HEINZ BAUT

Georg Traber
rue
HEINZ BAUT
© Traberproduktion
Year of creation : 1998 - currently on tour
Duration : 220 min
Target audience : All audiences
without specific language
Type : Fixed | indoor & outdoor
Dance, Performance, Urban installation, Participative, Theater, Object theater
HEINZ BAUT A SKYWARD-REACHING QUEST FOR KNOWLEDGE An 8mm-thick piece of flax cord hangs from a sack lying outside on the ground or on the floor of a room at least 10m high. A clutter of 47 3-metre long and 45mm-thick ashwood poles, tapered at both ends, lie strewn all around. In the midst of the clutter, three poles roped together with flax cord at their centres rise above the sack to form a tripod. HEINZ climbs up the tripod and lingers a moment, squatting on the intersection where the three poles meet. Leaning down from his perch, he picks up the pole lying closest to him on the ground and tugs the flax cord from the sack, from which he cuts a piece 1.5m long. He then fixes the pole vertically to one of the tripod’s skyward pointing legs and attaches another pole from the heap to it, thus connecting the tripod leg to the ground. Propped up with one pole bound firmly to another, a structure gradually develops to form a tower reaching skywards. HEINZ proves himself to be an excellent climber as he glides up and down in his labyrinth of poles, and with dexterity and surefootedness, over and again he tests the tower's structure and its strength as it progresses upwards from the ground. HEINZ interrupts his work three times to eat an apple, and by the third pause the tower has reached its peak. Although every tower ever built may differ in form, towers not yet built and those erected in the past all obey the same enduring principle. On the day when the ultimate tower will be built, HEINZ will go on upwards from its peak. In the meantime, while waiting for that day to come, he patiently detaches pole by pole, leans them on the tripod and throws the cord on a pile beside the tower. A few hours later, once HEINZ regains the ground and walks away, all that’s left is a heap of cord and a collection of ashwood poles stacked together to form a cone.

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