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Self-funded Artist Residencies at @Lake Studios Berlin i
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Comments
Thanks for sharing your thoughts about my Internet/social media strategy for dancers.
No question that such an approach does take considerable effort and planning. But, as you point out, a social media-enabled strategy is pretty much the direction things are going in. And for some dancers and dance companies, their primary online activities revolve around communicating with their friends through Facebook.
On your point about the limitations and drawbacks of video sharing sites: Personally, I like sites such as YouTube and Vimeo and I especially like watching the increasing number of videos in high-quality and HD formats. And users of these video sharing sites can always embed their videos on their own websites and blogs.
I'm going to learn about your FRAMEWORKS Dance Film Series now.
Best,
Doug Fox
Great Dance
My one other comment is about the media capabilities on external websites. Just a small counter-point to the idea that posting tons of video everywhere is good for a) your artistic process and b) getting people to become interested in your show. I am frequently frustrated watching video clips/trailers/excerpts of dance work on external websites that are a terrible environment for watching dance video (youtube is the most glaring): bad compressors (or fast-stream defaults), slow frame rates (terrible for dance) and a cluttered environment of text, photos, banner ads etc. surrounding the frame of the video. There are many cases when seeing such videos has made me much less excited about the project, even if I would enjoy the live experience of attending the show. All I'm saying is there is something to be said for presenting your videos at higher resolution in the closed context of your own website where you can control (how novel) how your artwork looks.
Thanks for opening up the subject.