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premiere:

POLIN Muzeum 25.02.2024.

Opera Wrocławska 01.03.2024.

creators:

conductor - Trajan Muryń

director, scegrapher - Kamila Siwińska

costiumes- Martyna Cierpisz

choreography - Katarzyna Witek

cast:

Jakub - Tomasz Rudnicki

Polda - Liliana Jędrzejczak

Paulina - Aleksandra Malisz

Draga - Barbara Bagińska

Adela/Magda Wang - Eliza Kruszczyńska

Edzio Kaleka - Jędrzej Tomczyk

Anarchista Luccheni - Aleksander Zuchowicz

fot. Natalia Kabanow

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„Szaleństwo jest jedyną drogą poznania.”

Hejzod

 

The character of Jacob from Bruno Schulz's "Cinnamon Shops" is a distant echo of the biblical Jacob from the Book of Genesis. Jacob is the one who fights against God. He also fights with his twin brother. Just like its distant prototype, he tries to overcome human nature, reach divinity, the mystery of creation. However, he is the creator of matter, not spirit. It only brings out the cry of despair of the creator, who, even though he is himself created in the image and likeness of God, can only parody the work of creation and rebel against pathetic second-rateness. It seems to speak with the words of Michael Foucault from the preface to the next edition of "History of Madness": "... Look, it's me, this is my face, my profile, look what these secondary faces that will spread from me are supposed to be like. If they deviate from this, they are worth nothing; judge the rest by the degree of similarity. It is I, the name, the law, the soul, the secret and the weight of all these doppelgängers.”

Schulz's Jakub is an emanation of the medieval vision of a madman. It manifests not a lack of reason, but its excess. It is like a large bird from medieval engravings - "an illogical creature, half-animal, half-thing." Its long neck allows thoughts floating from the heart to the head to travel the path of consideration and reflection. Undergo a kind of distillation during which true wisdom crystallizes. His visions abound in a multitude of meanings which, like numerous threads stretched between things, intersect to create infinite constellations of meanings. Only the most secret depths of consciousness can depict them. In the soulless matter of the world, he sees its life-giving possibilities of spontaneous growth. Genration Equivocal – Aristotle's theory of spontaneous growth of life from inanimate matter heated Jacob's mind to red hot.

 

His tragic figure of a madman-artist experiences the need to create as both a blessing and a curse; as a stimulus to live and a reason to die; as a moment of fulfillment and eternal longing. The tragic dimension of this state is determined by the conflict between libido and death, life and love, truth and falsehood. When the tension between them reaches its highest point, an explosion becomes inevitable. The critical moment reveals the quintessence: realizing one's divine potential does not mean "becoming a god" - fullness can only be experienced within oneself.

Kamila Siwińska

Manekiny is a chamber opera by Zbigniew Rudziński (1935-2019). The composer based the libretto on the prose of Bruno Schulz (1892-1942). His literary prototype was the stories from the collection Cinnamon Shops published in 1933: Manekiny, Treatise on Mannequins or The Second Book of Genesis, Treatise on Mannequins. Continued and Treatise on Mannequins. Completion.

The main character in the work is a textile merchant and creator - Jakub, accompanied by Polda and Paulina - living mannequins, incomplete beings. Their singing is actually the mechanical speech of wind-up puppets. Adela also appears, whose counterpart is the maid from Schulz's stories, a mute character. There are also a number of surreal figures and apparitions on the stage, such as Magda Wang (the woman with a whip from Schulz's masochistic drawings), or the unhappy Queen Draga, Edzio the Kaleka and Anarchist Luccheni. Jacob is forced to accept that the creator is not the Creator. Giving lectures on life and matter, a kind of heretical demiurge, expresses the belief that inanimate matter is only a surface behind which unknown forms of life hide. It expresses the desire to repeat the act of the Creator himself by bringing to life incomplete beings. "Less content, more form!" - he shouts. Rudziński's mannequins were exhibited for the first time at the Wrocław Opera in 1981. The opera was commissioned by Robert Satanowski - then director of the State Opera in Wrocław - who himself took over the musical direction in cooperation with Lucjan Laprus. The director of the show was Marek Grzesiński, the set was created by Janusz Wiśniewski, and the costumes were designed by Irena Biegańska.

The current staging of Mannequins is carried out by Kamila Siwińska, for whom an additional inspiration to create a new form of performance is one of the few preserved evidence of the existence of a large Jewish community in Grodzisk Mazowiecki. This is a photograph by Manachem Kipnis from 1925. The description on the back of the print reads: "Hasidic wedding in Grodzisk. At the tzadik's court in Grodzisk, at the wedding of the rebbe's daughter. Thousands of Hasidim are waiting outside. The famous madman Brudasz preaches his words of wisdom in front of everyone gathered."

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