Music and painting as happy couple

TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 28, 2012
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French duo Stereoptik combines art forms to take its audience on a visionary voyage

It’s a tradition at La Fete, and a good one, to have at least one production that mingles different disciplines of the arts. The French duo Stereoptik served this purpose well this year with their selftitled show, reflecting a major trend in contemporary arts that’s all too often neglected here because Thai performers are so rigidly trained to stay with their own fields.
Romain Bermond sat behind attached tables at stage left with a control board, lamps and camcorders, paper and painting equipment. JeanBaptiste Maillet was behind a drum set, keyboard and other music instruments at stage right.
Bermond worked on various pictures as viewers watched his progress on a large central screen and exercised their imagination guessing the outcome, entertained by his motions and Maillet’s music.
The pace picked up when Maillet began assisting Bermond in using prepainted objects. More colours were added and together they made deft use of sand and water.
In the space of an hour they took us on a delightful visual journey to many places, including into outer space, employing various techniques requiring different levels of skills.
The setting was the ballroom of the new Sofitel So hotel, which lent a nice ambience to the show, although the seating was set at a low angle, leaving those at the back with poor views of the paintings being created. (I’d earlier dined in the hotel’s lovely restaurant, the Red Oven, and was tipped off to sit up front in the ballroom.)
Every La Fete show this year has a Q&A session afterward, in French, Thai and occasionally English. In this case Maillet and Bermond explained that they drew inspiration from the animated films they’d seen as children. Maillet was trained as a plastic artist, Bermond as a musician.
They were asked whether the music from the show was available on CD. The answer was, “Maybe soon.” Clearly the music has its fans, so the show might even be regarded as a concert, with one artistic discipline serving to enhance another and then later to recall the overall experience.
The performers were asked whether they seek to convey messages. They said they concoct their experiment in techniques first and then find stories to match. They were thinking, for example, of painting a car pink onstage, reckoning that pink vehicles are rare – until they saw Bangkok’s pink taxis.
Another audience member loved the scene in which the videocam turned objects in an aquarium upside on the screen to amazing effect. Bermond gave credit to the idea to a heavy night on the rum, when he saw everything upsidedown.
After two soldout shows here, “Stereoptik” moved to Phnom Penh and is in Jakarta tonight before the due return home.
The appeal of multidisciplinary productions is undeniable. A senior fellow theatre critic recently organised a seminar for scholars of different fields at the Jim Thompson Art Centre, which was staging a multimedia art exhibition. Many intriguing opinions were voiced.
Had Stereoptik been able to stay in town longer, a workshop for local professionals and students might have fostered more interdisciplinary collaboration in Thailand.
Keep track of this visionary duo at www.Stereoptik.com.


BOX
No borders

This Friday and Saturday at 8pm Adrien M and Claire B present “Cinematique”, which blends visual and performing arts, at Chulalongkorn University’s Sodsai Pantoomkomol Centre for Dramatic Arts.
Seats cost Bt400 (Bt100 for students) at www.Thaiticketmajor.com and (08) 1559 7252.
Learn more at www.AMCB.net and www.LaFeteBangkok.com.
Compagnie Beau Geste’s “Transports Exceptionnels”, scheduled for March 11, has been cancelled due to unforeseen circumstances.