
The Book of Lamentation
Alexander Plotnikov, Shahen Khandkaryan
Author reflects on Christian faith as a way of prosthetically replacing what has been lost: lost lands, a lost past, an utopia.
Language:Armenian, with Russian and English subtitles
Chronotope
The performance is based on the play Infrared by Ester Bol (Asya Voloshina) and is built around a single female monologue, voiced by three women from three different cultures, in three different languages.
At its core lies the search for common ground within the irreconcilable differences of languages and ways of perceiving the world. Crossing the borders of English, Farsi, Russian, and Armenian, the performance strives to move beyond language toward pure presence — the essence of theatre.
A recurring motif is the song Time to Smile, composed especially for the performance by composer Dmytro Saratsky. Sometimes amusing, sometimes irritating, sometimes wounding, it leads to a terrifying conclusion: we endlessly speak of peace and endlessly wage war, walking in circles that no one alone has the strength to stop.
Synopsis
A woman returns to a country at war (each monologue refers to a different war and a different time) to meet the man she loves. He has been sent to the front, and she understands that he is doomed. She goes to him with a single purpose — to conceive a child and carry him across the border within herself.

Dmitriy Volkostrelov
What if Tolstoy were remembered by road dust and leaves, ash and poplar fluff? Things that usually remain outside our field of attention, objects we encounter every day without ever considering that they might possess memory — and the ability to articulate it.
Language:Russian, with Armenian and English subtitles
19:30