Agnese Cornelio

my home
my news

participant contact info

Italy

page tools

share / save this page
get permalink

a.pt menu


a.pt home
a.pt menu
a.pt news
a.pt projects
a.pt participants

a.pt partners

a.passa.s

Agnese Cornelio


Born in Bologna, Italy.
After some studies at the University of Bologna in Theater and Communications sciences, she attended the National Academy of Dramatic Arts as Theatre Director. After that she was one year in Berlin to study at the University of the Art and at the Actors School "Ernst Busch".
She war director assistent and director at the Theatre of Bale and at the Kammerspiele of Munich.
In Bale she directed the swiss debut of Blackbird (2006) by David Harrower, and of the Storyboard/Film Amore e rabbia (2005), adapted from a screenplay of Pier Paolo Pasolini.
At the Kammerspiele in Munich, she continued her directorial work on the theme of politics and on the boundary between the fictional character and the biography of the Actors. Terrormum (2007) was a play about the results of German '68 and RAF, staged as a family conflict between a father and son, depicting the ideology of political demonstrations and the hiring of demonstrators.  In A Stubborn Woman (2008)  written by Stefano Massini from the work of Anna Politkovskaja she developed of a document for this documentary narrative.
As assistent director she worked with a.o.: Thomas Ostermeier, Luk Perceval, Johann Simons, Stefan Kaegi (Rimini Protokoll), Stefan Kimmig, Lars Ole Walburg und Laurent Chetouane.
At the Internationales Forum of the Festival Theatertreffen 2009 she worked about Framing Reality with the Performance Group Gob Squad.
At present Agnese Cornelio partecipates at APT - advanced performance training - in Antwerp, Belgium with the project Mastorna and she will direct at the Nuovo Teatro Nuovo (Neapel, Italy) the performances: Incendi (Schorched) by Wajdi Mouawad and the solo la fame by Linda Dalisi after Simone Weil
.


my projects

THE GAZE 2.0



what is democracy

Agnese Cornelio -- Sat 24 Jul 2010 -- 0 reactions

A film by Oliver Ressler, 118 min., 2009

“What is democracy?” is not one question, but is actually two questions. On the one hand, the question relates to conditions of the current, parliamentary representative democracies that are scrutinized critically in this project. On the other hand, the question traces different approaches to what a more democratic system might look like and which organizational forms it could take.

The project asked “What is democracy?” to numerous activists and political analysts in 15 cities around the world, in Amsterdam, Berkeley, Berlin, Bern, Budapest, Copenhagen, Moscow, New York, Rostock, San Francisco, Sydney, Taipei, Tel Aviv, Thessaloniki and Warsaw.
The interviews have been recorded on video since January 2007. Even though all interviewees were asked the same question, the result was a multiplicity of different perspectives and viewpoints from people living in states that are usually labeled “democracies”.

This pool of interviews builds the basis for a film in eight parts, which (re)presents a kind of global analysis about the deep political crises of the Western democratic model. In one video, Adam Ostolski (Warsaw) explains that originally “the modern idea of democracy was connected to the notion of progress” and parliamentary states “had some tendency to become more and more democratic by including new types of political actors, such as workers and women. […] But since the 1980s, since the neoliberal trend in politics and economy we have a regression of democracy.” Lize Mogel (New York) notes that situation changed in such a way, that when you think about representative democracy today “you are not necessarily talking about individuals being represented, but more capital being represented.” Nikos Panagos (Thessaloniki) even argues that “representation and democracy are incompatible terms. Therefore, under no circumstances could the present system be called a democracy. It is just a sophisticated form of oligarchy.” While some subjects in the videos elaborate their ideas of direct democracy or decision-making processes of indigenous communities, David McNeill (Sydney) raises the issue of whether it makes sense “to continue contesting for the right to own and define the term democracy” or whether “it has been so corrupted and polluted by the conservatives that claimed ownership of it, that it is better to be surrendered.”

The film discusses the contested notion of “democracy”, which is misused for the maintenance of order by those in power, while at the same time “democracy” still represents an ideal hundreds of million people in the South desperately want to achieve. Today it seems almost impossible to be against “democracy”, even though it is getting emptier and emptier. A potential strategy could try to fill what is called “democracy” with new meaning. In this sense, the film presents a multi-layered discourse on democracy, which expresses a broad field of opinions that go beyond the borders of nation-states and continents.

The film has eight parts with the following titles: “Rethinking representation”, “Politics of exclusions”, “Secrecy instead of democratic transparency”, “New democracies?”, “Is representative democracy a democracy?”, “Direct democracy”, “Reclaiming Indigenous politics” and “Should we consign the Western democracy model to the ash heap of history?”


http://www.ressler.at/what_is_democracy_film/
more news items