Originally published on PC Gamer by Gregory Moomjy.
From the outside, there’s nothing special about New York City’s Robert Miller Gallery. It looks like the rest of the galleries in Chelsea that you might expect to find under the High Line—a former railroad track turned park. Yet inside, these bright white walls witnessed an unexpected birth. Who would think that the cultural elites of the opera world would mingle with the cult of Minecraft to produce a show? On May 2, it happened—an opera played out in front of Minecraft projections.
The mastermind of this novel coupling is a new company, Bare Opera, which made its debut with Maurice Ravels’ L'enfant et les Sortilèges (The Child & The Enchantments), the operatic equivalent of Where The Wild Things Are and the Toy Story movies. The production’s set designer, artist Alexandra Posen and director Anthony Laciura, the opera singer\butler of Boardwalk Empire fame, thought Minecraft was an ideal vehicle with which to show the story in a modern light.
In interviews on Bare Opera’s website, Posen has said that she was drawn to Minecraft for its ability to reflect a child’s darker side in a modern way. “The Lego-like land of Minecraft is a digital gaming space in which children escape to create, imagine and build,” said Posen, “but also to destroy, crash, explode and tear down.”
The Child & the Enchantments tells the story of a child who throws a tantrum and wrecks everything inside his house when his mother forces him to sit and do his homework. The broken objects—chairs, grandfather clocks, storybooks, and even his math homework—come to life and take revenge. They chase the child outside where things don’t get any better, as he is now in the grip of the backyard animals that he has abused for years. It is only when the boy bandages a wounded squirrel that the objects realize that the child has some good in him. It’s an opera about a fantastical world in which children both create and destroy.
In order to create this production, Posen collaborated with Voxelbox and the artist Kupo. Posen said, “Kupo expressed her passion for this project beautifully when she told me about Voxelbox: ‘Our goal is to create worlds where you feel as if they're alive and living in their own right. Making worlds where there are tiny details that you might not even notice until your 3rd or 4th time seeing the project is what helps make something really come to life. Being able to hear people notice all the small things that go into our work is what makes it rewarding after spending days just fine combing details.’”
The Minecraft projections used in the production are equally beautiful and ominous, with pastoral scenes contrasting with lava and fire. When the child falls off a chair after his tantrum, his Minecraft avatar goes from normal size to miniature, illustrating that he’s at the mercy of his surroundings.
The run, which lasted from May 2nd to the 4th, completely sold out. This was a double bill where The Child & The Enchantments came second after Debussy's L'enfant prodigue (The Prodigal Son). Intermission featured a special snack consisting of sour worms, gummi bears, goldfish, and orange soda—all items that according to Min Lew, Bare Opera’s general director, “were meant to remind the audience of childhood” before seeing the opera.
The audience on opening night was a refreshing mix of all ages, and everyone seemed to enjoy the blend of Minecraft and opera. “I am excited by the way that the project reaches into several unchartered territories," said Posen. "It both stretches Opera audiences to reevaluate the way that visual language can dialogue with music and stage, and it challenges the gaming community to welcome an unprecedented kind of storytelling and poetic beauty. Artistically, for me, it has opened my mind to future of art in an increasingly gamified and digital world.”