Friday, August 17, 2012

video: when the body does leave a trace

by just being and moving not by touching.. It is pretty rudimentary and not too inspiring but it shows what's possible, potentially. Only I think other people have done it better.
hand gesture drawing machine from Paul Ferragut on Vimeo.

link: kinetic drawing tool

images: William Forsythe / Hypothetical Stream choreography (1997)

For the dance company of Daniel Larrieu

















source for both images & great resources: http://sarma.be/oralsite/pages/William_Forsythe_on_Scores/

images: Tiepolo

William Forsythe speaks about Tiepolo's drawings being positioned in space, with no up, no down. Accessible from any direction. I haven't yet found a really suitable example to illustrate his point, but here is a test..


flying cherubs

I can only suspect that William Forsythe could have used any number of artist's drawings as a starting position for his choreography of Hypothetical Stream in 1997. William Forsuthe mentions how the drawings have no up or down and can be entered from any direction. I can not actually find a lot of evidence of Tiepolo drawing in that way specifically. I think it is very likely that a lot of sketches of other artists have this quality, too. But below is a good example of the directionless quality that Forsythe mentioned and used as a starting point to create a choreography for 8 dancer's.













Giovanni Battista Tiepolo (1696–1770)
Three Studies of Bacchus
Pen and brown ink, brown wash, over black chalk
13 x 10 13/16 inches (333 x 275 mm)
Gift of J. P. Morgan, Jr.; IV, 117a



*************************************************************************************

and then I found this, totally off topic but also by Tiepolo:






Thursday, August 16, 2012

videos: William Forsythe / Laban model / backbone of my essay!

I can't quite believe the luck that I found these:
Improvisation Technologies excerpt from volker kuchelmeister on Vimeo.

Improvisation Technologies Laban model from UNSW iCinema Centre on Vimeo.

Improvisation Technologies Parallel Shear from UNSW iCinema Centre on Vimeo.
Improvisation Technologies Extrusion Extension from UNSW iCinema Centre on Vimeo.
Improvisation Technologies Lines and Planes from UNSW iCinema Centre on Vimeo.
IT Curved Lines from UNSW iCinema Centre on Vimeo.
 Improvisation Technologies Extruding & Collapsing Points from UNSW iCinema Centre on Vimeo.
Improvisation Technologies Installation from UNSW iCinema Centre on Vimeo.
Improvisation Technologies Noah D. Gelber demo from UNSW iCinema Centre on Vimeo.
Improvisation Technologies Prototype from UNSW iCinema Centre on Vimeo.

Improvisation Technologies, A Tool for the Analytical Dance Eye from UNSW iCinema Centre on Vimeo.

video: Merce Cunningham hand drawn spaces

Hand-drawn Spaces - excerpt from OpenEndedGroup on Vimeo.
so happy to find it online! This is definitely a key reference for my dissertation. Missing Merce Cunningham. Who is today's Merce Cunningham, perhaps William Forsythe? Who is after William Forsythe?

**************
something else:
Nowhere and Everywhere at the Same Time (TRAILER) from Brock Labrenz on Vimeo.

link: great website, very useful, very inspiring

video: Blue Yellow - Sylvie Guillem - Jonathan Burrows -

video: The Stop Quartet - Jonathan Burrows - 1996 (Part 1)

video: A Tribute to Martha Graham


poetic, inspiring, encouraging

video: Ikeda Carlotta - a great butoh dancer (buto)


(at the end of the video: good links to more butoh)

video: Martha Graham Technique 1938-1939

video: 4. Points in Space (1986) Choreographer Merce Cunningham Dir Elliot Capl...

beware I'm starting typing now.. Let's see if some shape will appear.. Right now it feels like I might as well try to make confetti into origami.. Hurrah, good luck to me!

Wednesday, August 15, 2012

video: Tatsumi Hijikata, Hosotan (1972) / Butoh

I have such an absolute 'hunger' for Butoh, remembering quite vividly the
first time that I saw a screening of Tatsumi Hijikata's work in the Tate Moder,
some years ago. But I am just not sure that there is space for his performances
in my dissertation? But I am repeatedly like a bungee drawn back to Butoh.
I need to find out and find words to understand 'why'.?

...

Working on developing an understanding of structures of drawing that may affect the body and dance. Although I do think that my focus is very dance and body centered and most likely this description needs to be rethought profoundly! * Utilizing dance and music notation, diagrammatic forms that represent the body and internal mechanisms, relating this to forms and movements in space that express conceptual ideas or narratives..

Using the body for Narrative and abstract representation / mark-making in space. conceptual vs narrative.

Martha Graham Technique Class DVD 1, The Floorwok, by Phyllis Gutelius o...

5:00 onwards..

video: Hisako Horikawa & Min Tanaka - extract from a perfomance in Czechoslovak...

Tuesday, August 14, 2012

Chris Cunningham + Aphex Twin - Rubber Johnny

is there room for this? Suhail Malik recommended it. 

link: fantastic resource / William Forsythe / Synchronous Objects

video: Across Bodies and Systems: Interview with Susan Kozel

'social choreography',

I found this exciting woman!

Susan Kozel combines dance and philosophy in the context of new media: in other words she works with bodies, ideas and technologies. She has a PhD in Philosophy from the University of Essex, UK (1994), and a long history of various movement techniques (from ballet to butoh) but currently works primarily with phenomenology as a methodology and improvisation and a movement practice. Susan is now happy to start her permanent position as a Professor of New Media at MEDEA Collaborative Media Initiative, Malmö University.

More about Susan Kozel
She has taught for a range of university programs in the UK and North America (Dance, Philosophy, Interactive Arts, Digital Media) and. She balances her academic life with professional artistic practice at the convergence of dance and digital technologies as the director of Mesh Performance Practices.
She has published widely and performed internationally. Her collaborative performances and installations include the Technologies of Inner Spaces series (immanence 2005, Other Stories 2007 and The Yellow Memory 2009), whisper[s] wearable computing (with Thecla Schiphorst) 2002-2005, and trajets (with Gretchen Schiller) 2000-2007. Her writing includes the book Closer: performance, technologies, phenomenology (MIT Press 2007) which will be followed by a second book called Social Choreographies: Corporeal Aesthetics with Mobile Media (expected in 2012). Recently, she has written chapters for edited collections on performance research in The Routledge Companion to Artistic Research (ed. M. Biggs & H. Karlsson, Routledge, forthcoming 2010), and on corporeal ethics in Throughout: Art and Culture Emerging with Ubiquitous Computing, (ed. U. Ekman, MIT Press, forthcoming 2011).
Current work includes collaborating with dance scholars and artists Leena Rouhiainen and Mia Keinänen on the Intuition in Creative Processes initiative based at the Theatre Academy in Helsinki. This IntuiTweet project experiments with social networking applications (such as Twitter) for improvised performance with the aim of better understanding intuition. Other research areas include the interdisciplinary consideration of bodily expression in electronic music, and the articulation of an embodied methodological basis for artistic research.
She is a member of the Scientific Advisory Board for the Humanities Art and Technology Centre in Poznan, Poland, and the Quality Advisory Board of the Swedish National Research School in the Arts (Konstnärlig Forskarskola).

link: not my post: Dance Research on Rudolf von Laban: What Laban Means to Me...

Dance Research on Rudolf von Laban: What Laban Means to Me...: A great gift is given to any dancer who studies Laban Movement Analysis. LMA has given me tools and a vocabulary that I could never come ...

video: Living Architecture - extract / Valerie Preston Dunlop / Anna Carlisle

video: Moving Space: The Laban Scales (Demo)

A voice over would really help understand this easier...

video: ISTA Copenaghen, Steve Paxton's work demonstation, 1996

video: Meyerhold's Theater and Biomechanics - Screener

video: Tony Orrico, Penwald: 4: unison symmetry standing (Flux/S at Strijp-S, Eindhoven, NL)...

Monday, August 13, 2012

text: Roberta Carreri interview; and thoughts of my own.


..what interests me is particularly as she speaks about the intimacy of Odin Theatre and how
the limited audience of 60 allows for an immersive, intimate experience where the audience
becomes part of the performance in a way that within a large audience wouldn't be possible.
This is also what I was interested in with my photographic work Chorus, I used large scale
to try and create a world that the viewer could become a part of.

The other interest I have initially in Roverta Carreri is the passion and warmth that infuses
her words. It is this kind of warmth and passion that attracted me to become an Artist. I
realize that it is of another time, the current art scene doesn't seem to allow for poetry. I
understand that I got caught up in a revival of narrative art that took place in the 1980's
and carried over to my early beginnings. But with the advent of technology developing
another art was called for and I didn't quite fit in. I  cling to the romanticism of the 90's, in
my heart I am analogue not digital.

This conflict could work for me in this dissertation however. The striking difference to my
initial interest in dance and drawing and today is this: the digital revolution took place.
Everything I learnt and essays I wrote at university; essays rooted in the Art of Rauschenberg, Surrealism and Fluxus; everything now appears of another time altogether, is it devoid of
value because of this? Of course it depends on my aims. But can that old information, the
arts now in history and ready for the museum, can I still learn from it and take that what I
find with me into the present and possibly future?

I am hoping that William Forsythe will be one of my linking agents. But even this is going
to be problematic, he alone might not be enough. Although what I do appreciate about
William Forsythe is that while the movements of his dancers are so informed by geometry,
his choreographies are narrative, employ narrative elements. This is of huge help to me as I
search to formulate a new practice that is allowed to remain narrative while developing more
in a formal sense.

Tuesday, August 7, 2012

video: Tony Orrico, Penwald: 8: 12 by 12 on knees

Some of this artist's works are very expressive. particularly the project where
he stands facing a wall and in 3 separate performances marks the wall in an
endurance project. This work really touches me. The example shown below
is less emotive but a nice place to start in getting to know his work. 
Tony Orrico

Monday, July 23, 2012

video: William Forsythe / One Flat Thing (dance)

Forsythe will be a key figure in my dissertation. His movement schematics relate to
Oskar Schlemmers Triadic ballet (Bauhaus), Laban's system of movement and Merce
Cunningham's work. I will have a fair bit more to say about this soon. This is just to get the note taking started.