Revealing the cover for ‘Conflagration’… specially commissioned from Misanthropic Art…
Details of the book:
Title: CONFLAGRATION
Author: D.P. Watt
Published in the Mount Abraxas series by Ex Occidente Press, Bucharest
Book size: 24,5 cm x 24,5 cm
Wrap-up Illustration Cover by Misanthropic Art
Limited to: 83 hand-numbered copies (plus author’s copies)
Release date: late March, 2016
As of 15th March only 17 copies remain available at 90 Euros each,
available directly from Ex Occidente Press at exoccidente@gmail.com
Conflagration
Immoral Vignettes
by
D.P.Watt
This is not a manifesto; it is a dance of desire.
You know the old days are over; the playing with costumes and the giggling with make-up; the green room banter and the old rivalries; the useless mantelpiece acting and the puffing on chalk cigarettes. The wonderful baritones have degenerated into wheezes and groans; even the audiences are aged and their eyes no longer distinguish the players—all has homogenised into a colourful blur; widow Twankey has fused with the castle door frame and the props are dust in your hands. The old days are over, burn your photo-albums! The playbills have been whitewashed and their ridiculous names are now just a smutty rumour.
This is not a manifesto; it is a hymn to eternity.
Pray to the clowns and the troubadours. Worship in the stalls of the music halls and venerate the Punch and Judy booths. Let the puppets man the barricades; they are immortal, no bullet can harm them. Every harsh word screamed at the dancing bear is met with only a blank stare. In the heart of the inferno the girls still spring lithely upon the trapeze. The true theatre of ages is as ancient as a glacier and will freeze any heart as it adores the marvellous.
This is not a manifesto; it is a love song.
What was this terror, theatre? It was the soul of humanity; mystery, bodies in torment and flux. What is this luxury, theatre? It is a place in-between; the eruption of the crude and the incredible. Theatre? Cardboard and twine; rose petals and violins. Blood and betrayal; hope and empires. Sun and candlelight; oil on water and the magic of sweat.
Theatre: conflagration—the future!
∞
Dramatis Personae
Angel – August Strindberg
An aigrette of iridescent flames – Maurice Maeterlinck
Priest – Antonin Artaud
A long shadow cast against the cyclorama – Edward Gordon Craig
An infernal propeller – Filippo Marinetti
Language professor – Samuel Beckett
Violent shout (from the wings) – Alfred Jarry
Red flowers – Jean Genet
Macbeth or Clytemnestra – Tristan Tzara
Man bearing a placard with a Chinese symbol – Bertolt Brecht
Trumpet player – Vaclav Havel
Hanged Man – Stanislaw Witkiewicz
Pierrot and Juggler – Vsevolod Meyerhold
English schoolgirl – Eugene Ionesco
Charon – Tadeusz Kantor
Looking forward to this! –Harold