Title Staging Decadence (film) 
Description Staging Decadence is a film that introduces and maps how a few key performance makers and scholars have thought about decadence, and why they keep coming back to its pleasures and complexity. It offers a taste of various, promiscuously-sourced histories, journeying from ancient Roman actor-emperors, to ethereal plays of the 1890s, countercultural bohemians in the 1960s, the culture wars in the 1990s, right through to theatre makers and live artists in our own day. The film features interviews with numerous artists and scholars including Penny Arcade, Giulia Casalini, Alice Condé, Jessica Gossling, Richard Kaye, Shushma Malik, Nando Messias, Lucy McCormick, Owen Parry, Dan Rebellato, Normandy Sherwood, John Stokes, Selina Thompson, Ben Walters, David Weir, and Nia O. Witherspoon. The film also showcases recordings of performances by Penny Arcade, Ron Athey, Steven Berkoff, Darkwah, DEEP TRASH, Hasard Le Sin, Nando Messias, Lucy McCormick, Selina Thompson, Normandy Sherwood, Sadie Sinner, Jack Smith, Théâtre de l'Entrouvert, and Nia O. Witherspoon. 
Type Of Art Film/Video/Animation 
Year Produced 2022 
Impact It is too early at this stage to assess impacts resulting from the release of this documentary. 
URL https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IBl3ndytHRY
 
Title Staging Decadence: London 
Description The London-based arts centre Rich Mix and the Staging Decadence project teamed up to deliver a salon-style evening of performances by Lucy McCormick, Darkwah, Nando Messias, and Sadie Sinner, and talks by Giulia Palladini, Ben Walters, Owen Parry and Adam Alston. We gathered comprehensive feedback from the audience, which reported increased understanding of the field of decadence and a desire to explore associated themes further in their own working practices. The partner organisation also reported a formative impact on their approach to cultural programming. The event was sold out (123 tickets) and had an extensive waiting list, suggesting demand for similar events in the future. 
Type Of Art Performance (Music, Dance, Drama, etc) 
Year Produced 2022 
Impact Notable impacts are detailed in the 'Narrative Impact' section. 
URL https://richmix.org.uk/events/staging-decadence/
 
Title Staging Decadence: New York 
Description In September 2021, Staging Decadence teamed up with HERE arts centre in New York to stage a twenty-first-century salon. The night included the premiere of Nia Witherspoon's Priestess of Twerk, inspired by sacred sex workers and 'the "bad bitches" of hip-hop', and Normandy Sherwood's Psychic Self Defense, which riffed on endings and the decadence of theatrical objects. Hosted by the inimitable Murray Hill, Nia and Normandy were also joined by Dr Adam Alston and Professor Richard Kaye, who offered talks on sick theatres and the martyrdom of St. Sebastian, respectively. This event was held in New York soon after social distancing restrictions were eased. This meant that we were able to honour our financial commitment to the commissioned artists as well as the opportunity to share work with the public after a long hiatus, although we still felt obligated to have some social distancing in place to ensure the safety of the audience, which limited capacity. 
Type Of Art Performance (Music, Dance, Drama, etc) 
Year Produced 2021 
Impact Notable impacts are details in the Narrative Impact section. 
URL http://here.org/shows/raw21-staging-decadence/?fbclid=IwAR2kwpQcnTfeKm6WnX2T-wbpMTTN9hKWAG755YtomgLL...
 
Description The first of two core objectives underpinning this Fellowship was 'to lead a field of researchers and industry stakeholders in establishing and examining histories of decadent theatre in the long twentieth century (1880-2020)'. Contributors to a special issue of the journal Volupté: Interdisciplinary Journal of Decadence Studies on 'Decadence and Performance' (2021) encourage us to look beyond the European fin de siècle for examples of decadent drama, theatre and performance, including the late-Ottoman empire, countercultures in New York and Japan in the 1960s, and live art practice in Europe and North America in the present moment. It has also been exciting to find scholars exploring digital and online performance grounding their understanding of decadence in our post-digital present. The project blog has also challenged us to widen the geographical scope of Decadence Studies to account for South American contexts - particularly Brazil - as well as other Asian contexts, including China. The contributions of these scholars also make clear that a transhistorical reading of decadence is inappropriate when considering how decadence manifests in theatre and performance at specific times and in specific places. Indeed, it is the friction produced across different ways of seeing and understanding decadence - and embodying and enacting decadence in creative practice - that offers some of the most illuminating insight into the complexity of its cultural politics.

The Fellowship's second core objective was 'to conduct a more focused study of decadent theatre in the present moment'. A monograph by the Principal Investigator titled Staging Decadence: Contemporary Theatre and the Ends of Capitalism is forthcoming with Bloomsbury toward the end of 2023 and focuses firmly on twenty-first century performance, including performances that were commissioned as part of the Fellowship's wider engagement activities. In reflecting on these activities, a number of findings emerged that relate to a core insight: that there is a clear disparity between the conceptualisation of decadence in Decadence Studies as a field still dominated in large part by Literary Studies, and how performance makers and live artists are currently thinking about and engaging with decadence.

Firstly, decadence has proved a fruitful stimulus for performance - an area that has long been neglected in the study of decadence in art, literature and culture. Our live events played an important role in how the project team considered this finding. The ways in which artists responded to decadence as a theme for our two performance 'salons' at Rich Mix in London and HERE Arts Centre in New York, as well as a performance club night at Iklectik in London, placed a clear emphasis on embodiment. These artists invited their audiences to engage with decadence as an embodied and enacted phenomenon. This interest in embodiment and enactment had been there from the start of the Staging Decadence Fellowship - it underpinned the development of the project's research questions - but our invitations to artists were not prescriptive; they were open-ended invitations to 'stage' decadence as they saw fit. It is noteworthy that choreography and costume came to the foreground most of all in the majority of the commissioned performances, as they did across several of the articles published in our special issue of Volupté.

Secondly, the commissioned artists as well as other artists interviewed for the project's documentary suggests a clear interest in the politics of decadence, and what it might have to offer to the advancement of social justice. This would seem to fly in the face of received wisdom, where decadence is frequently pitched as being apolitical or reactionary (particularly where the focus lands on literature of the European fin de siècle). Nonetheless, several artists explored and envisioned the redistribution of decadence and related notions, like abundance and opulence, in relation to queer and trans activism. This suggests that it is time to reappraise how relationships between decadence and politics are conceived and studied as attention turns to twenty-first century contexts.

Thirdly, analysis of impact data suggests that queer and nonbinary communities were a key demographic attending our live events. 17% of audiences at our London events identified as nonbinary, compared with the 0.5% of UK census respondents who said they were not the same gender as their birth sex, and an Ipsos poll conducted in the summer of 2022 that identified 3.1% of people who said they were trans, non-binary, gender queer or gender fluid (due to staffing issues related to the pandemic, it was not possible to gather sufficient audience data at our event in New York in 2021). This is in some respects unsurprising given the commissioning process and context, which foregrounded the work of queer and nonbinary artists, although relationships between decadence, nonbinary genders and queerness - which have garnered critical attention in the past - are continuing to capture the interest of audiences in ways that buck demographic trends in more mainstream theatre today.
Exploitation Route There are multiple ways in which the outcomes of this funding will be - and already are - being taken forward and put to use by others.

Firstly, new collaborations are being forged. The Principal Investigator has been working closely with Dr Veronica Isaac, who offered a paper at a conference co-organised by the British Association of Decadence Studies and Staging Decadence, as well as a blog post for the Staging Decadence blog. Her contributions alongside several other papers and posts emerging around the same time all focused on decadence and costume. We hope that this will form the basis of a new tranche of activities and additional funding opportunities, and we are currently in discussion with a major museum based in the UK with an eye on staging a new series of events and research activities.

Secondly, the project blog has played an important role in establishing 'decadent theatre' as a field of study, and thanks to annual funding from the Decadence Research Centre at Goldsmiths we are now able to ensure that the site benefits from continued support despite the AHRC-funded period of the Fellowship coming to an end. The Staging Decadence blog, then, will continue as a space for platforming the work of relevant artists and scholars across all career levels.

Thirdly, the Fellowship has led to a number of unanticipated opportunities and collaborations - for instance, co-organising the annual conference of the British Association of Decadence Studies, and developing engagement activities for a related project funded by Arts Council England. That project will ultimately result in a new anthology, Decadent Plays: 1890-1930 (forthcoming with Bloomsbury), and will feature an international range of plays including new translations by Dan Rebellato and Jennifer Higgins. Staging Decadence helped with putting together a sharing of works in progress at The Albany Theatre in Deptford, and the anthology itself will showcase work that is yet to gain recognition on the British stage. As Rebellato pointed out on the night, our staging of excerpts from his translation of Remy de Gourmont's Lilith (1892) was probably the first time that the work had ever been presented in front of a live audience. In an introduction to the play, he also encouraged us to recognise it as being 'unperformable only in the conventions of the time and, by its very daring, to push theatre to reinvent its conventions as it also pushes a wider culture to reinvent its morality'. This has important implications for how we might re-appraise the supposed 'un-performability' of plays that have been identified as 'decadent' in the past.

Finally, interviews with artists, producers, audiences and other stakeholders also offer concrete evidence that the core outcomes of the project are being taken forward in a range of sectors. Feedback from artist contributors, Project Partners and general audiences also evidences how these stakeholders have been inspired to take forward ideas and activities related to the project - as set out in the Impact Summary.
Sectors Creative Economy,Culture, Heritage, Museums and Collections

URL https://www.stagingdecadence.com/
 
Description Analysis of stakeholder engagement and feedback suggests that key findings are being used in a number of different ways. These include: (i) Encouraging artists and arts organisations to re-think approaches to programming and making theatre and performance by deepening understanding of and engagement with decadence as a social, dramaturgical and political concept; (ii) Helping artists recover from the economic damage and career setbacks of the COVID-19 pandemic by providing employment. This was achieved through new commissions that can be developed after the event; offering a chance for artists to revive and develop existing works for new audiences; and being among the first events to be staged in New York and London once it was safe and responsible to do so with the easing of social distancing regulations; (iii) Fostering new ways of understanding a range of social and political issues by approaching decadence as a creative stimulus - particularly by learning from the experiences of queer and nonbinary artists; (iv) Highlighting work by queer and nonbinary performance makers, and fostering high levels of engagement among queer and nonbinary audiences (see Key findings); (v) Bringing together artists and scholars across all research and engagement activities associated with the project, enabling collaborations, and cultivating a network of stakeholders leading to new research and engagement opportunities. This project's exploration of theatre and decadence has had a direct impact on theatre programming in New York and London, primarily as a consequence of two performance 'salons' at HERE Arts Centre in New York and Rich Mix in London, and a performance club night at Iklectik, London. Our flagship event at Rich Mix sold out (123 tickets) with an extensive waiting list. Stakeholder feedback was gathered across all events, although staffing issues linked to the COVID-19 pandemic meant that we were only able to gather feedback from artists and the venue for our event in New York. What follows is an indicative sample. Our New York 'salon' included performances from Nia O. Witherspoon, Normandy Sherwood and Murray Hill, and academic contributions from Richard Kaye and Adam Alston. Meredith Lynsey Schade, producing director with HERE, describes how the event 'put much of the work that we do at HERE in a new light'. Normandy Sherwood, a participating artist, reflected on how the Staging Decadence project 'snapped something into focus for me [...]. There was something about applying the concept of decadence that brought some clarity to what it was that we were trying to do' with her company's work. Another participating artist, Nia O. Witherspoon, explained how 'decadence in performance, when re-appropriated, has the opportunity and the possibility to really offer a kind of experience that is not available in the world, or less available in the world, for folks who are really marginalised, so that's where I really engaged with this conversation'. The event's photographer also highlighted how the salon 'has deepened my thoughts on the educational value of Decadence in understanding the processes of power in the dynamics of class, race, sexual identity and gendering and how performative art opens a different perspective to this dominant discourse'. They also noted how the event 'encouraged personal growth and curiosity in my work [] by challenging the audience to look long and deep into their own personal and social history'. The London salon included performances from Lucy McCormick, Darkwah, Owen Parry, Nando Messias and Sadie Sinner, and talks by Giulia Palladini, Ben Walters and Adam Alston. One of the participating artists described how it 'challenged me to look at subjects and themes in ways that are other than typical, therefore enriching my ability to create metaphors throughout a piece as opposed to having many smaller, low-hanging ones within each performance'. Another participant explained how they 'benefitted intellectually, culturally and politically through increased understanding of the relevant topics and their relevance to our current conditions; professionally, through developing expertise and skills and strengthening links with potential collaborators; economically, through being paid at what is a challenging time for freelance arty types; and socially, and even in terms of mental health, through being involved in such a great live event with cool, nice people'. Audience members were also interviewed to camera and completed feedback forms. One audience member recalls how 'it made me reflect on the role of collaboration in my own work as a novelist'. Another explains how they were 'inspired and excited and thinking and feeling I want to be in it!'. An audience member self-describing as 'self-employed' explains how it made them 'want to engage more with the world of live art - and force myself through the doors!'. A farmer also suggested that the event 'broadened the mind', while the managing director of a company described it as 'profoundly thoughtful', giving them a 'greater awareness of our own privilege'. Finally, two academic audience members described how 'The whole thing made me think again about what decadence can be, and how I understand decadence in practice [...] Seeing things enacted has given me more to think about than just reading words in a library ever could', stating that 'my mind is whirling with ideas for both my current research project and my teaching'. Numerous other audience members simply stated that they found the event 'inspiring'. The producer at Rich Mix also highlighted how 'The format, salon style, is the thing that really interests me and has already informed some of the projects that I'm working on. We talk about WIP and scratch nights a lot in my work and although these are valuable terms, sometimes artists need and want to showcase shorter sets or performances that aren't unfinished or in-progress'. This suggests that the dramaturgical frame for our events was valuable in its own right, suggesting scope for delving deeper into the affordances of performance salons in the twenty-first century. The performance club night at Iklectik featured an international range of artists including Oozing Gloop (Germany / UK), Sigi Moonlight (UK), Hasard Le Sin (Finland), Miss HerNia (UK), Coco Deville (UK) and Gin (UK). Audiences valued 'Being able to discuss and share ideas on Decadence with incredible and diverse people'. Others noted how they 'had never been to a show like it before, so it was especially incredible to see decadence being performed on stage', with several others noting the importance of the event's 'community feel', and how it 'broaden[ed] my horizons', 'inspired me to revisit some of my own work', and 'inspired me as to how collaborations between researchers and artists can happen'. A delegate from a related conference also noted how the event made them 'think about decadence in different ways. It might help me relate to future researchers in the archives differently'. From these accounts, there is clear evidence to suggest that the project's engagement activities, especially, have had a tangible impact on the work of artists and cultural programmers, as well as the general public. This impact also compliments the work of the project team to nurture several lines of flight that emerged from the funded period of the Fellowship, including scope to develop a major new project exploring 'Decadent Costume' (see Key Findings).
First Year Of Impact 2020
Sector Creative Economy,Culture, Heritage, Museums and Collections
Impact Types Cultural,Societal,Economic

 
Description British Association of Decadence Studies / Decadence Research Centre 
Organisation Goldsmiths, University of London
Department Decadence Research Centre
Country United Kingdom 
Sector Academic/University 
PI Contribution In 2022, Staging Decadence collaborated with the Decadence Research Centre (DRC) at Goldsmiths in delivering the annual international conference of the British Association of Decadence Studies (BADS), titled 'Decadent Bodies'. In addition to PI time spent co-organising the conference, a night of decadent performance was held at Iklectik Arts Lab in London, funded by the Staging Decadence project, which was open to the general public. The event attracted 28 presenters from Ireland, Italy, Portugal, the UK, and the US, and the night of performance included contributions from Oozing Gloop (Germany / UK), Sigi Moonlight (UK), Hasard Le Sin (Finland), Miss HerNia (UK), Coco Deville (UK) and Gin (UK).
Collaborator Contribution The conference itself was financially enabled and supported by BADS, the DRC and Goldsmiths. The night of live performance was funded by the Staging Decadence project.
Impact One night of live performance (this is in addition to the conference papers presented by delegates and a specially curated exhibition that was organised by the DRC and BADS).
Start Year 2022
 
Description Iklectik Arts Lab 
Organisation IKLECTIK
Country United Kingdom 
Sector Charity/Non Profit 
PI Contribution Our collaboration with Iklectik Arts Lab was an unforeseen opportunity emerging from the commissioning of a co-producer for one of our core engagement activities. The collaboration involved the delivery of a live performance club night featuring contributions from local and international artists (see Artistic and Creative Products).
Collaborator Contribution Full technical support with two technicians, marketing support, and use of a performance space were all offered in kind.
Impact One night of live performance, as above. One artist's film, which is now hosted on the project website.
Start Year 2022