Scipion Nasice Sisters Theatre

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Scipion Nasice Sisters Theatre (Slovene: Gledališče sester Scipion Nasice) was founded on 13 October 1983 in Ljubljana by , Dragan Živadinov and , three Slovenian students.[1]

The founders also wrote a manifesto ("The Sister Letter"), setting this theatre group a time frame of operation—four years—and described its stages from formation to self-destruction. The name refers to Publius Cornelius Scipio Nasica Corculum, a Roman Republican politician who passed a decree in 151 BC ordering the destruction of the first Roman theatre.[2][3]

The Scipion Nasice Sisters Theatre (1983–1987) constituted—along with Laibach and IRWIN groups—one of the three pillars of the Neue Slowenische Kunst retrograde movement. Within the retrograde movement, theatre research engaged in the relation between religion, art and state. It focused on rituals and the function of spectacle in theatre and in the function of spectacle the state.

The retrograde production of events, as it was announced in the manifesto (The Sister Letter), incorporated an external manifestative part (actions) and an internal creative part (operations). The external part consisted of The Appearance (1983), The Resurrection (1984) and The Self-Destruction (1987); the internal part consisted of three stages of transformation: The Illegality (1984), The Exorcism (1985) and The Retro-Classic (1986).

In 1987, the Scipion Nasice Sisters Theatre performed self-destruction.

External actions of the Scipion Nasice Sisters Theatre[]

  • 1983 – The Sister Letter, Yugoslavia
  • 1984 – The Resurrection, Ljubljana (ŠKUC Gallery)
  • 1986 – The Self-Destruction Act, Belgrade ()
  • 1987 – The Self-Destruction, Bohinj – Belgrade – Ljubljana

Internal operations of the Scipion Nasice Sisters Theatre[]

  • 1984 – , 56 Tito Street (Titova cesta 56), Ljubljana
  • 1985 – , 17 Town Square (Mestni trg 17), Ljubljana
  • 1986 – , 10 Prešeren Street (Prešernova cesta 10), Ljubljana
  • 1987 – The Self-Destruction / , Bohinj - Belgrade

References[]

  1. ^ Praznik, "Ideological Subversion", p. 355 (note 1).
  2. ^ Tan, "Ambitions of Scipio Nasica", pp. 70–79.
  3. ^ Irwin & Motoh, Žižek and his Contemporaries, p. 32.

Bibliography[]

External links[]

Retrieved from ""