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Karin Schäfer

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Karin Schäfer
Karin Schäfer with Picasso-style figure
Born (1963-09-21) 21 September 1963 (age 61)
Known forVisual Theatre

Karin Schäfer (born 1963) is a performance artist and the head of the Karin Schäfer Figuren Theater - Visual Theatre Productions company. After studying puppetry arts with Harry V. Tozer at Barcelona's Instituto del Teatro and working in Spain for several years, she returned to Austria in 1993.

Based on classical puppetry techniques, she developed an artform she calls "Visual Theatre", integrating visual arts, fine arts, music, dance and new media rather than classical puppetry. She cooperates with artists from many genres, focusing on visual impact and abstaining from words in order to appeal to her audience from different countries, cultures and ages.[1]

Life and work

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Karin Schäfer grew up in Vienna and Neusiedl am See. She went to Spain in 1987 to study puppetry arts with Harry V. Tozer[2][3] at the Instituto del Teatro, Barcelona.[4]

  • 1989 founded puppet theatre Per Poc together with Santi Arnal. The first self-designed production was "Piccolo Forte Pianissimo".[5] They toured Spain, France, Germany and Belgium until 1993.[5]
  • 1991-1993, she also collaborated with Spanish puppeteer Jordi Bertran creating "Poemas Visuales" in 1992 and toured France and Spain.[6]
  • 1993, at Vienna, she created and directed the expressionist dance performance "Über das Marionettentheater" (On Marionette Theatre) after an essay by Heinrich von Kleist which had a run of 6 weeks in Vienna and was subsequently invited to renowned international festivals in Austria,[7] Germany, France, Greece, Italy, the former Yugoslavia and Czechoslovakia, and to the International Festival of Experimental Theatre in Cairo.[5][8]
  • 1993-1994, collaborating with Schneck + Co Theatre for Children, she designed and built the marionettes for "Post für den Tiger",[9] toured Austria and presented the show on ORF.
  • 1994, "Poemas Visuales" earned the jury prize at the Cannes International Theater Festival.[5]
  • 1997, she premiered "Stringtime" at dietheater [sic], Konzerthaus, Vienna which was presented until 2007 at international festivals all over the world (Austria, Belarus, Czech Republic, Germany, Spain, France, Hungary, Italy, Montenegro, Netherlands, Portugal, Poland, Russia, Turkey, South Korea, Cuba, Pakistan and Mexico). Also in 1997, she co-produced with Kabinetttheater "Wir drei die zwei einzigen" on a text by Max Gad which premiered at the Vienna Künstlerhaus.[5]
  • 1998, she co-produced Peter and the Wolf with Barcelona's Per Poc theatre.
  • 2000, her new show for adults "Twice upon a time" opened the Kleist-Festspiele at Frankfurt (Oder) It has been invited to international festivals in fifteen countries on four continents.[10]
  • 2001, she presented "Peter and the Wolf" at the Konzerthaus, Vienna together with Per Poc (Barcelona) and the Wiener Kammerphilharmonie (Vienna Chamber Orchestra), directed by Claudius Traunfellner.[5]
  • 2002, she premiered "home@anywhere", a show for adolescents about the live of young people in Pakistan, based on her experiences and interviews made in two journeys to Lahore, Pakistan, and the Thar Desert at the border between Pakistan and India.[11]
  • 2002, she premiered "Rose Dorn" after Tchaikovskys Sleeping Beauty, together with pianist Ingrid Marsoner in Konzerthaus, Vienna, followed by invitations to the Istanbul Puppet Festival and to Santa Maria Island.[5]
  • 2003, she conceived "PannOpticum", a biannual International Festival of Visual Theatre in Neusiedl am See, and since is its artistic director.[12][13][14]
  • 2004, she produced "Da ist der Wurm drin" based on the famous painting Children's Games by Pieter Bruegel the Elder.[5][15]
  • 2005, in co-production with Cordula Nossek / Dachtheater she showed "Skywalker", about a fictive meeting of the first two women in space (Valentina Tereshkova and Sally Ride; in reality, their excursions were twenty years apart.), at Dschungel Wien, Vienna's theatre for young audience in Museumsquartier.[16][17]
    Same year premiered Pictures at an Exhibition, an homage to the works of famous artists of the 20th century, with original music by Modest Mussorgsky together with Austrian pianist Christopher Hinterhuber, at Konzerthaus, Vienna, and subsequently performed in European concert halls and museums such as the Salzburg Museum of Modern Art and the Philharmonie Luxembourg.[1][11][18][19][20]
  • 2006, a co-production for the ISAF World Sailing Games on lake Neusiedl; "Wind und weiter" (en:Wind and Beyond), a nonverbal multimedia theatre performance for the multinational visitors. This show will be staged in a completely new version together with experimental musicians from the institute for transacoustic research in Vienna and receive its premiere at the Vienna Concert Hall - Konzerthaus Wien - in October 2008.[5][11]
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Awards

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Karin Schäfer has performed in 28 countries on four continents, by chronological order: Spain, France, Belgium, Italy, Ireland, Andorra, Hungary, Germany, the Netherlands, Portugal, Greece, Czech Republic, Switzerland, Slovakia, Poland, Yugoslavia/Montenegro, Turkey, Russia, Belarus, Egypt, Korea, Pakistan, Kenia, Mexico, Cuba, Luxembourg, Austria.[citation needed]

She won first prize at the First International Festival of Solo Puppeteers at Łódź, Poland in 1999 [21] and was awarded Best Performer of same festival in 2003.[22] Together with Santi Arnal and Jordi Bertran she won the prize of the jury of Cannes International Actors’ Performance Festival in 1994. In 2003, Stringtime was awarded "Best Foreign Performance of the Year" at the Festival International de Teatro de La Habana in La Havana, Cuba.[23][24][25][26][unreliable source?]

References

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  1. ^ a b c biography at Burgenländische Landesregierung, Künstlerdatenbank (Burgenland Government culture database, in German)
  2. ^ DaSilva, Ray, The Marionettes of Barcelona: Harry Tozer and His Tricks of the Trade.
  3. ^ Daniel S. Keller, JSTOR, "Historical Notes on Spanish Puppetry" (paid access site).
  4. ^ WP on Institut del Teatre (Spanish)
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h i "Karin Schäfer" Archived 2011-07-06 at the Wayback Machine biography (www.theaterspielplan.at — German).
  6. ^ Annuaire du spectacle de la communauté française de Belgique, page 56, on two shows in Belgium in 2003 (French), ISBN 2-87282-480-4
  7. ^ Elke Krafka[permanent dead link] on marionette theater in German speaking countries, and on the Kleist essay (German).
  8. ^ Cairo International Festival for Experimental Theatre Archived 2008-05-30 at the Wayback Machine Note: Data from 2000 forward.
  9. ^ Janosch, "Post für den Tiger" (en: A Letter for Tiger), ISBN 978-3-407-76046-3 (translation by Anthea Bell)
  10. ^ The Irish Times[permanent dead link] on "Twice upon a time" (2004-09-16).
  11. ^ a b c See figurentheater projects Archived 2011-10-04 at the Wayback Machine.
  12. ^ PannOpticum 2003[permanent dead link] (Pressetext Austria; German)
  13. ^ PannOpticum 2007[permanent dead link], by Der Standard (2007-04-27; German).
  14. ^ similar[permanent dead link], Kurier (2007-06-16; German)
  15. ^ "Theater: Da ist der Wurm drin!" Der Standard archive (2006-07-18; German; paid access site)
  16. ^ Skywalker (dachtheater)
  17. ^ [1] Mitteilungsblatt Zentrum Österreich, May 2005 (German)
  18. ^ www.kulturgericht.at[permanent dead link] on "Pictures at an Exhibition" (2005-10-12; German)
  19. ^ Christopher Hinterhuber performing in "Pictures at an Exhibition"[permanent dead link] (Kurier 2007-05-14; German).
  20. ^ Theatralia, Madrid 2007 (Information on Austrian government website, 2007).
  21. ^ "Certificate Festival Łód 1999". Archived from the original on 2011-05-19. Retrieved 2008-07-28.
  22. ^ "Certificate Festival Łód 2003". Archived from the original on 2011-05-19. Retrieved 2008-07-28.
  23. ^ kultur.news\bmaaV, Februar 2004 (PDF)
  24. ^ Premios Villanueva 2003 Archived 2008-05-06 at the Wayback Machine (Spanisch; gescheckt 2008-07-08)
  25. ^ "Certificate Premio Villanueva". Archived from the original on 2011-05-19. Retrieved 2008-07-28.
  26. ^ Communication of the Austrian Ambassador Archived 2011-05-19 at the Wayback Machine
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