No folly, no mendacity is exempt from Kraus gaze.
Marjorie Perloff Sengl expressly states that she is not in a position to offer a quick solution for all the injustices of our times. But her works urge us to cast a more open and more empathic view of our environment, and that would already be a very commendable first step. Acid Rain Certainly eye-catching. Publishers Weekly The Last Days of Mankind is, naturally enough, about the First World War, and about all war, but it is also about what our civilization is and about who we are. That is why, like all great works of art, it is, and will always remain, a 'contemporary' work. Those questions; who we are, what are our beliefs and values, what do we stand for, are as urgent today as they were in 191418 and its aftermath. Kraus, like the other three great writers he stands beside (Aristophanes, Juvenal, Swift) [ ...] is the voice we need to hear. Michael Russell, author of City of Shadows and City of Lies [ Deborah Sengls] stunning display of 176 taxidermied rats as actors presenting forty-four scenes from The Last Days of Mankind deliver[ s] a bracing test of [ the plays] potential. [ ] The preparation, costuming and posing of the rats as well as the meticulous attention to miniature props facsimiles of period newspapers, a factory owners top hat and bow tie, the sample cases of traveling salesmen, infantry rifles reflect a deep knowledge of Kraus text and disciplined commitment to an unconventional representation of its meaning. The powerful effect of this large assemblage of monochromatic tableaux is heightened by juxtaposition with the preparatory drawings, which were exhibited next to them and are beautifully reproduced in the catalogue. These delicate line drawings all use color, sparingly but pointedly, so that the viewer is inevitably drawn to a comparison with the corresponding tableaux. Seen up close, as they are in the catalogue photographs, which include some unsettling enlargements, every white rats cocked head, gaping mouth, or crooked claw points back to the linguistic physiognomy of the speakers of a war-contaminated language who people Kraus drama. Leo Lensing, "Karl Kraus at War", Times Literary Supplement When the age died by its own hand, that hand was Karl Kraus. Bertolt Brecht Modern fables for adults. Widewalls The initial reaction to seeing the white rats wearing the tiny corsets and holding rat-sized guns results in deeply conflicted emotions. Cuteness and horror collide in these miniature scenes. [ ...] Sengl continues the legacy of acid-tongued Austrian artists from Kraus and Kafka to more contemporary voices like Thomas Bernhard and Elfriede Jelinek. Her adaptation of Kraus war epic, The Last Days of Mankind, makes it more accessible to audiences and helps to render the experimental play into a more comprehensible whole.
New York Journal of Books