Windsor Star

Designer earns praise

Quebec video artist awarded $100,000 Siminovitc­h Prize

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Quebec video artist and set designer Stéphanie Jasmin has won the $100,000 Siminovitc­h Prize in Theatre.

The jury praised the co-artistic director of Montreal’s UBU creative company for “beautiful and highly original visions.”

The 38-year-old gets $75,000 and the right to choose a protégé to receive $25,000. Jasmin chose emerging set designer Max- Otto Fauteux, with whom she has collaborat­ed on past UBU production­s.

Celebrated playwright and novelist Tomson Highway hosted an awards ceremony this week at the National Arts Centre in Ottawa. Canada’s most prestigiou­s theatre prize rotates on a three-year cycle to celebrate a director, playwright or designer whose work is considered “transforma­tive and influentia­l.”

Other finalists included Montreal-based sound designer and musician Alexander MacSween; Toronto-based designer Camellia Koo, who has worked in theatre, opera and dance; and Itai Erdal, the artistic director of the Vancouver’s Elbow Theatre and an award-winning lighting designer, writer and performer. They each receive $5,000.

Jasmin said she was grateful to be in such auspicious company and said the lucrative award will give her “wings to continue and to go further and further.

“It’s rare to have that kind of prize for mid-career recognitio­n,” Jasmin said Monday as she arrived in Ottawa for the gala. “Normally, a big prize like this would be for lifetime achievemen­t and I found that it’s so right to ( be awarded) when things begin to be interestin­g and you have more and more work and you experiment more and more. It’s a very beautiful time to have some encouragem­ent.”

Jasmin said she may use the prize money to realize a longtime dream to visit Japan, hoping it could inspire future multimedia works. Born in Neuville, Que., just outside Quebec City, Jasmin moved to Paris at age 19 to study art at the Ecole du Louvre, and then Montreal to study film at Concordia University. Jasmin said she sees her theatre work as a seamless integratio­n of both words and images, rather than separate elements that are made to fit together.

“It’s really, really connected for me — you have to work in a sort of (harmony) to be linked even to the breath of the actors on the stage who are speaking,” she said. And while technology has its place, it also has limits.

“We have nice tools now, it’s very accessible so we can play a lot with those but it’s not an end in itself. I have a vision first, and after that I find the right tools,” she said. “I’m interested in looking at the world and finding some details and some landscape that can be a little bit worked and edited, transforme­d. But it’s really (about) beginning with the reality for me.” Jasmin said this next generation of set designers have embraced technology and mixed-media in exciting ways that are transformi­ng the craft.

That includes viewing various elements of a stage production — such as lighting, video and set design — as inextricab­ly linked from the beginning of the design process, she said.

“I think it could be interestin­g because it will be more integrated.”

 ??  ?? Stéphanie Jasmin
Stéphanie Jasmin

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