In the 80's, while I was at UC
Irvine doing research on meditation, Jerzy Grotowski was
there working with acting students. I never met him, but I
did meet some of his students. They looked a bit like yogis
and meditators, with a zany aliveness about them. To me,
the purpose of meditation is to make you available for
life. Grotowski, I found out later, was adapting yoga to
help the actor be more available for presence.
Keep in mind that by “yoga” he meant something specific he
had been exposed to or was inventing. He was taking some
element from the thousands of yogas and playing with it.
A page about Grotowski and Yogi is here:
"When I was young I asked myself what would be a possible
job that would enable me to look for the other one and
myself, to look for a dimension of life that would be
rooted in what is normal, organic, even sensual, but that
would go beyond all this, that would have a sort of axis,
another higher dimension that would surpass us. At that
time, I wanted to study either Hinduism, to work on the
different techniques of yoga, or medicine, to become a
psychiatrist, or dramatic art to become a director."
Grotowski was, I feel, dynamically adapting techniques of
yoga to empower actors in giving great performances. He was
not mechanically imitating someone else's yoga, he was
inventing his own.
in Towards a Poor Theatre he states:
"... we began by doing yoga directed toward absolute
concentration. Is it true, we asked, that yoga can give
actors the power of concentration? We observed that despite
all our hopes the opposite happened. There was a certain
concentration, but it was introverted."
Owen Daly writes that Grotowski said, "that his
exercises were not yoga, nor was yoga used as a vehicle
in his work because the objectives of Yoga and his work
are different. The implication I took from this was that
Yoga was for the pursuit of inner knowledge and his
exercises were for making actor's bodies more available
for performance."
See also here.
A page about Grotowski working with a man having intense
electric experiences: here.
I just found this stunning essay by Grotowski: The web link
is here.
The Drama Review
Summer
Copyright © Jerzy Grotowski
All rights reserved.
Untitled Text by
Jerzy Grotowski,
Pontedera, Italy, July 4, 1998.
According to the wish of Jerzy Grotowski this text is
published posthumously.
It is possible that the end of my life approaches. I should
like first of all to rectify an information which leads to
a false understanding of the work of the Workcenter of
Jerzy Grotowski and Thomas Richards. . .
Action is not a performance. It does not belong to the
domain of art as presentation. It is an opus created in the
field of art as vehicle. It is conceived to structure, in a
material linked to performing arts, the work on oneself of
the doers. Witnesses, outside observers, may be present or
not. It depends on several conditions which, under
different circumstances, this approach demands. When I
speak of art as vehicle, I refer to verticality.
Verticality we can see this phenomenon in categories of
energy: heavy but organic energies (linked to the forces of
life, to instincts, to sensuality) and other energies, more
subtle. The question of verticality means to pass from a
so-called coarse level in a certain sense one could say an
everyday level to a level of energy more subtle or even
toward the higher connection. I simply indicate the
passage, the direction.
There, there is another passage as well: if one approaches
the higher connection that means, if we are speaking in
terms of energy, if one approaches the much more subtle
energy then there is also the question of descending, while
at the same time bringing this subtle some- thing into the
more common reality, which is linked to the density of the
body. Thomas Richards analyzed his perception, his
individual experience of this kind of process, and he
characterized it as inner action.
With verticality the point is not to renounce part of our
nature – all should retain its natural place: the body, the
heart, the head, something that is under our feet and
something that is over the head. All like a vertical line,
and this verticality should be held taut between organicity
and the aware- ness. Awareness means the consciousness
which is not linked to language (the machine for thinking),
but to Presence.
What can one transmit? How and to whom to transmit? These
are ques-
tions that every person who has inherited from the
tradition asks himself, be- cause he inherits at the same
time a kind of duty: to transmit that which he has himself
received.
What part has research in a tradition? To what extent
should a tradition of a work on oneself or, to speak by
analogy, of a yoga or of an inner life be at the same time
an investigation, a research that takes with each new
generation a step ahead?
In a branch of Tibetan Buddhism it is said that a tradition
can live if the new generation goes a fifth ahead in
respect to the preceding generation, without forgetting or
destroying its discoveries.
I know, I know. . . in the artistic domain stricto sensu we
can say that there exists only an evolution and not a
development. And that the work of Beckett, because it
arrives after in time, is not more developed than the work
of Shakespeare.
But here I speak of a domain that is artistic and that is
not exclusively artistic. In the field of art as vehicle,
if I consider the work of Thomas Richards on Action, on the
ancient vibratory songs and on all this vast terrain linked
to the tradition that occupies the researches here, I
observe that the new generation has already advanced in
respect to the preceding one.
Jerzy Grotowski
July 4, 1998
Translated from the French by Mario Biagini