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Adrian Howells

Adrian Howells (9 April 1962 – 16 March 2014) was a British performance artist associated with one-to-one performance and intimate theatre. He performed in the United Kingdom and internationally (including in Israel, Singapore, Canada, Japan, Germany, Italy and other countries). He was a pioneer of one-to-one performance, in which an artist repeats and adapts a score for a performance for a single audience member, or audience-participant, and repeats the action serially across a run of several days. The process and outcomes in Howells' signature works were frequently modelled on activities associated with the service industries or the tertiary sector of the economy, such as washing the audience-participant's hair or clothes, or giving an audience-member a bath, replicating in some ways the labour of a hairdresser, laundry worker, or caregiver; or he appropriated and adapted intimate interpersonal experiences in carefully mediated situations, like talking around a script or score in a setting such as a Japanese rock garden in The Garden of Adrian (2009), or holding hands, listening to music, and spooning in silence in Held (2008).

Adrian Howells
Born(1962-04-09)9 April 1962
DiedMarch 16, 2014(2014-03-16) (aged 51)
Glasgow, Scotland, Scotland, United Kingdom
NationalityBritish
Known forperformance art, experimental theatre, one-to-one performance
Notable workAdrienne's Dirty Laundry Experience (2004), An Audience with Adrienne (2006-10), Foot Washing for the Sole (2008), The Pleasure of Being: Washing/Feeding/Holding (2010)

Life and work edit

Howells was born in 1962 in his grandmother's house in Bapchild, Kent in the South of England. He was raised in nearby Sittingbourne, and attended Minterne County Junior School and Borden Grammar School.[1] In the 1970s, he participated in youth theatre companies including Kent County Youth Theatre and Sittingbourne Youth Theatre.[2] From 1981 to 1984 he attended Bretton Hall College in West Yorkshire, graduating with a bachelor's degree in Drama and English. After working as a jobbing actor and director in provincial productions of plays and pantomimes, in 1990 Howells joined the Citizens Theatre Company in Glasgow, Scotland as an assistant director to Giles Havergal (one of the company's three pioneering directors, alongside Philip Prowse and the late Robert David MacDonald).[3] While working at the Citizens Theatre, Howells met Stewart Laing, and Laing cast Howells alongside the drag performers Leigh Bowery and Ivan Cartwright in a production of Copi's scatological play The Homosexual or the Difficulty of Sexpressing Oneself (1971) -- Laing's first directorial production (co-directed with Gerrard McArthur). The play toured to Glasgow, London and Manchester in 1993–94.

From 2001 until around 2008, much of Howells’ work involved the use of a drag persona, namely Adrienne.[3] Adrienne was used as a persona in a broad range of performances, including one-to-ones where Howells: washed and dried a punter's clothing over the course of an hour (Adrienne's Dirty Laundry Experience, 2003);[4] washed and styled one's hair in a hairdressers (Salon Adrienne, 2005); helped audience-participants buy a new outfit (Adrienne's Personal Shopping Experience, 2005); delivered wine, dessert and conversation to an occupied hotel room (Adrienne's Room Service, 2005); served food in a bar (Adrienne's Bar and Grill, 2010);[5] and – in the most arduous of these performances – Adrian/Adrienne lived for a week in a hotel room, without shaving, washing, or removing her make-up, receiving guests as the debris of eating and living mounted in the room (Adrienne: The Great Depression, 2004). In a review, Howells described his investment in intimate participatory performance: 'I went into one-on-one work because I wanted an equal exchange between performer and audience. I wanted to really connect with an individual and make it something cherish-able and genuine. And there are moments when you puncture the performance and it is something real.’[6]

Later, Howells recalls, ‘I made a conscientious decision to dispense with the mask of Adrienne – the makeup, hair, and costume. I wanted to be much more open and honest about risk, and vulnerability – and the cost, I guess, of an engagement with another person'.[7] This work has been widely discussed in terms of the means by which Howells explored intimacy, the pleasures and difficulties of interpersonal communication, and social relations.[8] After dropping the 'mask of Adrienne', Howells created one-to-one performances without a discernible persona.[7] Key examples included The Garden of Adrian (2009); The Pleasure of Being: Washing/Feeding/Holding (2010), in which an audience-participant lay in a bath of water and oils and was washed by Howells, then—after leaving the bath—was fed chocolates and held while wrapped in a towel;[7] and his most extensively toured of these performances, Foot Washing for the Sole (2008), a long encounter modelled on a foot massage.[3]

In his final years, Howells returned to creating solo and ensemble productions with larger audiences. These included Lifeguard (2012), staged in a swimming pool in Glasgow with a professional dancer who performed in the water.[9] May I Have the Pleasure...? used the format of a wedding reception to explore loneliness, sex and marriage. A reviewer wrote: 'The premise is a simple one: Howells has been best man on no fewer than eight occasions; he is something of a wedding expert, and yet he has never been in a long-term relationship. This new piece meditates on the feelings of isolation which such a situation can create.'[10]

Howells struggled with chronic depression throughout his adult life. He frequently discussed depression in his performances (for example, in Adrienne: The Great Depression), and in interviews.[7] He died by suicide on the weekend of 16–17 March 2014 in his home in Glasgow, Scotland.[11]

Howells' final project, Dancer was performed posthumously by Ian Johnston and Gary Gardiner and reviewed by Lyn Gardner for The Guardian newspaper as a 'simple, generous-spirited [and] vulnerable' work full of 'joy and abandon'.[12]

Legacy edit

Howells' papers are held in the Scottish Theatre Collection at the University of Glasgow, where they are open to researchers and the public.[13] Materials from the archive are reproduced in a book on Howells' work: It's All Allowed: The Performances of Adrian Howells, edited by Deirdre Heddon and Dominic Johnson, which was published in 2016 to coincide with the second anniversary of Howells' death.

In 2017, an annual award was set up in Howells' name. The Adrian Howells Award for Intimate Performance provides £4,000 to an artist working in intimate and/or one-to-one performance in the UK.[14] It is led by the National Theatre of Scotland, Battersea Arts Centre and Take Me Somewhere Festival with support from the University of Glasgow and the Live Art Development Agency. Previous winners include Nic Green (2017), Rhiannon Armstrong (2018), and Zinzi Minott (2019/20).[14]

References edit

  1. ^ [1] Workshop info page (2011). Harbourfront Centre, Toronto
  2. ^ Roberts, B. (1979). ‘The Drama Dream that Came True’, Gazette and Times
  3. ^ a b c [2] Gardner, L. (2014). 'Adrian Howells Obituary', Guardian
  4. ^ [3], McMillan, J. (2014). 'Theatre: The rich legacy of performance artist Adrian Howells’, The Scotsman
  5. ^ [4] Cairns, J. (2012). 'Ambivalent Intimacies: Performance and Domestic Photography in the Work of Adrian Howells', Contemporary Theatre Review, 22.3, pp. 355-372
  6. ^ [5], Fielder, M. (2011). 'Adrian Howells brings May I Have the Pleasure to 2011 Edinburgh Festival', The List
  7. ^ a b c d Johnson, D. (2012). ‘The Kindness of Strangers: An Interview with Adrian Howells', Performing Ethos, 3.2, pp. 173-190
  8. ^ [6], Field, A. (2014). 'Adrian Howells: He created performances of courageous honesty', Guardian
  9. ^ [7], Brown, M. (2012). 'Review - Lifeguard, Govanhill Baths, Glasgow', The Telegraph
  10. ^ [8], Twite, C. (2011). 'Review - May I Have The Pleasure…?, Traverse Theatre', Exeunt
  11. ^ [9], Groves, N. (2014). 'Theatre legend Adrian Howells dies aged 51', Guardian
  12. ^ [10], Gardner, L. (2014). 'Dancer review – a dapper and delicate last work from Adrian Howells', Guardian
  13. ^ "University of Glasgow Library - Collections - Scottish Theatre Archive".
  14. ^ a b [11] 'The Adrian Howells Award for Intimate Performance', Take Me Somewhere (2019)

Further reading edit

  • Doyle, J (2013). ‘Introducing Difficulty’, in Hold It Against Me: Difficulty and Emotion in Contemporary Art. Duke University Press. pp. 1–27
  • Heddon, D. and Johnson, D., eds. (2016). It's All Allowed: The Performances of Adrian Howells. Intellect and Live Art Development Agency
  • Johnson, D. (2015), ‘Held: An Interview with Adrian Howells’, in The Art of Living: An Oral History of Performance Art. Palgrave Macmillan. pp. 262–85
  • Machon, J. (2013). ‘Adrian Howells: The Epic in the Intimate’, in Immersive Theatres: Intimacy and Immediacy in Contemporary Performance. Palgrave Macmillan. pp. 260–8
  • Walsh, F. (2012). Theatre & Therapy. Palgrave Macmillan.
  • Zerihan, R. (2012). 'One to One Performance: A Study Room Guide'. Live Art Development Agency.

adrian, howells, april, 1962, march, 2014, british, performance, artist, associated, with, performance, intimate, theatre, performed, united, kingdom, internationally, including, israel, singapore, canada, japan, germany, italy, other, countries, pioneer, perf. Adrian Howells 9 April 1962 16 March 2014 was a British performance artist associated with one to one performance and intimate theatre He performed in the United Kingdom and internationally including in Israel Singapore Canada Japan Germany Italy and other countries He was a pioneer of one to one performance in which an artist repeats and adapts a score for a performance for a single audience member or audience participant and repeats the action serially across a run of several days The process and outcomes in Howells signature works were frequently modelled on activities associated with the service industries or the tertiary sector of the economy such as washing the audience participant s hair or clothes or giving an audience member a bath replicating in some ways the labour of a hairdresser laundry worker or caregiver or he appropriated and adapted intimate interpersonal experiences in carefully mediated situations like talking around a script or score in a setting such as a Japanese rock garden in The Garden of Adrian 2009 or holding hands listening to music and spooning in silence in Held 2008 Adrian HowellsBorn 1962 04 09 9 April 1962Bapchild Kent United KingdomDiedMarch 16 2014 2014 03 16 aged 51 Glasgow Scotland Scotland United KingdomNationalityBritishKnown forperformance art experimental theatre one to one performanceNotable workAdrienne s Dirty Laundry Experience 2004 An Audience with Adrienne 2006 10 Foot Washing for the Sole 2008 The Pleasure of Being Washing Feeding Holding 2010 Contents 1 Life and work 2 Legacy 3 References 4 Further readingLife and work editHowells was born in 1962 in his grandmother s house in Bapchild Kent in the South of England He was raised in nearby Sittingbourne and attended Minterne County Junior School and Borden Grammar School 1 In the 1970s he participated in youth theatre companies including Kent County Youth Theatre and Sittingbourne Youth Theatre 2 From 1981 to 1984 he attended Bretton Hall College in West Yorkshire graduating with a bachelor s degree in Drama and English After working as a jobbing actor and director in provincial productions of plays and pantomimes in 1990 Howells joined the Citizens Theatre Company in Glasgow Scotland as an assistant director to Giles Havergal one of the company s three pioneering directors alongside Philip Prowse and the late Robert David MacDonald 3 While working at the Citizens Theatre Howells met Stewart Laing and Laing cast Howells alongside the drag performers Leigh Bowery and Ivan Cartwright in a production of Copi s scatological play The Homosexual or the Difficulty of Sexpressing Oneself 1971 Laing s first directorial production co directed with Gerrard McArthur The play toured to Glasgow London and Manchester in 1993 94 From 2001 until around 2008 much of Howells work involved the use of a drag persona namely Adrienne 3 Adrienne was used as a persona in a broad range of performances including one to ones where Howells washed and dried a punter s clothing over the course of an hour Adrienne s Dirty Laundry Experience 2003 4 washed and styled one s hair in a hairdressers Salon Adrienne 2005 helped audience participants buy a new outfit Adrienne s Personal Shopping Experience 2005 delivered wine dessert and conversation to an occupied hotel room Adrienne s Room Service 2005 served food in a bar Adrienne s Bar and Grill 2010 5 and in the most arduous of these performances Adrian Adrienne lived for a week in a hotel room without shaving washing or removing her make up receiving guests as the debris of eating and living mounted in the room Adrienne The Great Depression 2004 In a review Howells described his investment in intimate participatory performance I went into one on one work because I wanted an equal exchange between performer and audience I wanted to really connect with an individual and make it something cherish able and genuine And there are moments when you puncture the performance and it is something real 6 Later Howells recalls I made a conscientious decision to dispense with the mask of Adrienne the makeup hair and costume I wanted to be much more open and honest about risk and vulnerability and the cost I guess of an engagement with another person 7 This work has been widely discussed in terms of the means by which Howells explored intimacy the pleasures and difficulties of interpersonal communication and social relations 8 After dropping the mask of Adrienne Howells created one to one performances without a discernible persona 7 Key examples included The Garden of Adrian 2009 The Pleasure of Being Washing Feeding Holding 2010 in which an audience participant lay in a bath of water and oils and was washed by Howells then after leaving the bath was fed chocolates and held while wrapped in a towel 7 and his most extensively toured of these performances Foot Washing for the Sole 2008 a long encounter modelled on a foot massage 3 In his final years Howells returned to creating solo and ensemble productions with larger audiences These included Lifeguard 2012 staged in a swimming pool in Glasgow with a professional dancer who performed in the water 9 May I Have the Pleasure used the format of a wedding reception to explore loneliness sex and marriage A reviewer wrote The premise is a simple one Howells has been best man on no fewer than eight occasions he is something of a wedding expert and yet he has never been in a long term relationship This new piece meditates on the feelings of isolation which such a situation can create 10 Howells struggled with chronic depression throughout his adult life He frequently discussed depression in his performances for example in Adrienne The Great Depression and in interviews 7 He died by suicide on the weekend of 16 17 March 2014 in his home in Glasgow Scotland 11 Howells final project Dancer was performed posthumously by Ian Johnston and Gary Gardiner and reviewed by Lyn Gardner for The Guardian newspaper as a simple generous spirited and vulnerable work full of joy and abandon 12 Legacy editHowells papers are held in the Scottish Theatre Collection at the University of Glasgow where they are open to researchers and the public 13 Materials from the archive are reproduced in a book on Howells work It s All Allowed The Performances of Adrian Howells edited by Deirdre Heddon and Dominic Johnson which was published in 2016 to coincide with the second anniversary of Howells death In 2017 an annual award was set up in Howells name The Adrian Howells Award for Intimate Performance provides 4 000 to an artist working in intimate and or one to one performance in the UK 14 It is led by the National Theatre of Scotland Battersea Arts Centre and Take Me Somewhere Festival with support from the University of Glasgow and the Live Art Development Agency Previous winners include Nic Green 2017 Rhiannon Armstrong 2018 and Zinzi Minott 2019 20 14 References edit 1 Workshop info page 2011 Harbourfront Centre Toronto Roberts B 1979 The Drama Dream that Came True Gazette and Times a b c 2 Gardner L 2014 Adrian Howells Obituary Guardian 3 McMillan J 2014 Theatre The rich legacy of performance artist Adrian Howells The Scotsman 4 Cairns J 2012 Ambivalent Intimacies Performance and Domestic Photography in the Work of Adrian Howells Contemporary Theatre Review 22 3 pp 355 372 5 Fielder M 2011 Adrian Howells brings May I Have the Pleasure to 2011 Edinburgh Festival The List a b c d Johnson D 2012 The Kindness of Strangers An Interview with Adrian Howells Performing Ethos 3 2 pp 173 190 6 Field A 2014 Adrian Howells He created performances of courageous honesty Guardian 7 Brown M 2012 Review Lifeguard Govanhill Baths Glasgow The Telegraph 8 Twite C 2011 Review May I Have The Pleasure Traverse Theatre Exeunt 9 Groves N 2014 Theatre legend Adrian Howells dies aged 51 Guardian 10 Gardner L 2014 Dancer review a dapper and delicate last work from Adrian Howells Guardian University of Glasgow Library Collections Scottish Theatre Archive a b 11 The Adrian Howells Award for Intimate Performance Take Me Somewhere 2019 Further reading editDoyle J 2013 Introducing Difficulty in Hold It Against Me Difficulty and Emotion in Contemporary Art Duke University Press pp 1 27 Heddon D and Johnson D eds 2016 It s All Allowed The Performances of Adrian Howells Intellect and Live Art Development Agency Johnson D 2015 Held An Interview with Adrian Howells in The Art of Living An Oral History of Performance Art Palgrave Macmillan pp 262 85 Machon J 2013 Adrian Howells The Epic in the Intimate in Immersive Theatres Intimacy and Immediacy in Contemporary Performance Palgrave Macmillan pp 260 8 Walsh F 2012 Theatre amp Therapy Palgrave Macmillan Zerihan R 2012 One to One Performance A Study Room Guide Live Art Development Agency Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Adrian Howells amp oldid 1218770695, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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