top of page

The Martin E. Segal Theater Center presents

STATIONS + LA FEMME À LA CAFETIÈRE + LA MORT DE MOLIÈRE

Robert Wilson

At the Segal Theatre Film and Performance Festival 2026

Screening Information

This program will be screened on May 31 at 5:30 PM, and June 2 at 6:30 PM, at Anthology Film Archives

Please note that these screenings are ticketed and require prior registration at the Anthology Film Archives website.

Country

United States / Germany

Language

English, French, German

Running Time

90

minutes

Year of Release

1982 / 1989 / 1995

About The Film

A triple program of video works by Robert Wilson, spanning three distinct creative phases.

STATIONS (1982, 56 min)
An enigmatic and hauntingly vivid work in which Wilson envisions the inner life of an eleven-year-old boy — his daydreams and fantasies rendered as a universe both magical and sinister. The tape's pivotal image is a young boy looking through a large kitchen window, which becomes the portal for a series of dramatic, often startling inner visions. Fire, metal, wind, glass, and water serve as points of departure for elegant pictorial compositions and evocative metaphors. Unfolding without dialogue or spoken language, STATIONS articulates the fear and mystery of a child's interior world and his relation to the outside world beyond. A characteristic Wilson work: precise, controlled, deeply strange.

LA FEMME À LA CAFETIÈRE (1989, 7 min)
In this brief and exquisite collaboration, Robert Wilson and dancer Suzushi Hanayagi bring to life Paul Cézanne's painting La Femme à la Cafetière. The work exemplifies Wilson's ability to translate a static visual image into living tableau — a transformation of painting into performance, flattening time and depth into a new kind of presence.

LA MORT DE MOLIÈRE (1995, 24 min)
A collaboration between Robert Wilson and playwright Heiner Müller in which they imagine the death of Molière — representing it as a series of tableaux, with text passages recited by Müller himself. "Cinema watches Death at work," wrote Wilson of the piece. Müller's commentary adds another layer: "The poem watches a dying man at work, his name is Molière. The poem is not a film. The film watches an actor playing a dying man called Molière." The piece sits at the intersection of theater, film, and literary elegy — a meditation on mortality and artistic legacy made by two of the defining figures of 20th-century avant-garde performance.

Total running time: approximately 90 minutes.

Director / Artist: Robert Wilson
LA MORT DE MOLIÈRE: In collaboration with Heiner Müller
Distributed by Electronic Arts Intermix (EAI)

About The Artist(s)

Robert Wilson (October 4, 1941 – July 31, 2025) was an American director, playwright, and visual artist who fundamentally reshaped experimental theater over more than five decades. Born in Waco, Texas, he studied at the University of Texas before moving to New York, where he trained at Brooklyn's Pratt Institute and founded the Byrd Hoffman School of Byrds, a performance collective that became the incubator for his early landmark works.

Wilson's theater — often described as a "theater of imagery" — is distinguished by its radical reimagining of theatrical time and space, its use of exquisitely composed light and movement in place of conventional narrative, and its synthesis of visual art, music, dance, and text into unified stage pictures. His work sits at a radical distance from naturalism: performers move with ritualized, slow precision, language is treated as sound as much as meaning, and the stage itself functions as a living painting.

His breakthrough came with Deafman Glance (1970), a six-hour silent opera that electrified Paris audiences and prompted the Surrealist poet Louis Aragon to describe Wilson as the fulfillment of Surrealism's deepest aspirations. Throughout the 1970s Wilson created a series of epic-scale works that redefined theatrical duration, culminating in his collaboration with composer Philip Glass on Einstein on the Beach (1976), a five-hour opera that premiered at the Avignon Festival and later played the Metropolitan Opera. It is widely regarded as one of the defining works of 20th-century performance.

Over the following decades Wilson collaborated with an extraordinary range of artists — Tom Waits, William S. Burroughs, Heiner Müller, Lou Reed, Susan Sontag, Laurie Anderson, Willem Dafoe, and Marina Abramovic, among many others — while also directing canonical texts by Shakespeare, Beckett, Wagner, Ibsen, and Ionesco. He staged productions at the world's leading theaters and opera houses, including the Brooklyn Academy of Music, the Berliner Ensemble, the Thalia Theater Hamburg, La Scala, and the Salzburg Festival.

Alongside his theater work, Wilson was a prolific maker of video art. Beginning in 1978 he produced a series of innovative television works including VIDEO 50, DEAFMAN GLANCE, and STATIONS, transposing his theatrical visual language into the moving image. He also created an extensive series of Video Portraits of figures including Lady Gaga, Brad Pitt, and Mikhail Baryshnikov.

In 1991 Wilson founded The Watermill Center on Long Island, a "laboratory for performance" housed in a former Western Union research facility on the edge of the Shinnecock Reservation, which continues to host residencies, exhibitions, and productions. His drawings, sculptures, and installations are held in major collections worldwide, including the Metropolitan Museum of Art, MoMA, the Whitney Museum, and the Centre Pompidou in Paris.

Wilson received numerous honors throughout his life, including Guggenheim and Rockefeller fellowships, the Drama Desk Award, Obie Awards, and a 1986 Pulitzer Prize nomination. He died on July 31, 2025, at the age of 83.

Get in touch with the artist(s)

and follow them on social media

Find out all that’s happening at
Segal Center Film Festival on Theatre and Performance (FTP) 2026
by following us on
FacebookTwitterInstagram and YouTube
See the full festival schedule here

© 2026

Martin E. Segal Theatre Center, The CUNY Graduate Center

365 Fifth Avenue, New York, NY 10016-4309 | ph: 212-817-1860 | mestc@gc.cuny.edu

Untitled design (7).jpg
bottom of page