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—— Madison
—— D.VIEW
Today, stage art is increasingly inseparable from one element: the projector. Projectors not only overcome the limitations of stage space design but also greatly expand the boundaries of artistic expression, enriching the audience's sensory experience and becoming an indispensable innovative tool for stage art.
This performance, through the interplay of light, shadow, song, and dance, vividly tells the dramatic story of two young Tujia people, Xilan and Kapu, who fall in love and eventually marry. The stage design combines both ethnic characteristics and a modern feel, featuring two clusters of stilt houses in the foreground.
To create a deeper sense of stage perspective and a sense of progression, two gauze screens are used as projection surfaces for the main perspective at the center of the stage, switching according to the plot. The image remains clear and vibrant even when the two screens switch, thanks to the projector's lens memory function, which quickly returns to the preset projection size and focus from its current position.