Symbolism, Surrealism and Theater of the Absurd

Beginning in France, these three artistic modes infiltrated theater all over Europe. Symbolism, having its roots in poetry, aimed at instilling within drama a lyrical and suggestive quality, and relied upon sensory elements -- light, patterns, and sounds -- to create this effect. Surrealism, also a reaction against realist drama, broke away from logical thought and develed into the unconscious workings of the brain, devising a drama based on chaos, randomness, irrationality, and alienating the audience. Finally, absurdism, a theatrical term designating a specific group of writers such as Beckett, Ionesco and Genet, evolved from an existential view of the world following the World War II.

Images

This site will show images from Appia's and Craig's scene designs for the theater, as well as from such works as Cabaret Voltaire,

 

Texts

Antonin Artaud

"Theatre of Cruelty: First Manifesto"

 

Edward Gordon Craig

The Steps (currently unavailable)

"The Actor and the Ubermarionette" (currently unavailable)

"The Censor and the Mask" (currently unavailable)

"A Note on Marionettes"

 

Futurism

Education and Passatism -- Two Futurist Scripts

 

Alfred Jarry

"Letter to Lugne-Poe"

"Writings on the Theater"

 

Tristan Tzara

Gas Heart

 

W. B. Yeats

At the Hawk's Well

"Preface" to Plays for Dancers