performance (84)

Jasmina Prolic’s latest project ‘Julie(t)- duet in absentia’ deals with technology versus body interrelations… elusive moments and impulses between sexes…The performance she choreographed and performed was collaboration with multimedia artist Hubert Pichot, known for his project ‘Try Me’ Rolling Chair Jockey - RCJ which he had introduced at the iMAL’s OpenLAB Projects in Belgium three years ago. About what Pichot said back then: ‘RCJ (music and vidéo compatible) is an electric rolling chair with sensors measuring its move and acceleration, and also some of the moves of its user. A computer processes the sensors data and generates images and sounds. The person using the chair becomes a sort of conductor controlling an audiovisual creation through his/her moves in and with the chair.’

Photo: Compagnie Jasmina (c)

Along with this line Hubert Pichot designed an experimental wearable sound device for dancer in order to give her a tool for generating soundz connected with her movements via bending wires and pick ups through accelerometers to computer and mixer at the end.Jasmina Prolic dances 'tuned on' with minimal, transcendental movements at the beginning, which grows up as the dramaturgical structures are growing too, into rhythmically more completed textures…

Photo: Compagnie Jasmina (c)

The piece is fragmented into smaller parts which are developed through wordz / dialogues with a man ‘behind’ the ‘technological wall’ emanating himself through video installation and complex DIY electronic sound device letting different sounds to come out depending on dancer’s moves. It’s a kind of a sound mapping of their virtual communication based on practical physics (more precisely micro-kinetics) - her dancing.

Photo: Compagnie Jasmina (c)

Although, the use of such devices could be constraining for the performer, seems like Hubert did a great job with his real-time sound device, Jasmina Prolic accepted it superbly as part of her body, mainly because it’s a communication tool between human being and entity of electronic nature, if you understand it banally.Prolic deploys a sort of micro-inquiring within her body narration and technique creating an artwork of emotional depth… She is questioning the issues of being emotional and physical attached via technology to another person, and the possibilities of having the same relation as if this person would be made of flash and blood…

Because of choreographer’s intention to go further the whole story is not finishing with a pair of lovers running through the meadow into each others arms… But seems like this whole ‘wired’ love is functioning with some boundaries… which leads you to the point where, as a viewer, you can realize that lots of thingz in our lives turned out in some direction because of our previous expectations… Can we accept relations with ‘entities’ and being emotionally involved with… well, actually we already live this life without even perceiving it, or maybe we all like to live in certain oblivion…

Photo: Compagnie Jasmina (c)

Jasmina Prolic is a Sarajevo ex-ballet girl on her ‘movable’ life journey, heavily ‘spiced’ with contemporary dance, in France… At the beginning of 90’s Jasmina was already an award winning ballet dancer and member of Sarajevo’s National Ballet Ensemble … but due to terrible thingz which started to happen in Bosnia at that time, she first found refuge in Zagreb, and then she entered at The National Superior Conservatoire of Dance and Music of Paris in order to study Contemporary Dance.Her graduation dance piece was her first solo work ‘Sarajevo, 25th of April 10 o’clock in the morning or Why?’. Jasmina Prolic has received Award for French Young Choreographers in 1999; she was a member of the Junior Ballet of the CNSMDP from 1996-97, which followed the residency - danceweber at DanceWeb Project within ImpulsTanz in Vienna in 1998. Artists she had collaborated with are: Jean Claude Gallota, Maguy Marin, Joachim Schlomer, Palle Granhoj, Gildas Zepffel, Gildas Bourdet, Balazs Gera, Maja Pavlovska, Szilard Mezei, Albert Markos, Henrik Jaspersen et Ko de Regt (Duo Resonante), Jérome Poret etc.

Photo: Compagnie Jasmina (c)

Lucid choreographer Joseph Nadj invited her in 2002 to base her very own dance company in Orléans (France), which was initially a new trigger in her carrier, not just for her solo artworkz but for promoting younf dancers and companies from South Eastern Region… Jasmina Prolic is spending a lot of time on givin’ dance workshops and classes in this region…From 2007 she is an art consultant for Nomad Dance Academy regional network presenting the Bosnian organisation for contemporary dance Tanzelarija; and she have an active participating role in the Balkan Dance Network and IETM. She’s the organizer of ‘Choreographic Meetings of the Balkans’ dance event with the National Choreographic Centre of Orléans and National Scene of Orléans in France. Jasmina is artistic director of the First Bosnian Contemporary Dance Festival ZVRK in Sarajevo.

Photo: Compagnie Jasmina (c)

After such a technical complex dance piece ‘Julie(t)- duet in absentia’ with a dancer immersed deeply in the theme, I couldn’t resist not inviting Jasmina for a small talk on her solo work… technology… about her challenges…about ZVRK … and all that stuff…Hi, Jasmina! Could you please tell me something about that how did you first get involved with technology? Something that actually can’t be controlled in a way you can control your own body and expressiveness…J: Hubert Pichot and I met while working together on the theatre production in February 2006. Then he introduced me with his technological stuff and expressed a wish to work with a dancer in order to create a live instrument!!! He said he would like to work on Romeo and Juliet by Prokofjev, but I replied that Romeo and Juliet that I think off are written by Shakespeare. In that sense I was ready to enter the adventure of exploration for a live instrument, not being interested in the love story, but in the conflict and all that destroyed love.

Photo: Compagnie Jasmina (c)

Are you planning to work or develop the same working process within ‘Julie(t)- duet in absentia’ or some other future performance?J: The work with Juliet isn’t finished yet; we’re still developing and rethinking this piece. Maybe, if I will feel the urge, I’ll provoke something similar in some other project.In your opinion, what is the perspective of a human moveable body through dance in the context of technology?J: Well, there are so many things in that context that need to be discovered. It also depends a lot on what you want to express, in what direction you want to develop and what kind of message to send.Do you think that you can expand your possibilities as a dancer by using experimental performing devices, DIY tools, data sensors and so?J: These devices push you in some very different ways to use your body and to develop conscience about some still undiscovered parts and possibilities. But, they influence your style also.

Photo: Compagnie Jasmina (c)

Josef Nadj has inspirited you with invitation to work and base your dance company in Orleans…J: I can only thank him for everything.What do you give to dancers on one side and learn from them on other side in your international classes?J: When I teach, first of all I give respect and get human quality. Sometimes, I learn everything from the beginning…What could you tell me about the development of dance scene at the moment in South Eastern Europe, in the European context?J: Although I am not completely familiar with the whole South-East European scene; dancers and choreographers that I do know can with confidence stand side by side in the European context.

Photo: Compagnie Jasmina (c)

The first Bosnian Festival for Contemporary Dance took place in September in Sarajevo… That’s great news for young people willing to expand their experiences in the field of contemporary dance, but also for society and the city of Sarajevo in general… How do you see the future of the scene that will certainly emerge from it in ten, twenty years from now?J: Who could know how the scene will look like tomorrow, not to say in ten or twenty years! (laughs).I only hope that something has finally been moved. This first edition convinced us of the great need for this kind of events in the contemporary societies; so we can’t give up. Dance makes you free and gives you a chance for interaction. There are no limits and that is what we really need.In any case, it won’t be easy, but it never is in Bosnia and Herzegovina! ‘Nice and easy’ approach. And maybe the standing tomb-stones will revive through our bodies; they’ll become off petrified and therefore even nicer and stronger.Jasmina, thanks!p.s. Bosnia and Herzegovina is well known for archaeological sites of medieval tomb-stones.(This blog post was originally posted on Personal Cyber Botanica at www.lomodeedee.com)
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Wand 5 invites you to submit your entry for the competition of the 23rd Stuttgarter Filmwinter in the categories Film/Video, New Media or Installation.Requirements:FILM & VIDEOContributions to the film/video competition must include a preview DVD or VHS tape (PAL or NTSC). Films and videos submitted to the »International Short Film Competition« can't be longer than 30 minutes.Submitted films and videos being longer than 30 minutes may run in a special programme outside the competition.MEDIA IN SPACE (INSTALLATION), PERFORMANCES, WORKSHOPSPlease enclose detailed plans, information, technical specifications and a calculation.There is no fee for works selected for the competition programme.ON-/OFFLINEOn-and Offline works on software, net-art and virtual communities may be submitted for this section. Online work can also be submitted via www.filmwinter. de.Prizes:TEAM-WORK-AWARD RITTER SPORT endows an award amounting 2.000 Euro for a film and video production realized by a team.NORMAN 2010 Award of the jury for film and video of 4.000 EuroAWARD FOR MEDIA IN SPACE Award for Media in Space (installations)AWARD FOR ON-/OFFLINE This award goes to an independently produced work in the field of software, net art or virtual communities.WAND 5 AWARD Our legendary Wand 5 team special price award!AUDIENCE AWARDS The prizes for the best short film and the best media-installation in the international competition will be awarded by the audience.We kindly ask you to send us a printed and filled copy of the application form along with the preview material of your work. Application shall be mailed to our address.Application formDeadline: 01/09/09Contact:Wand 5 e.V.Friedrichstr. 23 A70174 StuttgartGermanyPhone: 0049-711-99 33 98 0Fax: 0049-711-99 33 98 10E-mail: wanda@wand5.deURL:www.filmwinter.de
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Cartografías para otro Jardín

Entendemos así que la Transdisciplinación, se refiere a un modo de producción de subjetividad distinto que aquél de la Interdisciplinación, a un proceso a través del que se crea un territorio de experimentación en las personas (caosmosis existencial), de autoobservación y de observación de hábitos de pensar, hacer, sentir o decir (figuras de subjetivación), con una invitación a la lógica de los sentidos y de los cuerpos, a un tartamudeo de las estrategias, de las logísticas y de las técnicas, a una deconstrucción de los tiempos y los códigos.S. Rolnik, Cartografía Sentimental, 1989In this days (from one year ago) I´m working about cartographys, a way to create space(s) and draws, of the movement of things I feel. I think it is like a big board to put my own subjetive changes: lines, areas, points, intensitys, etc.The materials for make this draws are everything (organic and electronic things included) and always exist me (or another draw partners) making it possible on the stage-board.So my performance - technique is just put things together, some times these are assembled to my body, some times not. What I try is this join-materials can speak new senses.I like this, very much.If you want to know more about cartography, I recomend Suely Rolnik and Félix Guattary.

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Boston, MA — Dance and technology take center stage with “Loops,” an exhibition and performance inspired by Merce Cunningham’s solo dance “Loops.” The exhibition takes place April 24-May 10 at the MIT Museum, 265 Massachusetts Avenue, Cambridge, and the performance, presented by Critical Moves, takes place on the evening of April 24. The story of “Loops” began in 2001 when artists Paul Kaiser, Shelly Eshkar and Marc Downie created a digital artwork by motion-capturing Merce Cunningham as he performed. The artists developed a sophisticated software program that turned the motion-capture data into a flowing abstract digital portrait; they later added multiple screens and a soundtrack. In 2008, the Cunningham Foundation and the OpenEnded Group (an organization consisting of Kaiser, Eshkar, and Downie) placed all the material online as open source, where it would be available for repurposing by other artists. Boston Cyberarts, with a grant from the LEF Foundation, commissioned four media artists — Brian Knep, Golan Levin, Casey Reas, and Sosolimited — to utilize the “Loops” material in whatever way they chose to create new works. The results are on display from April 24 through May 10 at the MIT Museum, with an opening reception on April 24 from 5:30 to 7:30 pm. Additionally the works, along with their code, will be online at www.bostoncyberarts.org/loops as open source for use by others. Also at the MIT Museum, Critical Moves Contemporary Dance Series presents a performance on April 24 by two dancer-choreographers performing works inspired by the “Loops” project. Jonah Bokaer performs “False Start,” an excerpt of his evening length "Three Cases of Amnesia", a technology-influenced solo dance and media work. Marjorie Morgan performs a new solo work of her own, involving live looping sound tracks and simultaneous solo dancing. Sound and video are provided by Jed Speare. The evening also includes a keynote talk by Marc Downie of OpenEnded Group, and a Q&A. The 2009 Boston Cyberarts Festival takes place April 24-May 10, 2009, at museums, galleries, performing spaces, educational institutions, and on the web. Complete information about the Festival, including a searchable database of the more than 50 events and exhibitions, is available at www.bostoncyberarts.org. Further information on the Boston Cyberarts Festival is available by calling 617.524.8495 or emailing info@bostoncyberarts.org. At a Glance What: “Loops” Exhibition Who: Presented by Boston Cyberarts, in conjunction with the Cunningham Foundation, OpenEnded Group, and MIT Museum Works by Brian Knep, Golan Levin, Casey Reas, and Sosolimited Sponsored by LEF Foundation Where: At the MIT Museum, 265 Massachusetts Avenue, Cambridge When: Exhibition on view April 24 – May 10. Open daily 10 am – 5 pm. Opening Reception Friday, April 24, 5:30 – 7:30 pm Admission: $7.50 adults; discounts for students, seniors, MIT community. Free on Sunday mornings. Admission to the Opening Reception is free. What: “Loops” Performance Who: Presented by Critical Moves Contemporary Dance Series, with support from the Boston Dance Alliance Featuring performances by Jonah Bokaer and Marjorie Morgan, sound and video by Jed Speare Keynote address by Marc Downie of OpenEnded Group, and Q&A Where: MIT Museum, 265 Massachusetts Avenue, Cambridge When: Friday, April 24, 8:00 pm Admission: $20 general admission; $18 for students and Boston Dance Alliance members Reservations online at www.bostoncyberarts.org/loops, or purchase at the door Biographies of Performers Jonah Bokaer is an award-winning choreographer and media artist. Based in New York, he is dedicated to expanding possibilities for live performance through choreography, digital media, cross-disciplinary collaborations, and social enterprise, in the United States and internationally. He has worked with such leading dance figures as Merce Cunningham, John Jasperse, David Gordon, Deborah Hay, Tino Sehgal, and many others. His work has been presented widely throughout the United States and abroad, including Cornell University, Dance Theater Workshop, Danspace Project, Dixon Place, La Mama ETC, P.S. 122, Symphony Space, the ISB (Bangkok), Naxos Bobine, Studio Théâtre de Vitry, and La Générale (Paris). Marjorie Morgan is a Boston-area choreographer, composer, dancer and singer whose work often combines elements of movement, live sound, music and text. She is particularly fascinated with the territory between composition and improvisation, and between narrative and abstraction. Her original works have won her two awards for outstanding achievement in the arts and repeated Best of Boston Awards from the Boston Globe, Boston Herald and Boston Phoenix. She has performed and toured nationally and internationally with the companies of Pooh Kaye, Paula Josa-Jones, Caitlin Corbett, Snappy Dance Theater, and the Mobius Artists Group. Marjorie is a professor in the Theater Department at the Boston Conservatory. Marc Downie is an artist and artificial intelligence researcher. Born in Aberdeen, UK, he has an MA in natural science and a MSci in physics from the University of Cambridge. In 2005 he obtained a PhD from MIT’s Media Lab, writing a thesis entitled “Choreographing the Extended Agent.” He is part of the OpenEnded Group, an association of three digital artists who create works for stage, screen, gallery, page, and public space. Jed Speare is a crossover artist working in a variety of media and settings. Initially trained in music composition, he has presented sound, performance, video, installation, conceptual, and community-based works locally, nationally, and internationally for over thirty years. In Boston, he has been known primarily as a member of the Mobius Artists Group since 1995 and as the Co- Director and Director of Mobius from 1996 through 2004. He has recently been Director of Studio Soto, a space for ideas, since 2006. # # # The Boston Cyberarts Festival, launched by George Fifield in 1999 with seed funding from the Massachusetts Cultural Council, is the only Festival in the world that encompasses all art forms, including both visual and performing arts, film, video, electronic literature, public art, and web art. The 2009 Boston Cyberarts Festival takes place April 24-May 10, 2009, at museums, galleries, performing spaces, educational institutions, and on the web. Cyberart encompasses any artistic endeavor in which computer technology is used to expand artistic possibilities — that is, where the computer’s unique capabilities are integral elements of the creative process in the same way that paint, photographic film, musical instruments, and other materials have always been used to express an artist’s vision. Your browser may not support display of this image.Your browser may not support display of this image.Your browser may not support display of this image.Boston Cyberarts is grateful for the support of many generous individuals and institutions, including The Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts, ArtsBoston, IBM, LEF Foundation, Massachusetts Cultural Council, Phoenix Media Communications Group, and 1330 Boylston Street.
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Anne Rosset + Robert Alexander> Une Histoire D`Amour <3 Bilder. 10 Ballerinas. 10 Schlagzeuger. 30 Minuten.(+ 10 Ghettoblaster, 10 Taucherbrillen, 10 Sonnenbrillen, 10 Sommerhüte,10 schwarze T-Shirts, 10 Spitzenschuhe, 10 Sommerkleider,1 Jogger, 1 Viadukt und jede Menge Wasser)Künstlerische Leitung:Anne Rosset + Robert Alexander(Pigs And Birds Performance Projekte)Projektblog: Une Histoire D`AmourAnne Rosset Robert Alexander Pigs And Birds Performance Projekte
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Call: BALKAN DANCE PLATFORM

5th BALKAN DANCE PLATFORM October 1–3, 2009 / Novi Sad, SerbiaPer.Art in collaboration with the Serbian National Theatre - New Dance Forum, TkH – Centre for theory and practice of performing arts and Station – Service for contemporary dance and the regional partners of the Platform is pleased to announce the 5 edition of the Balkan Dance Platform 2009 (BDP 2009) - the only biennial event in the Balkans presenting the current tendencies in contemporary dance and choreography in the region. Per.Art will stage BDP 2009 from October 1-3, 2009 in Novi Sad, Serbia at the venues of Serbian National Theatre. BDP 2009 follows on the success of the previous events in Athens/Greece 2007, Skopje/Macedonia 2005, Bucharest/Romania 2003 and Sofia/Bulgaria in 2001.The main festival programme me of BDP 2009 will present a selection of the best dance productions in the Balkans made in the period from April 13, 2007 until the March 20, 2009. The 5th BDP will be an opportunity for choreographers and dancers from Bulgaria, Romania, Greece, Macedonia, Slovenia, Serbia, Turkey, Croatia, Bosnia and Hercegovina, Albania and Montenegro to present thier work to a great number of international visitors (directors, producers, curators).The aims of BDP are:- Development of contemporary dance in the Balkans through presentation and promotion of the choreographers and dancers, groups, organizations, and institutions dealing with contemporary dance in the Region;- Stimulation of collaboration and initiation of new productions, collaborative projects, and regional networks.Members of the jury are:Ana Vujanovic – editor of TkH journal for performing arts theory and lecturer at University of Arts in Belgrade (Serbia);Andreea Capitanescu – artistic director of ArtLink (Romania);Christina Polychroniadou – director of Full House Promotion (Greece);Iskra Sukarova – artistic director contemporary dance of Lokomotiva Centre for New initiatives in Arts and Culture (Macedonia);Natasa Zavolovsek – director of Exodos (Slovenia);Tzvetelina Iossifova – director of The Red House Centre for Culture and Debate (Bulgaria).Deadline for application is March 20, 2009!(Please note: it is possible to apply with “work-in-progress”, but if selected for BDP 2009, the work is expected to be finished until May 31, 2009)Please, visit our website for ONLINE APPLICATION!Beside the main festival programme there will also be the Video Showroom Programme (video presentation of contemporary dance scene of each country in the Balkans). The video materials will include footage of the existing dance performances produced in the Balkan countries in the period from March 1, 2006 until March 20, 2009.The aim of the Video Showroom is to:- Create video archive of contemporary dance productions in the Balkans (mobile exhibition and online presentation);- Enable continuous promotion and information about contemporary dance tendencies in the Balkans;- Increase mutual acquaintance of the dance scenes in the BalkansDeadline for applications is March 20th, 2009!Please, visit our website for more info about application procedure for Video Showroom!We are looking forward to welcome you and present your work in Novi Sad during the 5th Balkan Dance Platform !More information:Regional partners of BDP are: ArtLink (Bucharest, Romania), Exodos zavod (Ljubljana, Slovenia), Full House Promotion (Athens, Greece), Lokomotiva - Centre for New Art and Culture Initiatives (Skopje, Macedonia), Per.Art (Novi Sad, Serbia) and The Red House Centre for Culture and Debate (Sofia, Bulgaria).Application procedure – the main festival programme me of BDP ‘091. Filled-out online application form2. Video of the dance performance in its full length (DVD format) sent by post to following address:UG Per.ArtP.Fah br.1521102 Novi SadSerbia3. Receipt of your application form will be confirmed after you submit your application onlinе4. Receipt of your video material (DVD) will be acknowledged by email5. Video materials (DVD's) will not be sent back to applicants6. Do not send video material by email!SUBMIT YOUR APPLICATION FORM ONLINE!Deadline: March 20, 2009Contact: officebdp09@gmail.comEligible for the Balkan Dance Platform are:- Works of authors who are based and work in the region of the Balkans;- Works produced in the period from April 13, 2007 until March 20, 2009;- Dance performances but also other forms of dance projects (actions, installations, lecture performnaces, etc.) which are performed at non-theatrical venues (galleries, outdoor, lobbies …);- Works with simple technical requirements, accomplished within three hours of technical set-up;- It is possible to apply with “work-in-progress”, but if selected for BDP 2009, the work is expected to be finished until May 31, 2009 and a DVD of the finished work is to be sent.Authors belonging to the same group/ organization/ institution, may apply for the festival. Authors whose works were presented in the previous BDP editions may apply. One author may apply with several performances but only one can be selected for the main festival programme of BDP 2009Selection procedure:- Applicants will be informed about the final selection decision on March 31 , 2009;- The works for the festival are chosen by the jury which consisting of the experts in the field of contemporary dance who are proposed by regional partner organizations;- The jury will not give individual explanation to those whose work is not selected for the main festival programme of BDP 2009;- The organizers will cover shared accommodation, per diems, a small fee and will provide the venue for the performances with technical support and promotion for companies selected for the main festival programme of BDP 2009;The artists/companies or regional partnership organizations will be in charge AND/OR will assist artists/companies in covering travel expenses, medical insurance and visa costsApplication procedure – Video Showroom ProgrammeEligible to apply:- Video documentation of dance projects produced in the period from March 1, 2006 until March 20, 2009 by the authors living and working in the Balkans!(please note - it is different than the period for the main festival programme of BDP 2009!)Authors should send by post their video materials (DVD format! Full length! No trailers!), info about the dance project (concept and credits) and contacts to:UG Per.ArtP.Fah br.1521102 Novi SadSerbiaDeadline: March 20, 2009!!Contact: video.showroombdp09@gmail.comMore info about Video Showroom Programme:Please note!- Please don't send video materials by email !- There is no limit to the number of authors that will be presented in the Video Showroom!- There is no limit to the number of submitted dance projects by the author!- Video Showroom will present video documentation of dance projects not video dance art!- There is no selection process!
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Michael Una performing at SYNC Fest 08 from Michael Una on Vimeo. From his Vimeo account: Michael Una (http://www.una-love.com/muna) of Chicago investigates how vibrating waves of energy and human consciousness interact. He utilizes traditional musical instruments, handbuilt analog electronics, video processes, digital synthesis, and repurposed objects to build harmonic wave patterns. These patterns are projected into physical space, creating a unique and temporary audiophysical experience.
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berlin tanz im august

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Acabamos de volver de Berlin, donde hemos visto un monton de cosas bien impresionantes. El estupendo festival de danza Tanz im August no nos dejaba mucho tiempo para respirar actuaciones fuera de este mundillo..... menos mal!primero nuestros amigos de membros, que imponaban el publico de sophiensaele, (una sala muy guapa) con su danza politica y sus movimientos tan precisos.Luego, "accumulated layout" Hiroaki Umeda nos dejaba flipando. Del momento un pequeño video del performance:Dock11, un centro de crecion escenico con énfasis en danza es un sitio muy bonito y potente. Tienen salas de ensayo, hacen workshops de alta nivel y tienen sala de actuacion con propuestas muy inbteresantes.Vimos una recopilación curiosa de propuestas diversas que interprataban el "baile" de un adolecente americano, cuyo video cursaba extensivamente en el mundo you tube... la realisacion de la pieza era estupenda. con tecnica minima (un videoproyector, unas altavoces y un dvd player hacian todo desde iluminación hasta sonido). iniciado por la no-compania de teatro post-theater, se puede ver - y si estas en berl lo recomendamos- esta performance Napoleon D. todos los lunes el septiembre. aka la info.
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Arts in the urban space

Contemporary creation as a tool

Circostrada Network, a European information and exchange network on street arts and new circus, has published a collective work called “Arts in the urban space: contemporary creation as a tool”.
"The publication aims to engage in deeper reflection on the effects of artistic intervention in public spaces. We asked European scholars of various fields to analyze, from the perspective of their own domain, the impact that artists’ presence has on the public space. What does it mean for society to see the arts moving into a space that was not originally conceived for them? What role can the street arts play in making adjustments on our cities or improving the framework of our lives? Should we beware of the possible exploitation of artistic creation towards political ends?"

Table of contents:

  • Town Planning and Street Arts
  • Spectator in fabula – What Street Theatre Does to Spectators
  • Public Art: between (street) spectacle and the spectacular
  • Nomadic Creations
  • From the Street Theatre to Theatre in the Public Space
  • Artistic Interventions Affirm Public Space
  • Arts Don’t Have to Know How to Behave – A Commentary on Street arts in Contemporary Urban Surroundings
  • Art, Public Space and Creation Centres
Contributers:
  • Anne Gonon
  • Jean-Pierre Charbonneau
  • Dragan Klaic
  • Alix de Morant
  • Joanna Ostrowska
  • Ramón Parramón
  • Christian Ruby
  • Stéphane Simonin
  • Corina Suteu & Cristian Neagoe
  • Yohann Floch (coord.)
You can download the PDF for free: French and in English
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As the sparks fly upwards...

As the sparks fly upwards... is really on it's way now. The piece, which uses Isadora to bring live dancers and film clips together, had it's first showing last Friday with very positive results.Lights are attached to dancers' bodies which are then tracked in the space by a camera and used by Isadora to trigger specific pre-recorded film clips. The movement is the same for the live and filmed dancers but the order is completely different. Sometimes in unison, sometimes in canon, sometimes completely out of sync.Initial feedback includes comparisons to photographic dark rooms watching images develop, appraisals of the dynamic, fluid movement and claims of 'this is the future of screendance'.View the Isadora output...

Or mobile phone footage from the performance...

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Find more videos like this on dance-tech.net
i intervied dance/visual artist Jillian Peña. She creates video vignettes/tableaux as hybrid performances mixing hope and cinicism, spiritulaity and UFOs as a way of dealing with the concept of dance. Interviewed at Dance Theater Workshop, NYC 4/10/08 Video-based artist Jillian Peña's newest work, MOTHERSHIP, is a virtual meta-dance which creates movement through intimate interaction with its viewers. Set in an imaginary landscape of pop spirituality, the piece pulls the audience between hope and failure, devotion and cynicism, group experience and alienation. Upcoming performance at DTW, NYC Apr 16 – 19 at 7:30pm http://www.dancetheaterworkshop.org/ellsworth_pena jillianpena.com
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I interviewed Michelle Ellsworth before the premiere of her work http://www.tifprabap.org/ at Dance Theater Workshop in NYC. She talked about her journey as dance soloist making connection between technology, religions and humanness. In this episode I am experimenting with hyperlinking het video material/documentation to augment her words. I am using Viddler that allows you to create links and comment and more as dots in the timeline. So, hover over the dot and click in the link and will take you to some samples of her work. Documentation provided by the artist
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A CROSS-SECTED VIEW OF 16 PEOPLE, 16 ROOMS, 16 PRIVATE LIVES, SILENT ROOM IS AN X-RAY VISION OF 16 INTERIORS. IN THIS FILM-POEM, THE ROOM IS FELT FROM THE INSIDE. AN INTERIOR STEEPED IN DISCONTINUITY, WHERE UNUSUAL AND POETIC COMMUNICATIONS UNFOLD WORDLESSLY, THROUGH A CONTAMINATION OF THE SENSES. RATHER THAN A STORY LINE, THERE IS A SET OF TABLEAUX VIVANTS, EACH CRAFTED AROUND A FIXED IDEA, AN IMPULSE, A VOID, A HUNGER FOR AN IDEAL. SILENT ROOM IS A CINEMA OF LIGHT AND SHADOW, A CHAMBER CINEMA, WHEREIN THE MOST SILENT AND LEAST VISIBLE ELEMENTS VIOLENTLY DESCEND TO MURMUR ITS PRESENCE. IN THEIR WORK, THE SKOLTZ_KOLGEN ARTISTS USE A FOTOCINETIQUE APPROACH FOUNDED ON THE TEMPORAL FRAGMENTATION OF ACTION. TO ACHIEVE THIS EFFECT, SEVERAL SIMULTANEOUS CAPTATION TECHNIQUES WERE USED, IN CONFRONTATIONS OF VARIOUS VANTAGE POINTS. FOR A MORE PRECISE CONTROL OF TIME, A BATTERY OF CAMERAS WERE SEQUENTIALLY SYNCHRONIZED TO TAKE OVER 10,000 PHOTOGRAPHS, WHICH WERE SUBSEQUENTLY DIGITIZED AND ANIMATED. THE SKOLTZ_KOLGEN CELL THEN DEVELOPED DIGITAL FREQUENCY-SENSITIVE IMAGE- GENERATING SOFTWARE THAT INSTANTANEOUSLY SHADOWS THE AUDIO TRACK — SOMEWHAT LIKE A HEARTBEAT MONITOR THAT SHADOWS THE FREQUENCIES OF A HEARTBEAT, BUT IN THIS CASE EACH FREQUENCY OF SOUND CAN GENERATE ITS IMAGE EQUIVALENT. PLAYING WITH INTERLUDES OF THIS SPLIT-SECOND SYNERGY BETWEEN SOUND AND FILM, THE MUSIC AND SCORING EXPRESS A STATE OF AFFECT WITHIN THE ROOMS AND THE INTERNAL REALITY OF THE CHARACTERS. THIS IS THE FILM'S NARRATIVE TRACK. THERE IS NO DIALOGUE TO FOSTER UNDERSTANDING OR ANY REASSURANCES FOR THE VIEWER. INSTEAD, WE REMAIN IN A STATE OF CONTROLLED HYPNOSIS. SILENT ROOM IS AN ART OBJECT THAT DEFIES CLASSIFICATION — A HIGHLY POTENT FILM OF ITS TIME. Via dance-tech list by Hélène Lesterlin I saw the video work of skoltz_kolgen in Montreal and thought their work also had a very strong element of choreography, movement, humanness, tenderness, staging, theatricality... I saw the five channel video work entitled "Silent Room". Beautiful! If you get a chance to see their work, do it. http://www.skoltzkolgen.com/
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Tonight, I attended a very stimulating evening of performances as part of the Performance Mix Festival. Cynthia Hopkins, Karen Bernard, Layard Thompson, from New York and Nathalie Claude from Montreal delivered layered, sensitive, clever and shamanic performances with humor and sophisticated craft. Queer warriors mixed with holly madness, reflexions on mortality mixed with time/space travel. A trip! I was taken by the complexity, risk and the evocative power of their presence. It was an evening of edges and impossible stories about our human and post-human deliriums. Performances until April 5th!
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The Performance Mix festival organized Mobile Clubbing. It was an spontaneous gathering for dance. The rules are show up at the designated place and time, turn on your personal stereo and dance. Mobile clubbing is a matter of identity: you can dance the way you want, and listen to the music you choose. www.newdancealliance.org
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www.mediatisedsites.netMediatised Sites is the culmination of a six month interdisciplinary project involving artists from all over the world. Led by Tamara Ashley and Kate Craddock, these artists have been developing intimate response to their chosen geographical locale and communicating that response through online and digital media. The festival will include performances, discussions and installations created by these artists. Work in the festival will explore how technology mediates our perceptions of sites, landscapes and places, as well as virtualised relationships between each other. The day will also showcase work created by local artists in the tractors and attractors laboratory that takes place in the week preceding the festival.Day Pass: £8/£5Passes available from Dance City, www.dancecity.co.uk, 0191 261 0505
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