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Imagery as starting or ending point

Tonight I will perform at St. Marks Church in Dagmar Spain's YELLOW IS NOT GOLD. Will I be able to replace moments in the piece that feel amorphous with those that feel potent and compelling?  Daniel Nagrin once advised his choreographic students never to verbally share the basic impulse for your choreography, save the urge to share through your dance. Guard it as your secret.  Lacking the toolbox of final cut pro to shape/morph/frame that image, I'm left to bumbling around in the dark room of my mind. With a video dance, one could simply show the idea, find it or create it, manipulate it. But for a live dance, the image is the impulse behind the choice of speed, shape, flow, a guide perhaps for the improvisation.

Perhaps awareness of physical sensations triggers thoughts which conjures images..

The altered state of dancing can interfere with clear thinking on how to transfer that pleasure, that escape from the daily norm, to the viewer. How does one dance to heat the blood in the viewer, make them feel their breath in a singular way.  Lifting one's eyelids up for the metaphorical kiss.

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Relato del encuentro: Apertura (14 junio 2012)

Comenzamos con el relato de lo que tuvo lugar entre los días 14 y 17 de junio en Cádiz en el marco de MOV-S 2012 y lo hacemos con la apertura de MOV-S el día 14. Intervinieron Pepe Vélez, director del festival Cádiz en Danza, Natalia Balseiro, directora de MOV-S 2012 y María Ptqk, metodóloga del encuentro. Despúes de esta introducción, Raúl Sánchez Cedillo presentó el proyecto Fundación de los Comunes. Condujeron el acto Berta Sureda y Jesús Carrillo, de MNCARS.

Ponemos a vuestra disposición el archivo en audio

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Movilidad y visibilidad

El pasado domingo 6 de mayo, la Plataforma CRIM (Creadores Independientes en Movimiento) organizó un encuentro para recoger informaciones y opiniones respecto a uno de los temas que se debatirán en el marco de MOV-S. Nos han hecho llegar un vídeo resultado de esta reunión informal. En él, una serie de artistas expresan sus inquietudes y puntos de vista alrededor del tema de la visibilidad de las propuestas artísticas.

Untitled from pere faura on Vimeo.

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Archived'it goes live!

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Welcome to Archived'it

 

Launch Date: 12th June 2012 at Midday archivedit.org

Back in summer 2011 I pitched the idea of working with Dartington Hall Trust’s Archive Collection to create a web application that would encourage an online audience to engage with the archive creatively. A year on, and with the help of filmmaker Alice Powell, web developer Luke Shumard and composer Ólafur Arnalds, Archived’it is finally here!

We’ve been working with a silent black and white piece of archive footage titled ‘Dance on Steps’ (1934). The film features the enchanting dance and mime student Teda de Moor performing angular and bound movement, swaying back and forth as she progresses up constructed stairs on a stage. Cutting in at just under a minute we set ourselves the task of giving ‘Dance on Steps’ a new lease of life.

I taught myself Teda de Moor’s movement, played around with reacting to it as if she were in the studio with me then created my own choreographic response. Alice filmed the material in a green room then incorporated my response into the original footage.

How it works

The HTML5 web application allows the user to create their own version of ‘Dance on Steps’ using the remixed content. Using a + interface concept, Archived'it has been created purely from open source technology. Ólafur’s music will automatically attach itself to your film; so it’s up to you how much of the track you use.

The idea is once arranged to your liking, save and share!

One response to digitised archive

Jaron Lanier states in his inspired book ‘You Are Not A Gadget’ (2011)

Ironically, advertising is now singled out as the only form of expression meriting genuine commercial protection in the new world to come. Any other form of expression is to be remashed, anonymized, and decontextualized to the point of meaninglessness

I’d like to think with Archived’it we have been able to find one way of ‘remashing’ with meaning. We have taken a piece of incomplete archive footage, the author lost to time, and deconstructed/re-imagined the 55 seconds of content into an artistic statement that has not only been informed by the past but responds to a digital future.

- Adrienne 

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Gestión vertical vs. Gestión con comunidades

Compartimos con vosotros un par de esquemas que confrontan dos modelos diferentes de gestión: por una parte la vertical y, por otra, la horizontal, que tiene en cuenta las comunidades. La propuesta la hace María Ptqk, metodóloga de MOV-S 2012.

El modelo de gestión cultural que conocemos es un modelo de carácter vertical, con una distribución muy clara de tareas. Al artista le corresponde la parte creativa de pensar y concebir la idea; a los gestores y mediadores les corresponde la ejecución de esa idea; a las instituciones o entidades privadas asumen la financiación (y en ocasiones también la realización del proyecto); y al público, situado en la última fase del proceso, le corresponde recibir el proyecto finalizado en calidad de destinatario o consumidor. En este modelo, las comunidades sólo intervienen puntualmente, colaborando en alguna de estas fases, normalmente en la de recepción o difusión.

Por el contrario, el modelo de gestión con comunidades es aquél que las incorpora de una manera orgánica en todas las fases del proceso, desde la ideación hasta la realización pasando por la financiación, la comunicación y la producción. Hablamos de comunidades en un sentido amplio y heterogeneo, incluyendo tanto personas individuales como grupos definidos que se incorporan a la vida del proyecto con diferentes grados de implicación e intensidad. En este tipo de modelos, la gestión se transforma en auto-gestión colectiva, no hay autorías definidas ni distinción entre artistas, productores y público.

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DOM1NIO PÚBL1CO - PROJECT

12249535463?profile=originalEsse ano, caso não saibam, a nossa cia.ltda. realiza o projeto
DOM1NIO PÚBL1CO.

As primeiras cinco performances em colaboração com diferentes
artistas e os primeiros videos já estão prontos.

Na primeira semana de junho estaremos comemorando essa primeira fase:

1. realizando uma oficina com nosso amigo, o artista performático
RICARDO ALVARENGA de Minas Gerais -
dias 04, 05, 06 e 08 de junho
no Espaço Cultural da UFAL
das 08 as 12 da manhã;

2. apresentando a performance HOMINIDAE do próprio Alvarenga, 
durante todo o dia 07 de junho, em local a definir;

3. Apresentando e debatendo os videos realizados até o momento pelo projeto:
dia 08 de junho as 16 horas na Praça Santa Tereza, no Vergel do Lago.
MACEIÓ.AL

Interessados em participar da oficina
acessem o evento no facebook e "participe"

caso não tenha Facebook: entre em contato pelo 82 8817.1628

as demais atividades não exigem inscrição.

BEIJOS A TOD@S

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MASSACHUSETTS DANCE FESTIVAL 2012

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Summer 2012 may break records for “most outstanding arts support” across the nation, due in part to the National Governors Association’s May 2012 best practices report, “New Engines of Growth: Five Roles for Arts, Culture, and Design” and the involvement of 55 US governors to innovate solutions for public policy challenges.

 

The NGA, founded in 1908, is concerned with overcoming five-year recession, such as job loss and reduction of new business creation, by targeting creative industries such as arts, culture, and design, for improvement in economic development, strengthening manufacturing and tourism, and supporting artists and designers as entrepreneurs. (http://www.nga.org/center)

 

What this means for Massachusetts, and particularly for the Massachusetts Dance Festival, entering its fourth annual season of promoting multi-genre dance classes and performances across the Commonwealth, is that our early mission statement is perfectly aligned with the NGA in applying creative leadership for successful economic turnaround.

 

In case you missed it the first three years, MDF “seeks to raise the profile of dance as a profession in Massachusetts, as a means to stimulate social and cultural development across our state … and to contribute to quality life in the 21st Century…” with emphasis on revitalizing dance and the creative sector as “essential to meaningful lives and healthy communities.”

 

This summer, Massachusetts Dance Festival kicks off its fourth season of full day weekend education workshops and performances on June 23rd and 24th at Boston University’s Dance Studio Theater and September 24th and 25th at UMass Amherst’s Bowker Auditorium, capturing audiences east to west. (http://www.massdancefestival.org

 

MDF stands apart from the wide assortment of other dance festivals by actually paying dance performers and educators, who have professionally studied and performed locally, nationally, and internationally, with dance icons such as: Agnes deMille, Alvin Ailey, Anna Sokolow, Boston Ballet, Brenda Bufalino, Chet Walker, Isadora Duncan, Leonide Massine, Jimmy Locust, Josh Hilberman, Jacobs Pillow, Matt Mattox, National Ballet Senegal, and Stuttgart Ballet, among others.

 

Invigorating the performance art genre called “dance” is no easy task, yet this two-pronged approach that reaches hundreds of dance enthusiasts from all geographic locations, ethnic and cultural diversities, and complementary levels of dance ability – from absolute beginners to full-fledged professional company members – has proved a successful platform. Businesses, educational, cultural, travel, and arts institutions, as well as dance industry vendors, students, and audiences, have joined the cause.

 

This year’s performance and instruction from Massachusetts companies and master teachers include: Agentine Tango, ballet, contemporary, contact improvisation, modern, jazz, hip-hop, Butoh, Odissi, Iranian, East Indian, and senior dance. Here are some highlights:

* BoSoma Dance, founded by Irada Djelassi and Katherine Hooper in 2003, stretches every boundary of human physicality and musicality, through high intensity, paradoxical twists, turns, leaps, and rapid spatial changes that thrill audiences, consistently.  “BoSoma Dance Company was founded upon the belief that dance should be an accessible art form, transcending borders of social background and cultures; it collaborates with local musicians and visual artists with the intent of reaching out to audiences of different artistic mediums.” (http://www.bosoma.org/bosoma)

 

* CHIMERAlab Dance Theatre, directed by Jennifer Hicks, is a contemporary dance company founded on a unique interface between somatic techniques such as; Butoh, Martial Arts, Body Mind Centering ®, Viewpoints, Contemporary Dance, Physical Theater, Tectonic Moment Work, Yoga, and Meditation… where artists, musicians, actors, and dancers create original work using poetic imagery, memory, story and a sense of place. (http://www.jenniferhicks.org)

 

* Contrapose Dance, founded by artistic director Courtney Peix, creates exciting and entertaining works that “engage audiences by plumbing deep emotions,” inviting them to “set aside expectations and respond to the thrill of the new.” Contrapose Dance, with roots in classical training, combines traditional with contemporary, bringing a “new energy to the theater scene, attracting a new generation of dance lovers." Contrapose seeks not only to reach existing dance audiences but also to widen the circle by reaching out to communities that may never have attended dance concerts. (www.contraposedance.com)

 

* Dances by Isadora, directed by Catherine Gallant and Patricia Adams, shares the history of dance as an art form with a contemporary audience through the presentation and teaching of the work of modern dance pioneer, Isadora Duncan (1877-1927). The company is also dedicated to the growth of new work which comments on history and culture while making connections from past to present with an eye to future innovation (http://www.dancesbyisadora.com)

 

* Deadfall Dance, directed by Judith Wombwell, was founded to cultivate creative collaborations and to explore innovative techniques of developing movement. Besides the natural kinesthetic implications, the name derives from the Native American tradition of making use of downed wood; in a similar fashion, Deadfall Dance uses available resources. The work is strongly influenced by post-modern dance, the visual arts, multi media work, and is largely driven by explorations of literature, philosophy and man’s relationship to the natural world. (http://www.jwombwell.com)

* Iranian Dance Project, directed by Sheila Eghbali, educates the community about Iran’s diverse culture and history through dance. This non-profit dance troupe strives to bring forth creative, yet authentic dances from various regions of Iran. Sheila Eghbali was born and raised in Tehran, Iran, after the revolution, when dance was made illegal. She was nine years old when her parents found an underground class where she began her studies in ballet and Iranian and Azeri classical dances. After a few years, the classes were shut down. Shortly thereafter, Ms. Eghbali moved to the U.S. where she continued to dance, choreograph, and perform at a variety of cultural events. (http://sheilaeghbali.com/ida)

* Kairos Dance, founded in 1999 by Artistic Director Maria DuBois Genné, is a 19 member dance company spanning four generations, with performers ranging in age from 2 to 98 years old. The mission of Kairos Dance Theatre is to transform and revitalize individuals and communities.  Working with older adults in intergenerational settings to liberate the healing power of interactive dance and story, the company has been awarded the “Innovations in Alzheimer’s Disease Care-giving Legacy Award,” and was featured in the AARP Bulletin. (http://www.kairosdance.org)

* Legacy Dance Company, founded by Thelma Goldberg, a well-known and highly regarded tap dancer and master educator, is the youth performance division of Dance Inn, performing tap, jazz, hip-hop, contemporary and musical theater repertoire that delights audiences young and old.  Establishing the Dance Inn in Lexington in 1983, Thelma’s mission is “to offer the highest level training and programming for both the recreational and aspiring professional dancer,” always emphasizing good technique and musicality, and “dance as a life-long activity.” (http://www.thedanceinn.com/performance.html)

 

* Mariah Steele/Quicksilver Dance, directed by choreographer Mariah Steele, uses anthropological inquiry and artistic exploration, delving into contemporary and timeless issues to inspire reflection and imagination and to spark new perspectives and cross-cultural dialogue. (http://www.quicksilverdance.com)

 

* Navarassa Dance Theater, founded by Aparna Sindhoor, Ph.D., in 1991, creates “solo and group works in classical and contemporary dance and theater that are Inspired by Indian classical and folk dance forms, theater, world music, martial arts (kalari ppayattu), aerial dance, yoga, live singing and storytelling.” Navarassa is a “dynamic, radical, and original style of dance theater, known for its shows with themes that deal with human issues in a meaningful way that makes audiences enjoy and be touched at the same time.” (http://www.navarasa.org)

 

* Sokolow Now!, directed by Lorry May, the only performing archival dance company of its kind, keeps Anna Sokolow’s extraordinary legacy and vision alive by presenting stunning theatrical stagings of her timeless choreograph. The company's vibrant dancers perform Sokolow's unique dance - theater style with a strong physical commitment and technical excellence while maintaining the feeling and integrity of the original choreography. (http://www.annasokolow.org)

 

Also performing are the heralded “Dancing Arts Ensemble,” “Kinetic State Youth Ballet,” “North Atlantic Ballet,” “Rebecca Steinberg and Artists,” “Sorvino Dance,” “Stylized Movement” and “Upasana” – not to be missed!

 

To date, MDF is sustainable through performance and dance class ticket sales, and the dedicated hours of our board members and valued volunteers.  We thank ALL of our dancers, teachers, and supportive institutions and audiences for helping us to promote dance and healthy communities across the Commonwealth, and invite you to partake in our 2012 festivities.

 

Please visit: (http://www.massdancefestival.org) for ticketing, dance class schedules, and performance company lineup.

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Proyecto Multitud

Desde México, Tamara Cubas nos hace llegar este documento sobre el proyecto Multitud.

A partir de la presentación de una pieza escénica de Cubas, ésta junto con Hayde Lachino, decidieron levantar un proyecto para continuar la investigación que el mismo espectáculo planteaba y que era la problematización del coreógrafo como autor único de la obra y la ruptura con las técnicas normalizadas de entrenamiento. Multitud se define así como un proceso, un espacio de reflexión y acción compartidas en el que participan un grupo de intérpretes y que se articula alrededor de la siguiente pregunta: ¿qué pasa cuando un signo es multiplicado en muchos cuerpos? ¿Qué nuevas significaciones afloran?

Este proyecto ha permitido establecer un punto de vista crítico sobre la dinámica institucional de la danza en México y cuestionar los procesos de producción en un contexto que, precisamente, ignora los procesos y pone el acento en el producto artístico final.

Documento completo en pdf.

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Fundación de los Comunes

En esta ocasión ponemos a vuestra disposición un documento muy completo que recoge, de una manera más amplia, el carácter del proyecto.

Incluye una presentación de esta iniciativa, una relación de los temas de interés de la fundación y una explicación detallada de sus líneas de investigación. También dedica espacio a hablar de las líneas de colaboración establecidas con otras fundaciones e instituciones y a ofrecer una completa referencia bibliográfica.

Documento en pdf.

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GillesJobinCGregory%20Batardon.jpg
Geneva, 14 May 2012.

Space, time and gravity are under the cultural spotlight at CERN this month with the arrival of Gilles Jobin, the laboratory's first choreographer in residence and winner of the Collide@CERN Geneva prize, which is supported by the Canton and City of Geneva. Jobin is an internationally renowned Swiss choreographer with a company in Geneva. His CERN inspiration partner for his three-month residency at the laboratory will be the multi-media producer and visualisation specialist, João Pequenão, who studied physics at the University of Lisbon.
 
To mark the occasion, Gilles Jobin et João Pequenão will give a public presentation in CERN’s Globe of Science and Innovation on Wednesday 23 May about movement in dance and particle physics. Doors open at 18:30 with a prompt 19:00 start.
 
“It will be fascinating to see how Gilles Jobin explores particle physics through dance and movement following creative dialogues with CERN scientists and science,” said CERN Director General Rolf Heuer.
 
The Collide@CERN Geneva prize is the second strand in the Collide@CERN Artists Residency programme launched by CERN in 2011. Jobin was given the award by a jury for his proposal to explore through dance the relationship between mind and body at the world's largest particle physics laboratory.
 
“The opportunity to be in contact with what is the largest scientific experiment in the world in my own city is extraordinarily fascinating as well as intellectually challenging,” said Jobin. “Passion is what we share and a choreographer deals with time and space while CERN scientists deal with movement and space at sub atomic levels. Conceptually, for a choreographer to realize that gravity, the major force I am dealing with every day, is the weakest of the four fundamental forces of nature is mind blowing.”
 
At the 23 May presentation, Jobin and Pequenão will make individual presentations of their work and then discuss the potential of their forthcoming creative collisions at CERN. CERN’s cultural specialist, Ariane Koek will chair the discussion and take questions from the audience.
 
“Both Gilles and João have cross over connections which is what makes their partnership so exciting,” said Koek. “They are both experts in the visualisation of abstract ideas through movement – Gilles does this through dance, João does this through multimedia representations of the complexity of particle physics.”
 
During the residency, the public will be able to follow and comment on the experience and interchanges on a blog accessed through the Arts@CERN website featuring their exchanges. During his residency, Jobin will appear at the City of Geneva's Nuit de la Science on 7 and 8 July, and give a final lecture after the end of his residency in October.
 
Members of the public, including CERN personnel, who wish to attend should register their requests for seats with

merce.monje.cano@cern.ch.


Further information:Collide@CERN website


Gilles Jobin (CH) is the winner of the first Collide@CERN Geneva residency award. With an international reputation as a choreographer, early works A + B=X (1997) and The Moebius Strip (2000) were hailed as contemporary dance masterpieces. Apart from his own dance productions, which include the recently acclaimed Spider Galaxies, Gilles Jobin has made his company and Studio 44 a pioneering place, offering professional training for dancers and stimulating international exchange by means of various initiatives.


João Pequenão (Portugal) is a specialist in scientific visualization. He studied physics at the University of Lisbon, becoming increasingly interested in the multi-media possibilities and potential of communicating the science of particle physics through imaginative and digital means.

Gilles Jobin is a dance-tech.net member and a close collaborator since 2009.

12249536690?profile=originalartists@labs series!

Soon on dance-tech.tv!

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Proyecto Transductores

Transductores es un proyecto cultural que centra sus esfuerzos en el trabajo alrededor de pedagogías colectivas y políticas espaciales.

Toma su nombre del mundo de la física, donde un transductor es un dispositivo capaz de transformar una energía de entrada en otra diferente de salida. En la teoría de las redes sociales, se utiliza el concepto para referirse a los catalizadores de cambios sociales.

El proyecto dirige su mirada, en primer lugar, hacia las pedagogías colectivas. Es decir, hacia iniciativas en el terreno de la educación, el arte y el activismo que, a partir de grupos multidisciplinares y la participación ciudadana, promueven la transformación social de una forma sostenible. En segundo lugar, trabajan en el campo de las políticas espaciales, prácticas alternativas que proponen un uso integral y participativo de los espacios y que implican la colaboración del urbanismo y la arquitectura con otros campos del saber.

Ambos centros de interés están en fase de expansión en su vertiente más democratizadora.

Transductores es un proyecto cultural del Centro José Guerrero de Granada, ideado desde Aulabierta y coproducido por la Universidad Internacional de Andalucía y el Ministerio de Cultura.

Incluye seminarios y talleres de formación, la construcción y exposición de un archivo relacional, el trabajo con agentes locales y la edición de diversas publicaciones.

Esta iniciativa aporta material a MOV-S a través de Javier Rodrigo, uno de los relatores del encuentro de Cádiz. Se trata de una serie de referencias bibliográficasde interés:

Publicación en inglés y castellano que recoge, a través de estudios de caso, un análisis de 13 proyectos en el terreno de las pedagogías colectivas, las prácticas colaborativas y las intervenciones en el espacio público.

Desgrana la complejidad de las prácticas colaborativas entre diversos grupos y trabajadores culturales.

Artículo basado en el curso Gestionar Jugando, coordinado por Zemos98 en colaboración con Colaborabora y Transductores.

Sobre dinámicas de trabajo en talleres y cómo usar los sociogramas como un catalizador del trabajo colectivo. También describe los elementos de análisis de trabajo en las políticas de gestión de proyectos.

Crónica de uno de los talleres sobre prácticas colaborativas y trabajo en red donde se desarrollan metodologías y complejidades del trabajo en red de diversos colectivos.

Artículo sobre prácticas colaborativas y políticas culturales a partir del análisis de dos proyectos sobre espacio público, pedagogías y trabajo colectivo de intervención.

 

Encontraréis más información y referencias en www.transductores.net yhttp://javierrodrigomontero.blogspot.com.es.

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Nube de palabras (Mayo 2012)

Segunda entrega de la ecología de conceptos que MOV-S está documentando a partir de las aportaciones que han realizado las personas inscritas al encuentro en junio.


Colaboración público-privada

Movilidad y visibilidad


Sostenibilidad de las prácticas artísticas

Nube realizada a partir del RSS de la webwww.mov-s.org

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The International Journal of Screendance

Review Essay by Claudia Rosiny

Line Dances (seven cinematic journeys) — seven films for web and new media. Directed by Daniel Belton. Dunedin, NZ: Good Company Arts, 2010.


They look like human creatures in artificial cobwebs of lines—Daniel Belton, head of Good Company Arts, based in Dunedin, New Zealand, created and directed seven dance films under the headline Line Dances. And, in fact, lines are the joining elements in all these films, which vary between five and twelve minutes. The unique aesthetics of the imagery are remarkable, combining human beings performing dance movements into a graphic environment that is often detached from any real spatial perception. On the surface of the cinematic image, Line Dances looks like a formal dialogue between human beings that resemble animated representations of human characters on one side and geometrical patterns on the other. Throughout this approximately seventy-minute program, a black afterimage dominates these “seven cinematic journeys,” as Line Dances are subtitled. The intermediate sequences always return to this blackness in which blurred images of an old fashioned camera show up. Each “Line Dance” has a title: Saint A in B, Portrait of an Acrobat Realm of the Curtain, Harlequin on the Bridge, Equilibrist, Perspective with Inhabitants, Realm of the Curtain. As you read them, they do give some narrative hints, as they refer to pictures with the same title by Paul Klee.


Indeed, the idea of interacting human figures with abstract lines and geometric systems resulted from Belton’s research on Modernism, especially the drawings of Paul Klee and the background of the Bauhaus movement. Some of Klee’s pictures in fact seem to emerge out of the image like his squares in red connected with fine lines in Portrait of an Acrobat. And the use of baton reminds us of the famous Bauhaus baton dances, which Gerhard Bohner reconstructed in the 1980s. Belton uses Klee’s quotation, “One eye sees, the other feels,”as a guideline to indicate what he wishes to achieve in his films. He wants to exhaust the visual and physical potential of dance. Common stereotypes like a ballerina, an acrobat, or a harlequin are a strong contrast to these simple graphic lines. Formalism and emotional potentiality seem to melt; you don’t have to be moved, but maybe these fairytale-like figures call up sensations and souvenirs of whatever we associate with them. Paul Klee’s drawings were Belton’s inspiration, but his artificial images also awaken references to early experimental and abstract film of this period (the 1920s), such as the “dancing” of painted patterns that Len Lye, Hans Richter, Walter Ruttman or Viking Eggeling created. These pioneers of experimental film were artists who applied drawings directly on the film material, the celluloid.

Belton’s most exciting passages are those when the interaction between moving bodies and geometrical forms leads to a metamorphosis: the lines stretch, bend, and curve, initiated through the movement of a figure; then suddenly there is a pulse in a line and the geometrical patterns become natural. In the first film, which starts with a white afterimage, the lines serve foremost as a surface, as spatial references on which the figures start to move. Later the lines form a building with an abstract cupola: “the lines exaggerate the corporeal, and develop texture within the space,” as Belton describes his idea.1 Belton works with multilayered images, with duplications of his figures that emerge out of the black and fade back, seemingly into outer space. Often the duplication—for example of the ballerina and fool couple—is displayed in a smaller size and the motion of the mirrored couple has a slight retardation. Line Dances are strongly cinematic insofar as there is hardly any reference remaining to a stage perception. We seem to look into a nirvana space that has a ground, but no limitations in all directions. The screen is the stage but with no resemblance to a theater stage. A high grade of abstraction is also achieved by a mainly black and white image. Sporadically, the figures change to color, which adds an accent of realism and narrativity to the characters.

In addition to multiplications of figures, Belton also works with size and magnitude, setting them like small toy figures in his creative playing field. Whereas the ballerina symbolizes the dance world, the fool in theater history is the figure that has freedom to query and contest. With these strong character types he also interrogates the conditions of theater and dance.


The third aesthetic level next to the figures and forms is the elementary sound track, splashy piano music, composed and played by Anthony Richie. It is possibly the monotony of the sound that at times lengthens the hour-long program. But it is different if the films are watched in the closeness of a dark cinema, as they were when premiered last October in New Zealand. Regardless, as Daniel Belton and his Good Company’s numerous video dances have already been selected for countless festivals and gained scores of awards, it is certain that Line Dances will tour and find its audiences. At the end of January 2011, Portrait of an Acrobat was selected for the oldest Dance on Camera Festival in New York City. Seen in the context of the rise of a new genre, video- dance, which emerged in the 1980s, Line Dances offers an interesting link to art history and a unique film concept. All films can be watched on Daniel Belton’s website www. goodcompanyarts.com, the photos and videostills at www.dance-tech.net.


References

Good Company Arts. Dundein, New Zealand. http://www.goodcompanyarts.com/main.html.

Notes

1. See http://www.goodcompanyarts.com/main.html.

http://journals.library.wisc.edu/index.php/screendance/issue/current

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Nubes de palabras (Abril 2012)

Compartimos con vosotros unas nubes de palabras realizadas por Marlon Barrios (www.dance-tech.net y www.dance-tech.tv) a partir de los conceptos que las personas inscritas al encuentro de Cádiz han sugerido para debatir en función a cada una de las tres mesas de trabajo.
Colaboración público-privada

Movilidad y visibilidad

Sostenibilidad de las prácticas artísticas

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Seminario de Economia de la Danza/PID

La Plataforma Internacional de Dança (PID) es un evento internacional de danza contemporánea que surgió en 2009 a partir del impulso de la Fundação Cultural do Estado da Bahia (FUNCEB) en Brasil con el objetivo de proporcionar visibilidad y accesibilidad a la danza contemporánea producida en Bahia. Su primera edición tuvo lugar en 2009.

En su tercera edición, que tuvo lugar del 3 al 13 de noviembre de 2011, tuvieron lugar una serie de actividades como espectáculos y conferencias. Una de ellas fue un Seminario de Economia de la Danza. Compartimos con vosotros el documento que Gilsamara Moura Robert Pires nos ha hecho llegar con un resumen sobre los temas discutidos y la metodología utilizada.

Documento en pdf (en brasileño).

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El Teatre L'Escorxador de Lleida cuenta con un grupo de espectadores cómplices que asisten regularmente a las actividades paralelas a la programación artística que el teatro organiza. Grupos de debate, conversaciones con los artistas y visitas a centros de creación son algunas de ellas. En esta ocasión, han debatido algunos de los temas propuestos por MOV-S para el debate sobre danza y artes del movimiento. Ofrecen sus puntos de vista e ideas sobre la educación en arte, financiación pública de la creación y el interés por conocer a los artistas locales, entre otros.

En la sesión, que tuvo lugar el domingo 29 de abril, en motivo del Día Internacional de la Danza, participaron Jaume Belló, David Gil, Marta Guiu, Veronique de Bolle, Marta Oriach, Teresa Minguella, Antoni Fargues, Pilar Duaigües, Jaume Rutllant, Puri Terrado y Marta Salla. Margarida Troguet, directora del espacio, dirigió el debate.

Aquí podéis ver un vídeo-resumen. Vídeos del debate completo: parte 1,parte 2 yparte 3.

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