-
These are sequences from a play called
"The Lehman Trilogy,"
-
which traces the origins
of Western capitalism
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in three hours,
-
with three actors and a piano.
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And my role was to create a stage design
-
to write a visual language for this work.
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The play describes Atlantic crossings,
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Alabama cotton fields,
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New York skylines,
-
and we framed the whole thing
within this single revolving cube,
-
a kind of kinetic cinema
through the centuries.
-
It's like a musical instrument
-
played by three performers.
-
And as they step their way
around and through
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the lives of the Lehman brothers,
-
we, the audience,
-
begin to connect
with the simple, human origins
-
at the root of the complex
global financial systems
-
that we're all still in thrall to today.
-
I used to play musical instruments
myself when I was younger.
-
My favorite was the violin.
-
It was this intimate transfer of energy.
-
You held this organic sculpture
up to your heart,
-
and you poured the energy
of your whole body
-
into this little piece of wood,
and heard it translated into music.
-
And I was never particularly
good at the violin,
-
but I used to sit at the back
of the second violin section
-
in the Hastings Youth Orchestra,
-
scratching away.
-
We were all scratching
-
and marveling at this symphonic sound
that we were making
-
that was so much
more beautiful and powerful
-
than anything we would ever
have managed on our own.
-
And now, as I create
large-scale performances,
-
I am always working with teams
-
that are at least the size
of a symphony orchestra.
-
And whether we are creating
-
these revolving giant
chess piece time tunnels
-
for an opera by Richard Wagner
-
or shark tanks and mountains
for Kanye West,
-
we're always seeking to create
the most articulate sculpture,
-
the most poetic instrument
of communication to an audience.
-
When I say poetic,
-
I just mean language
at its most condensed,
-
like a song lyric,
-
a poetic puzzle
to be unlocked and unpacked.
-
And when we were preparing
to design Beyoncé's "Formation" tour,
-
we looked at all the lyrics,
-
and we came across this poem
that Beyoncé wrote.
-
"I saw a TV preacher when I was scared,
at four or five about bad dreams
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who promised he'd say a prayer
if I put my hand to the TV.
-
That's the first time I remember prayer,
an electric current running through me."
-
And this TV that transmitted prayer
to Beyoncé as a child
-
became this monolithic revolving sculpture
-
that broadcast Beyoncé
to the back of the stadium.
-
And the stadium is a mass congregation.
-
It's a temporary population
of a hundred thousand people
-
who have all come there to sing along
with every word together,
-
but they've also come there
each seeking one-to-one intimacy
-
with the performer.
-
And we, as we conceive the show,
we have to provide intimacy
-
on a grand scale.
-
It usually starts with sketches.
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I was drawing
this 60-foot-high, revolving,
-
broadcast-quality portrait of the artist,
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and then I tore
the piece of paper in half.
-
I split the mask
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to try to access the human
underneath it all.
-
And it's one thing to do sketches,
but of course translating from a sketch
-
into a tourable revolving
six-story building
-
took some exceptional engineers
working around the clock for three months,
-
until finally we arrived in Miami
-
and opened the show in April 2016.
-
(Video: Cheers)
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(Music: "Formation," Beyoncé)
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Beyoncé: Y'all haters corny
with that Illuminati mess
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Paparazzi, catch my fly,
and my cocky fresh
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I'm so reckless when I rock
my Givenchy dress
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I'm so possessive so I rock
his Roc necklaces
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My daddy Alabama
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Momma Louisiana
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You mix that negro with that Creole
-
make a Texas bama
-
(Music ends)
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I call my work --
-
(Cheers, applause)
-
Thank you.
-
(Cheers, applause)
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I call my work stage sculpture,
-
but of course what's really being sculpted
is the experience of the audience,
-
and as directors and designers,
-
we have to take responsibility
-
for every minute
that the audience spend with us.
-
We're a bit like pilots
-
navigating a flight path
for a hundred thousand passengers.
-
And in the case of the Canadian
artist The Weeknd,
-
we translated this flight path literally
-
into an origami paper folding airplane
-
that took off over the heads
of the audience,
-
broke apart in mid-flight, complications,
-
and then rose out of the ashes restored
-
at the end of the show.
-
And like any flight,
-
the most delicate part
is the liftoff, the beginning,
-
because when you design a pop concert,
-
the prime material
that you're working with
-
is something that doesn't take trucks
or crew to transport it.
-
It doesn't cost anything,
-
and yet it fills every atom of air
in the arena, before the show starts.
-
It's the audience's anticipation.
-
Everyone brings with them
the story of how they came to get there,
-
the distances they traveled,
-
the months they had to work
to pay for the tickets.
-
Sometimes they sleep overnight
outside the arena,
-
and our first task is to deliver
for an audience on their anticipation,
-
to deliver their first sight
of the performer.
-
When I work with men,
-
they're quite happy to have their music
transformed into metaphor --
-
spaceflights, mountains.
-
But with women, we work a lot with masks
and with three-dimensional portraiture,
-
because the fans of the female artist
-
crave her face.
-
And when the audience arrived to see
Adele's first live concert in five years,
-
they were met with this image
of her eyes asleep.
-
If they listened carefully,
-
they would hear her sleeping breath
echoing around the arena,
-
waiting to wake up.
-
Here's how the show began.
-
(Video: Cheers, applause)
-
(Music)
-
Adele: Hello.
-
(Cheers, applause)
-
Es Devlin: With U2,
we're navigating the audience
-
over a terrain that spans three decades
of politics, poetry and music.
-
And over many months, meeting
with the band and their creative teams,
-
this is the sketch that kept recurring,
-
this line, this street,
-
the street that connects
the band's past with their present,
-
the tightrope that they walk
as activists and artists,
-
a walk through cinema
-
that allows the band
to become protagonists
-
in their own poetry.
-
(Music: U2's "Where the Streets
Have No Name")
-
Bono: I wanna run
-
I want to hide
-
I wanna tear down the walls
-
That hold me inside
-
Es Devlin: The end of the show
is like the end of a flight.
-
It's an arrival.
-
It's a transfer from the stage
out to the audience.
-
For the British band Take That,
-
we ended the show by sending
an 80-foot high mechanical human figure
-
out to the center of the crowd.
-
(Music)
-
Like many translations
from music to mechanics,
-
this one was initially deemed
entirely technically impossible.
-
The first three engineers
we took it to said no,
-
and eventually,
the way that it was achieved
-
was by keeping the entire
control system together
-
while it toured around the country,
-
so we had to fold it up
onto a flatbed truck
-
so it could tour around
without coming apart.
-
And of course, what this meant
was that the dimension of its head
-
was entirely determined
-
by the lowest motorway bridge
that it had to travel under on its tour.
-
And I have to tell you that it turns out
-
there is an unavoidable
and annoyingly low bridge
-
low bridge just outside Hamburg.
-
(Laughter)
-
(Music)
-
Another of the most technically complex
pieces that we've worked on
-
is the opera "Carmen"
-
at Bregenz Festival in Austria.
-
We envisaged Carmen's hands rising
out of Lake Constance,
-
and throwing this deck
of cards in the air
-
and leaving them suspended
between sky and sea.
-
But this transient gesture,
this flick of the wrists
-
had to become a structure
that would be strong enough
-
to withstand two Austrian winters.
-
So there's an awful lot
that you don't see in this photograph
-
that's working really hard.
-
It's a lot of ballast and structure
and support around the back,
-
and I'm going to show you the photos
that aren't on my website.
-
They're photos of the back of a set,
-
the part that's not designed
for the audience to see,
-
however much work it's doing.
-
And you know, this is actually the dilemma
-
for an artist who is working
as a stage designer,
-
because so much of what I make is fake,
-
it's an illusion.
-
And yet every artist works in pursuit
of communicating something that's true.
-
But we are always asking ourselves:
-
"Can we communicate truth
using things that are false?"
-
And now when I attend
the shows that I've worked on,
-
I often find I'm the only one
who is not looking at the stage.
-
I'm looking at something
that I find equally fascinating,
-
and it's the audience.
-
(Cheers)
-
I mean, where else do you witness this:
-
(Cheers)
-
this many humans, connected, focused,
-
undistracted and unfragmented?
-
And lately, I've begun to make work
that originates here,
-
in the collective voice of the audience.
-
"Poem Portraits" is a collective poem.
-
It began at the Serpentine
Gallery in London,
-
and everybody is invited
to donate one word to a collective poem.
-
And instead of that large
single LED portrait
-
that was broadcasting
to the back of the stadium,
-
in this case, every member of the audience
-
gets to take their own portrait
home with them,
-
and it's woven in with the words
-
that they've contributed
to the collective poem.
-
So they keep a fragment
of an ever-evolving collective work.
-
And next year, the collective poem
will take architectural form.
-
This is the design for the UK Pavilion
at the World Expo 2020.
-
The UK ...
-
In my lifetime,
it's never felt this divided.
-
It's never felt this noisy
with divergent voices.
-
And it's never felt this much
in need of places
-
where voices might connect and converge.
-
And it's my hope
that this wooden sculpture,
-
this wooden instrument,
a bit like that violin I used to play,
-
might be a place where people
can play and enter their word
-
at one end of the cone,
-
emerge at the other end of the building,
-
and find that their word has joined
a collective poem, a collective voice.
-
(Music)
-
These are simple experiments
in machine learning.
-
The algorithm that generates
the collective poem is pretty simple.
-
It's like predictive text,
-
only it's trained on millions of words
written by poets in the 19th century.
-
So it's a sort of convergence
of intelligence, past and present,
-
organic and inorganic.
-
And we were inspired
by the words of Stephen Hawking.
-
Towards the end of his life,
he asked quite a simple question:
-
If we as a species were ever
to come across another advanced life-form,
-
an advanced civilization,
-
how would we speak to them?
-
What collective language
would we speak as a planet?
-
The language of lights
reaches every audience.
-
All of us are touched by it.
None of us can hold it.
-
And in the theater, we begin each work
in a dark place, devoid of light.
-
We stay up all night focusing the lights,
programming the lights,
-
trying to find new ways
to sculpt and carve light.
-
(Music)
-
This is a portrait of our practice,
-
always seeking new ways
to shape and reshape light,
-
always finding words for things
that we no longer need to say.
-
And I want to say that this,
-
and everything that I've just shown you,
-
no longer exists in physical form.
-
(Music)
-
In fact, most of what I've made
over the last 25 years
-
doesn't exist anymore.
-
But our work endures in memories,
in synaptic sculptures,
-
in the minds of those
who were once present
-
in the audience.
-
(Music)
-
I once read that a poem learnt by heart
-
is what you have left,
-
what can't be lost,
-
even if your house burns down
and you've lost all your possessions.
-
I want to end with some lines
that I learnt by heart a long time ago.
-
(Music)
-
They're written by the English
novelist E.M. Forster,
-
in 1910, just a few years
before Europe, my continent,
-
(Music)
-
began tearing itself apart.
-
(Music)
-
And his call to convergence
still resonates
-
through most of what
we're trying to make now.
-
(Music)
-
"Only connect! That was
the whole of her sermon.
-
Only connect the prose and the passion,
-
and both will be exalted,
-
And human love will be seen at its height.
-
Only connect! Live
in fragments no longer."
-
Thank you.
-
(Applause)