argia.eus
INPRIMATU
Wooden bench
  • Today we are in a poetic reading about the scenario of the Oihaneder of Vitoria-Gasteiz. The topic to be discussed will be the last poem that has closed the book Ilfabeto, by Iñigo Astiz, and the performance of Mikel Ayerbe, in 'EITB Kultura'.
Marta Sendiu Zulaika @martasendiu 2020ko urtarrilaren 08a
Argazkia: DosPorDos
Argazkia: DosPorDos

Love, death, friendship and politics will be the main axes of the day. We will delve into the world of sensations and emotions. The Twenty-one poem is an essay that gathers “everything” or the world today. An attempt to understand this 21st century, composed of messages and codes.

The stage is dark and the small bank is illuminated by a spotlight. Ayerbe has appeared with an empty Coca-Cola plastic bottle, like a kid playing with an airplane. After circling the stage, Iñigo has started reciting the poem titled "Burubero". He tells us that the time of space and cosmonauts is over, that the century of particles has come and that the universe is in us.

The interpreter has begun to inflame the boat bought in Decathlon for 30 euros, while on the other side of the Mediterranean the narrator says that the same boat costs 300 €. Ayerbe has mounted the boat, yellow and black, and has been circling the spectators with infantile attitude.
“There are more dead people than I live, but no one is able to remember the names of all the dead and for now it is enough for me to think that they are more per cent.” With a personal reflection on death he has introduced the following theme. It says it's the century of percentages. Every day we see and hear thousands of data, it has shown the relationship between the data issuer and the data through some examples: “More than 50% of the population suffers a gap in mobile screen, a study conducted by mobile homes.”

He has insisted that it is the age of transfers, marketing and ideas, but he has insisted that it only relied on ideas, not ideas but in things. The performance has appeared with a cardboard box that could be from Ikea, has removed instructions and wooden plates from its interior and has started to assemble what will be a table.

Coca-Cola has been filled with cans with the table and the chair, and the little red boats have been taking more and more space on stage. The narrator has taken us to 2017, specifically to Erandio. You're drinking a Coca-Cola to test closed factories and cranes that are standing on the river bank. He wants to show that the kingdom of things is exhausted and realizes that he lives through the echo that things have left.

Ayerbe, on the mounted table, has placed the wooden bench that existed from the beginning and has placed several cans scattered around the stage, one on the other and next. He puts an empty glass on the top and starts to pour Coca-Cola inside. As the glass filled and overflowed, the sugary liquid spread across the ground as if it were a leap of water.

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