Liminal Performance Group: Archive

The Oregonian, October 10, 2003

by Richard Wattenberg

Liminal’s always earnest ensemble takes on the Faust story in an intriguing theatrical production that is certainly not for everybody. Paradoxically combining spare minimalism with Gothic extravagance, this performance—part installation art, part movement piece and part oratorio—is sometimes mesmerizing, sometimes unfathomable and often lacking humanity. “Faust” is structured around a series of movement vignettes, each representing one episode in Faust ‘s life. Played by three performers using a muscular physical idiom, each vignette is associated with one of the cardinal points of the large central performance space. East is “Thirst for Knowledge,” and here we see an impatient Faust being tempted by two demons. South, “Faust Signs an Agreement,” represents the doctor’s acceptance of the devil’s compact as an eerie black mass. On the west side of the space, “Gretchen’s Seduction,” a tragic and erotic episode, is rendered. To the north, “Mephistopheles Takes What Finally Belongs to Him” focuses on Faust’s death. The vignettes, played and replayed, follow one another in a seemingly random sequence. Nevertheless, the repeated movements within each vignette as well as their iteration of the vignettes suggest a predetermined, freedomless world and, consequently, the horrible inevitability of Faust’s fate.

Faust(Faust) (2003)

Liminal’s Faust(Faust) was an eerie performance installation for the Halloween season based on the epic tragedy of Faust. Specifically, Faust(Faust) was an open-ended continuous installation made from an ever-changing flow of surreal actions. Strange phenomena appeared and receded in multiple parts of the performance space and the order and arrangement of the performance was not predetermined. Rather, it emerged based on simple rules governing the actions of the performers. Fragments of the Faust story were presented by actors, vocalists and live musicians who interacted with each other in four rooms symbolizing the four elements of earth, air, fire and water. Audiences were encouraged to explore the ever-changing environment, view the performance from different locations, and come and go as they pleased during nightly installation hours.

Faust(Faust) was performed in September-October 2003 by Liminal. The project concept, sound design and music direction were provided by John Berendzen. Movement direction and visual design were provided by Bryan Markovitz. Set construction was provided by Georgia Luce and Jeff Marchant. Performers included John Berendzen, Frank Marroquin, Ammon Morris, Linda Miles, Bryan Markovitz, Leslie Goodwin, Georgia Luce and Jeff Marchant.




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