Periodic Reporting for period 1 - SPECTACLECONOMICS (Financing Festivals, Music and Theatre: Real Expenses and Fictional Expenditures in France between the Sixteenth and Seventeenth Centuries)
Période du rapport: 2021-10-01 au 2023-09-30
The other objective was to highlight some historiographical problems (such as the methods of financing civic and court performances, and finally the motivations behind these productions) and bring them to the attention of the scholarly European community of all possible disciplinary fields involved in the study of Renaissance and Early Modern spectacles, including theater historians, musicologists, economic historians, art historians, historians of the medieval and modern ages, and literary scholars. Succeeding in the stated objective would have brought with it another consequence: namely, to stimulate interest in and the study of the economic management of the performing arts in the period in question, investigating other fundamental aspects, such as the processes of production and modes of consumption (and thus the relationship between financing bodies and their ‘audiences’), and finally on the birth and evolution of the professions related to the performing arts.
https://www.lestudium- ias.com/events/economics-spectacle-funding-ephemeral-arts-early-modern-europe. She is also preparing an article and a methodological introduction for the proceedings from the conference.
At the same time, a better understanding of this topic in the past could have a positive impact on the performing arts economics in the present: dissemination of the results to practitioners could lead to the identification of strategies to implement economic development and investment in contemporary performing arts, engaging performers, actors, musicians, dancers, composers, directors and artists to disseminate knowledge of Renaissance and Baroque theater to the general public through historically informed performances, concerts and plays.