Logo The Grotowski Year 2009
The Grotowski Institute
  • Polish
  • English
Supporters
City of Wroclaw


Wroclaw European Capital of Culture 2016


the Ministry of Science and Higher Education
Peter Brook: With Grotowski. Theatre is Just a Form

With Grotowski. Theatre is Just a FormTitle: With Grotowski. Theatre is Just a Form
Author: Peter Brook
Edited by: Georges Banu and Grzegorz Ziolkowski with Paul Allain
Date: January 2009
ISBN: 978-83-923635-9-0
Dimensions: 120x190 mm
Paperback: 120 pages, 1 black and white photograph
Price: 15 € 


Fragment of the book: PDF

Publication realised in collaboration with the British Grotowski Project (www.britishgrotowski.co.uk) supported by the Arts and Humanities Research Council and the University of Kent.
Supported by The Board of the City of Wroclaw


‘From early on, Grotowski recognised the double nature of forms. They conceal, but they also protect the life that is within. For this reason, he set up his own barriers, so as to conceal and protect the work he was doing with his dedicated companions in their well-guarded private space. When he eliminated spectators from his theatre, and when he refused to allow writers to describe and evaluate his explorations, this was to prevent mere descriptions from replacing the vivid life of actions. And yet Grotowski, a great reader, an encyclopedic man of learning, knew well how essential in human life it is for understanding to be passed on, for there to be a chain of transmission. His quest was not only in a personal need to force the crust of the earth to open so as to reveal the blazing core hidden in its depths. It was also, in his own chosen field of theatre, to guide others, to help them discover in exact, detailed and repeatable ways what laws, what practices make this deep inner penetration possible. In this way, he could develop a craft that could be transmitted directly, from person to person, a craft that examined the relationship between impulse and action, and made their coming together possible. He carefully separated himself from his explorations, so that they could continue one day without him’. (an extract from the book)