WHAT WE DO
Volcano’s goal is to make the world a more resilient, just and caring place through what we as arts workers can imagine, through the actions we take, through the respect we show for one another, and through the art we foster into existence.
Our responsibility is to walk a path towards societal, cultural and ethical transformation in all we do: our art-making, our training, our mentoring, our day-to-day activities as a company.
In practice, we work experimentally, collaboratively, and with an eye to making art that transcends borders, boundaries, orthodoxies. We offer training, mentorships, and various supports to our fellow arts-workers.
Our work is, and always has been, modern. It deals with race, politics, history – all the currents present in the world around us. We create carefully over long development periods, and we keep projects alive through local remounts, national and international touring, and, occasionally, through digital platforms.
We value collective effort - and so we value the people we work with for their imaginations, their excellence in craft, and for all the experiences, vantage points and histories they bring with them. We value the creation of space where art-makers can feel free to bring themselves fully to their art-making. We value diversity in craft and culture.
We understand that we’re all in this together.
HISTORY
ROSS MANSON ANSWERS THE QUESTION “HOW DID VOLCANO BEGIN?"
I trained in Science initially (BSc Biology from Mt. Allison) and then went on to do a Masters in Drama, with a focus on Directing (Royal Holloway College, U of London). After that, I was too terrified to direct. I’d learned enough to become hyper-aware of my own failings. So I fell back on the thing I had already been doing for years: acting. I moved to Toronto from my hometown - Sackville, New Brunswick - waited tables for a year, then began to get roles. Quite a few roles. I ended up working in most of the major regionals, as well as with the usual suspects in Toronto. After about a decade of this, I became aware - in a visceral way - of the stylistic limitations of mainstream theatre in English Canada. I had been acting literally across the country, and had almost never had an experience outside of rushed naturalism (rehearsal periods were always short - 2 to 4 weeks). So I often found myself acting in new plays that were not really ready to open, and which, after they closed, were too often forgotten. Then I was offered a part in a German play for a festival at Toronto’s Harbourftront arts complex: Big and Little by Botho Strauss. The design and direction team were from Munich (the director was Sigrid Herzog, who now runs the acting training program for the Munich Kammerspiele). My mind was blown. The style was not naturalistic. The direction was outside anything I had experienced. The design was about as far from the kitchen sink as one could get. I felt out of my depth and fascinated.
And so a seed was planted. I realized - not in an academic way, but in an embodied way - that theatre could operate with different rules. I applied for an apprenticeship in Germany and got it. This gave me a year away from the acting life, and allowed by mind to engage with what I might want to do on the Canadian stage. I saw a lot of work and read and thought. When I returned to Toronto, I directed an equity showcase production of Woyzeck (my own translation). My scientific training suddenly seemed applicable - researching and experimenting were skills that transferred. The design team from Woyzeck followed me to Volcano’s first show, The Third Land. Through doing - I began to form an aesthetic: make work slowly, carefully, and in stages. Keep it alive past its premiere whenever possible. Let the work determine the time it needs to come into existence. Through collaboration, find a new language for each project. Be alert to accidents - they are often useful. Be ready to move either slowly or quickly. Create work that is just beyond your grasp.