Saturday 23 November 2013

Theatre Review - Waiting For Godot - Sydney Theatre Company 2013 Season


Richard Roxburgh and Hugo Weaving - Waiting for Godot
Samuel Beckett’s absurdist play “Waiting for Godot” has often been credited as one of the most influential English language plays of the 20th Century with a litany of interpretations on  meaning and intent whether religious, existential or autobiographical.

The play in two Acts is focussed on two characters, Gogo and Didi (abbreviated from Estragon and Vladimir in the original Beckett version), who wait endlessly and in vain for the arrival of someone named Godot. The tedium and monotony of their wait is interrupted for awhile by the arrival of two other protagonists - Lucky, a baggage-burdened, nearly-silent slave who has a rope tied around his neck and his aggressive and pompous master, Pozzo. The entire content of the play is actually the musings and discourse between these characters and little else.

Adapted by Andrew Upton for the Sydney Theatre Company’s 2013 season, the most tangible value of the play are the performances of Hugo Weaving and Richard Roxburgh as the two main characters, Vladimir and Estragon. Upton has made changes to the dialogue and placed the two act play in an urban setting of an alleyway rather than Beckett’s original setting in the countryside. The STC production also identifies the two main characters as tramps or down-and-outs whereas Beckett himself never provided such a biographical description.

Essentially this is a play about nothing much at all as the two main characters debate issues of little actual philosophical or existential consequence in a haphazard sometimes circular manner without resolution or insight. Beckett’s ultimate absurdist achievement has been to have critics and audiences debate and ponder this work whereas in fact, ‘the emperor has no clothes’.

Tuesday 19 November 2013

America Painting a nation - Art Gallery of NSW - Summer Exhibition 2013/2014

Charles Willson Peale: John & Elizabeth Cadwalader
The major summer exhibition of the Art Gallery of NSW for 2013/2014, America painting a nation, is promoted as the first historical survey of American painting held in Australia with many masterpieces shown here for the first time.The exhibition brings together 92 works from major artists, such as James Whistler, Edward Hopper, Mark Rothko, Georgia O’Keeffe and Jackson Pollock and has been brought to Sydney in collaboration with Los Angeles County Museum of Art, the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, the Philadelphia Museum of Art, and the Terra Foundation for American Art. In reality, this is an edited version of an exhibition which was originally chosen for audiences in South Korea.

In terms of content and masterpieces, these are thin on the ground in fact. There are three paintings by O'Keeffe and Homer; two each by Sargent, Eakins and Cassatt; and one each by Hopper, Rothko and Pollock. As Sydney Morning Herald art critic, John McDonald, observed ".....although there are some strong pictures in this group, none might be described as iconic.." He further noted that the Art Gallery of NSW would be hard pressed to sell "...a show in which most of the artists will be unknown to the vast majority of viewers...". Although this art show is thin with major art 'names' there is an impressive body of work to be seen nonetheless and the choice of works will pleasantly surprise the viewer if expectations are not set too high. The exhibition has 7 set chronological themes in which the paintings are grouped with the stronger works predominately coming from the 19th Century. The choice of paintings for the 20th Century is decidedly weaker both in number and content.

America Painting a nation  is on show until 9th February 2014.

Thomas Moran - Grand Canyon of the Colorado River


Saturday 16 November 2013

Climate Change Insight: more carbon dioxide = more plants

Savannah vegetation
One of the many contradictions in climate science is understanding the impact of higher levels of carbon dioxide CO2 in the atmosphere on plant growth. The central thesis contends that increased levels of CO2, warmer temperatures and the creation of wetter climes in some areas of the globe should produce higher levels of vegetation through the stimulation of photosynthesis. One of the tests for this theory has been undertaken by Australia's CSIRO which has been monitoring the edges of many arid areas in Australia, Southern Africa, the Southwest of the United States, North Africa, the Middle East and Central Asia. The results of the monitoring process has found that the amounts of vegetation per unit of rainfall actually rose by 11 per cent rather than remaining constant. In short, the increase in vegetation occured where the only input which had altered was the corresponding increase in CO2 levels. 

This increase does not apply to all the dry regions of the world and in many cases, there will be no change at all due to the scarcity of water which will become more extreme in arid mid latitude geographical locations.The long term effects of increased vegetation in terms of potentially locking down CO2 emissions are unknown although current atmospheric greenhouse gas increases are considered to be too high to be matched by plant growth.

Sunday 10 November 2013

Genetically Modified Wheat - escaping into the wild

The use of genetically modified (GM) crops particularly wheat is a highly controversial topic and GM crops are currently strictly controlled at point of origin and GM wheat is not approved for commercial use anywhere in the world. Despite exacting controls however GM wheat does escape from test farms and has been shown to actually be capable of replacing natural grown wheat where the two come into contact. Agricultural biotech giant Monsanto has been the main operator, researcher and developer of GM crops but has been at a loss to explain GM wheat materialising in non research locations such as the farm in Oregon this year. The original GM wheat test programme was ended in 2004 and the GM material was destroyed yet this farm was found to have GM wheat 9 years later and was not even part of the actual GM test programme.

Similar experiences have been found with testing of GM crops in Australia where there is a high potential for cross contamination with natural wheat. Japan and South Korea immediately halted wheat imports from the United States until the wheat had been tested for GM traces. Australia would do well to remain cautious about the use of GM crops given the almost non-existent information on downstream impact and longer term human health. 

Film review - Oblivion - Tom Cruise

Tom Cruise in a Still from Oblivion
It's taken almost as a given that any film shot in the Science Fiction, Action or Fantasy genres should make extensive use of CGI special effects not only for effect but as a substitution for the absence of an interesting or functional plot, shallow storyline or none-existence of effective character development. With Joseph Kosinski's film Oblivion the use of CGI is not excessive and remains well within the context and sci fi environment setting of the story. The film has a tight central cast of only six characters with Tom Cruise, Morgan Freeman, Olga Kurylenko, Andrea Riseborough in central roles with supporting acting roles being Melissa Leo and Nikolaj Coster-Walder. Kosinski co-wrote, produced and directed this film which was funded/distributed by Universal Pictures.and shot in various locations in Iceland and the United States.

In voiceover narrative, the story is set in the year 2077 and Tech 49 Jack Harper (Tom Cruise) is one of the last drone repair technicians stationed on Earth. The planet was nearly destroyed sixty years ago, during a war against a race of alien invaders known as Scavengers ("Scavs"). The Scavs destroyed the moon, causing massive earthquakes and tsunamis on the earth's surface, before launching their own invasion. Only through the use of nuclear weapons were the Scavs defeated, which left most of the planet irradiated and uninhabitable. The few surviving humans temporarily migrated to a large space station called the "Tet", a massive tetrahedral space station that orbits the Earth, powered using energy harvested on Earth by giant ocean-borne power stations that generate fusion power from seawater. From the "Tet "most of the survivors have  migrated to Titan, one of Saturn's moons abandoning the Earth. From Tower 49, a base standing above the remains of the northeastern United states, Jack and his work partner and lover Victoria "Vika" Olsen (Andrea Riseborough) operate as a team to maintain the autonomous heavily armed drones that defend the power stations from the remaining elements of the defeated Scav army. They receive their daily work orders via electronic communications from Sally (Melissa Leo), their mission commander, who is stationed on the Tet. 

But all is not what its seems and Jack will be confronted by a completely different reality when he actually meets the 'Scavs' and their leader (Morgan Freeman) and realises the greatest threat is the 'Tet' itself.

Oblivion performed modestly in the US box office taking on $89M in sales against a $120M cost but enjoyed much stronger ticket sales overseas bringing the film's total income to $286M. It is a visually impacting film with a specially written music score by French electronic music band M83 to complement the expansive dimensions of the film. Kosinski is best known for his other film work 'Tron: Legacy' for Disney and visual effects for the 'Halo 3' game.
Jack (Tom Cruise) watches as a repaired drone takes off - Oblivion