Not exact matches
A FEW THOUGHTS ON THE NUMBER FOUR I think that it is significant that Beckett
included four major characters in
Godot.
We also showed a big slate of physics - based Indie Game Jam (2) games - which
included a game inspired by «Waiting for
Godot», and a game about Iyengar Yoga!
There are also props to re-enact scenes from the game
including evidence to present, a pedestal to slam, and a coffee mug perhaps gifted to him in court by the coffee - loving
Godot.
[96] Beckett is a writer with roots in the expressionist tradition of Modernism, who produced works from the 1930s until the 1980s,
including Molloy (1951), Waiting for
Godot (1953), Happy Days (1961), and Rockaby (1981).
Major projects Creative Time undertook while Pasternak was director
include Tribute in Light, the twin beacons of light that illuminated the sky above the former World Trade Center site after 9/11; Paul Chan's production of Samuel Beckett's Waiting for
Godot in New Orleans's Lower 9th Ward; Nick Cave's Heard NY in Grand Central Terminal; Doug Aitken's Sleepwalkers at The Museum of Modern Art; Jenny Holzer's For New York at Rockefeller Center; Kara Walker's A Subtlety in the former Domino Sugar warehouse in Williamsburg, Brooklyn; and the recent joint project Funk, God, Jazz & Medicine: Black Radical Brooklyn at the Weeksville Heritage Center and its surrounding neighborhood in Brooklyn.
Pasternak is, in her own words, a «populist,» one who's decorated career
includes staging Paul Chan's Waiting for
Godot in New Orleans and helping to organize Kara Walker's sugar sphinx in Williamsburg, all under the auspices of the public art organization Creative Time.
There is also a number of significant photographic works
including Gerard Byrne's view of the Gate Theatre's stage with Louis le Brocquy's famous set for Waiting for
Godot; Amanda Coogan's still from her performance piece Reading Beethoven, 2004, and Willie Doherty's Grey Day 4, 2007, among others.