So here it is - the second conceptual model, which has managed to solve a lot of the initial problems. The big difference is that the stage is in the middle of the structure with audience on all four sides. This allows everyone to feel like they are inside the belly of the same great fish. I had initially put a second level with all the way around too but on reflection decided there was advantage to having it on one side as this creates a kind of natural hierarchy that the actors must address or overcome.
(This model is made of cooking skewers but represents approximately 6m across and 5m high)
(This model is made of cooking skewers but represents approximately 6m across and 5m high)
The first thing you notice is how intimate the space is. It forces the audience almost onto the stage, I like this because they will truly impact on the performance itself, unable to be faceless figures in the dark as we are so often used to in conventional theatres.
By my figuring there is enough room for just over 50 people in the space (depending on whether or not you use the area under the mezzanine for public)
But here is the exciting bit... I wired the model up with some LED lights (explaining the blueish tint) and introduced a few wire-framed figures. These are the shadows those 3 or 4 lights managed to throw.
This is a shot from above with shadows on the walls of my bathroom. I like the ambiguity of scale and the confused layering of imagery that multiple light sources can throw.
So now I need to turn this conceptual model into a living breathing structure. Now we get down to structural details like how much load it needs to take from people and more importantly wind hitting the side like a sail.
More on that later.
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