Mask Making (Historical Context and Time line)
Introduction
Masks were first used in theatre to enhance the actors expressions
and acting, enlarging the facial features. Theatre masks were used in ancient
Roman and Greek dramas to portray character. Theatre masks are used as a symbol
of balance of emotions that theatre aims to strike.
ANCIENT GREECE 5th century BC
The masks that were
famously used in ancient Greece were employed to honour, worship and depict
their mythical gods. In ancient Greece
the progress from ritual to ritual-drama was continued in highly formed
theatrical representations. They were heavily made and of a size to enlarge the
actors presence, the Greek mask seems to have been designed to throw the voice
for example, they had built in microphone devices and by exaggeration of the
features, to make clear at a distance the precise nature of the character.
Greek actors were limited by convention to three speakers for each tragedy to
impersonate a number of different characters during the play simply by changing
masks and costume.
Middle Ages 12th -16th century
In plays dramatizing
portions of the Old and New Testaments, grotesques of all sorts, such as
devils, demons, dragons, and personifications of the seven deadly sins, were
brought to stage life by the use of masks.
Renaissance 15th century
The 15th-century
Renaissance in Italy witnessed the rise of a theatrical phenomenon that spread
rapidly to France, to Germany, and to England, where it maintained its
popularity into the 18th century. Comedies improvised from scenarios based upon
the domestic dramas of the ancient Roman comic playwrights “Plautus”
and Terence (186/185-159 BC) and upon situations drawn from
anonymous ancient Roman mimes flourished under the title of Commedia dell'
Arte. Adopting the Roman stock figures and situations to their own usage's, the
players of the Commedia were usually masked. Excellent pictorial records of
both commedia costumes and masks exist; some sketches show the characters of
“Arlecchino” and “Colombina” wearing black masks covering merely the eyes, from
which the later masquerade mask is certainly a development.
Modern Day (Entertainment,
Performance, film and television
Masks have been used almost universally to represent
characters in theatrical performances. Theatrical performances are a visual
literature of a transient, momentary kind. It is most impressive because it can
be seen as a reality; it expends itself by its very revelation. The mask
participates as a more enduring element, since its form is physical.
Conclusion
Over the years masks were used for expression and
characterisation in theatre. The kind of mask I want to do is a Renaissance age
mask.