Top 34 Quotes & Sayings by Haris Pasovic

Explore popular quotes and sayings by a Bosniak director Haris Pasovic.
Last updated on November 8, 2024.
Haris Pasovic

Haris Pašović is a Bosnian theatre director. Over the course of his career, he has also worked as a playwright, producer, choreographer, performer, and designer. He is best known for his productions of Wedekind's “Spring Awakening”. He is the artistic leader of the East West Theatre Company in Sarajevo and tenured Professor of Directing at the Academy of Performing Arts in Sarajevo.

To come to the theatre, people have to make arrangements, change their clothes, find a babysitter, find a parking space - and they don't come after hard work to hear a lecture.
Theatre, for me, is about providing to the audience a new and exciting experience.
My company is called East-West Theatre precisely because Sarajevo is this city on the border between East and West, the place where the Great Mosque and the Catholic Cathedral and the Serbian Orthodox Cathedral stand almost within touching distance of each other.
Life is not just food, it's something spiritual. — © Haris Pasovic
Life is not just food, it's something spiritual.
We need the daring visions. To go to theatre must be different than to go to shopping. We adventure together, we journey through the mindful and emotional landscapes, we create together an event, unique and unrepeatable.
I work in theater, so I am always working in front of empty chairs. They represent a future presence. They are never just chairs.
Europe is a much more complex historical, cultural, and geographical concept than is envisaged in the reduced approach by the European Union.
Yes, I am mad - like the Marquis de Sade was mad, like Giordano Bruno was mad, like Antonin Artaud was mad.
'Hamlet' is a universal story that concerns us all. These issues do not concern only Muslims, but all people equally, showing that we all share the same problems regardless of religion, nation and culture.
In war, everything changes. You are very selective of what you do because everything you do can be the last thing you do in your life.
The U.S. Declaration of Independence enshrines the right to life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness. Alas, that is not the case everywhere in the world.
Football is probably the most democratic human activity. It belongs to everyone... to poor and rich, illiterate and educated, to all races, cultures, and nations.
People come to the theatre in search of a real encounter with other human beings, and we must give them what they come for. Our capacity to do that is the measure of being human. And if the price is that we sometimes say something not very pleasant - well, that's precisely why people want us, in the end: because we speak the truth.
Art can articulate new ideas.
The 21st century is significantly different from the 20th century. The old models will not hold anymore. More and more, we are one people on Earth. We need to share our problems.
Art is a primal need - even under siege, especially under siege.
We realised that art, theatre, and music in Sarajevo were resistance at the deepest level.
The more film festivals, theatrical shows, and music performances and visual arts we have, the less chances there are for war. Art is hope, and it is found in hope, and that's why we need to share our experiences and cherish art.
I think we are slowly killing liberty, creativity, intelligent thinking; it's as if we are being led into a world that is like a huge shopping centre, with a sort of anaesthesia about everything except the choice of goods in front of us.
The meaning of art in a time of suffering, a time of war, is much more intense. People are more focused.
Art is freedom. If we don't have that element, we don't feel human anymore. Art is not decoration or a function. Before all that, art is art. This connection to meaning - our inner, intuitive knowledge - is something.
There's no real theatre without taking risks.
Many have asked me, 'Why have a film festival in the middle of a war?' But they have it backwards. The question is, 'Why have a war in the middle of a film festival?'
Every time has its own 'Hamlet.'
Art has to be able to match life, to respond to the ever-changing forms of the world, to electrify the audience.
War and peace-making, human rights, humanitarian issues have become industries, but nobody looks closely at human greed, at the arms industry and the manufacture of landmines. Art has to take a wider view. The problems of Ireland are my problems, too.
The industry of political conflict is the biggest industry in Bosnia, and it is still not exhausted. What is needed is to replace these two industries - the industry of political conflict, the industry of human rights - with normal, creative walks of life.
Individual acts have made Europe a civilized place and are key to its development. We must not forget it. — © Haris Pasovic
Individual acts have made Europe a civilized place and are key to its development. We must not forget it.
I grew up in adoration of writers like Hemingway, George Orwell, Anna Akhmatova, and that has always been my idea about the artist - that you have to be a brave and freedom-loving person.
People have to have food for their souls.
I learned a lot about Ottoman court, and it was very Shakespearian in essence. Stories like the one in 'Hamlet' did happen several times in the 500 years of Ottoman history.
My company, East West, was founded on the premise that people need to group together and not be xenophobic, parochial, or provincial.
Culture is a part of basic human nature, of deep humanity.
My theatre is not a conventional one. It is bold, serious, funny, confronting. It is anything but boring.
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