Feb 7, 2017
Music

“Enthralling” – The London Evening Standard
An exceptional achievement” – The Guardian

A series of curricular, co-curricular, creative, and academic events around a movie screening of Carl Theodor Dreyer’s silent film La Passion de Jeanne d’Arc presented with live music by the Orlando Consort.

Voices Appeared: La Passion de Jeanne d’Arc and the Orlando Consort

“Voices Appeared: La Passion de Jeanne d’Arc and the Orlando Consort” is a live multimedia performance and historical reconstruction of Carl Theodor Dreyer’s 1928 silent film La Passion de Jeanne d’Arc. “Voices Appeared” features live musical accompaniment to the film, curated and performed by the Orlando Consort. Inspired by Joan of Arc’s gnomic description of angels appearing before her, “Voices Appeared” reconciles the silent film medium with Joan’s narrative experience of hearing voices. The project uses vocal works from the early part of the fifteenth century, when Joan was alive and active, providing historical context as well as musical commentary on her psyche while in captivity, especially as a gender and religious minority figure.

Cited as “simultaneously ravishing and reverential” by the Los Angeles Times and “enthralling” by The London Evening Standard, the Orlando Consort, formed in 1988 by the Early Music Network of Great Britain, is one of Europe’s most expert and consistently challenging groups performing repertoire from the years 1050 to 1550. Their work successfully combines captivating entertainment and fresh scholarly insight. The unique imagination and originality of their programming, together with their superb vocal skills, has marked the Consort out as the outstanding leaders of their field. More information at http://www.orlandoconsort.com/

“Voices Appeared”: a film screening of Theodor Dreyer’s silent film La Passion de Jeanne d’Arc with live performance by the Orlando Consort: March 30, 8:00 PM, Old Cabell Hall

Joan of Arc/Afterlives

The film screening is paired with a symposium entitled “Joan of Arc/Afterlives” that will explore the reception of Joan and the many roles Joan has played in world culture. Joan’s many lives have included playing the role of heretic and sexual ingénue, icon of the American feminist movement and symbol of the ultra right in France, victim of the patriarchal establishment and the face of the transgender movement. How can one individual of whom we know so little (and then only through court transcripts and rumor) fulfill so many modern desires? These roles and many others will be the subject of discussion during the symposium that will bring together internationally recognized specialists of Joan of Arc with members of the UVA community who will engage with the histories, mythologies, and representations of Joan from the vantage point of their own disciplines.

March 31st Symposium Schedule Here > 

The event will also feature flash seminars and other events geared to introduce undergraduates to the delightful strangeness of Joan of Arc’s historical and artistic afterlives.

“Voices Appeared” is sponsored by the Vice Provost for the Arts and the College of Arts and Sciences.  The collaboration between the McIntire Department of Music, Department of French and McIntire Department of Art is co-sponsored by the Institute of the Humanities and Global Cultures Department of English, Corcoran Department of History, Department of Religious Studies, Women, Gender & Sexuality, and American Studies Program.