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Inter- și transdisciplinaritatea cercetării artistice

The objectives of artistic research include the promotion of works and creations through specific working methods that complement the methods of scientific research. Interdisciplinarity is a collaborative approach that integrates the skills of scientists and artists from different fields, leveraging the products of science and artistic creations. This involves the transfer of methods between disciplines, without dissolving their boundaries, stimulating thematic synergies and developing a “binocular” perspective about the world. Thus, the collaboration of researchers is favored, facilitating the transition from hypothesis to conceptualization and widening the area of analysis, with impact in various fields. The arts, in particular, enable new, sensitive and innovative approaches to research. The transdisciplinary approach uses concepts and methods with their own internal logic, overcoming traditional disciplinary boundaries and proposing new methods of knowledge and transmission of ideas. In transdisciplinary artistic research, the unity of knowledge and the involvement of various categories of specialists (artists, critics, theorists and practitioners) are pursued, stimulating innovation and exploring creativity. Defining and valuing creative activities involves a complex process of establishing artistic research directions, and interdisciplinarity and transdisciplinarity contribute to the creation of an environment of collaboration and promote the exchange of ideas. This interdisciplinary and transdisciplinary framework ensures a continuous evolution of knowledge and creation, demonstrating that the synergy between the arts and sciences can lead to innovative discoveries and a deeper understanding of our world.

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Resurecția Antigonei

It is said that some works never die, through their meanings and validity, through the actuality of there depiction of a humanity which remains, now and always, the same. If so, then Antigone is one of the most suitable choices. Both through the general human attitude that the paradigmatic conflict of the tragic depicts – where “both sides of the opposition, considered for themselves, are justified, while on the other hand each of them can realize the true positive content of the goal and its character only by denying and harming the other side”, as Hegel states in Lectures on Aesthetics -, as well as by the necessity of an answer to a problem beyond the artistic field, in our very current existence: namely, war. From this point of view, re-reading Antigone in the key of a contemporary perspective could give us the opportunity to confirm the values and actuality of the ancient Greek dramatist. But not only that. In a way it is like opening a Pandora’s Box, one originating in ancient Greece. Besides the fact that it had laid the foundations for the debate about the morality of the city and the individual`s “despair” of ethical origin, it seems that it also deals in an exhaustive manner with the topic and implications of war – a radical event of the city, which enshrines a very specific relationship in history, both at individual and at state levels, and which arises from the discursive mediation of a narrative that is also our object of study.

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Dumitru Solomon și teatrul de idei (I)

In the early years of communism, Romanian drama encountered major difficulties due to censorship and political control. Great writers, such as Camil Petrescu and Victor Eftimiu, produced mediocre plays, aligned with socialist realism. Likewise, Lucia Demetrius and Aurel Baranga wrote pieces in a socialist style, but rarely ignored official ideology. Part of a select few, Teodor Mazilu, with Fools under the moonlight, drew attention to the abuses of the totalitarian system, in an aestheticized, masked manner. In 1965, Nicolae Ceaușescu imposed a directive for realistic and optimistic art. In the 1970s and 1980s, censorship intensified, culminating in the scandal of the staging of Gogol’s play The Inspector General, directed by Lucian Pintilie, at the “Lucia Sturdza Bulandra” Theater, which was quickly banned after only three performances. In this context, Dumitru Solomon’s dramaturgy focused on dialectics and selfknowledge. His theater, characterized by polemical dialogue and the effects of parody, sought to confront clichés and incite self-reflection. His plays emphasize how dramas transform actions into history and people into characters, reflecting Brecht’s theory of social transformability. The difference between historicism (related to Marxism and the relativity of truths) and historicity (with a focus on a continuous present) is emphasized. In general, Dumitru Solomon believed in uncompromising theater and in performances that do not distort the original message of the dramatic author. In his opinion, it is necessary to balance the comic and dramatic elements, by involving the audience in an active dialogue. At the same time, Dumitru Solomon considered metaphor as essential in theater, through which the relationship between reality and the abstract is explored. The author also insisted on the moral dimension of stage art, stating that theater must interpret reality, not imitate it. In this way, a theater of ideas and debate was promoted, essential for the development of the consciousness of the spectators. With the help of the metaphor, which connects the dream state with reality, utopian ideals are explored, but also the truth about people, with the aim of maintaining a balance between the self and the world.

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