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29.05.2014-01.06.2014
international conference hosted by the MA program Choreography and Performance

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One of the global tendencies that describes the current situation of the arts under the conditions of neoliberal capitalism is privatization and financialization, in which both the arts and education lose the meaning and the status of a public good. Using the pretext of austerity and strategies of neoliberal policy, the state is dismantled in its public sector, disowning the arts and education as common concerns. While, on the one hand, it goes hand in hand with the transformation of labor in post-Fordism, de-skilling and re-skilling which trains flexible subjects, and, on the other hand, it reflects the temporality and affective modes of project-based, intermittent and precarious work, this tendency plays out as a merge between art and education, leaning on art as research, or art as practice, to name a few concepts in recent debate.

The past few years have witnessed a paradox in the development of higher education in the arts and university. On the one side, MA and doctoral programs in the arts are proliferating, thus registering an increased influx of artists into the academy. “Creative-art” and “practice-based” doctorates offer institutional support to artistic research, in other words, a refuge for many young artists who are struggling in precarious conditions of freelance production. To continue one’s studies by going back to school doesn’t just present a temporary relief from the art market, it responds to a relentless feeling of various kinds of structural lack: of knowledge, an incurable “unlearnedless” that artists express in the wake of knowledge economy; of consistency in work, which is compensated or covered by conflating one’s art with a project of lifelong learning and subject-formation; of public space that can be hijacked into a platform of artistic, theoretical, social or political gathering and activity; of time that is punctuated and fragmentarized by projects, nomadic lifestyle, and other forms of job opportunity that thwart the experience of duration in which things may go astray, in which one may hesitate, delve into something that doesn’t seem useful yet, drastically change or simply research. In sum, there are many positive aspects of higher education in the arts that empower artists today and, thereby, explain the mass exodus of artists from the artistic scene toward the university. But there are equally many problems associated with, what was uncritically appraised as the “educational turn” in the arts, which prompt us to organize this conference.

MORE INFORMATION

 

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International Workshop on Movement and Computing (MOCO14)
> Intersecting Art, Meaning, Cognition, Technology 
 
June 16-17 2014, Paris France
Ircam - Centre Pompidou
 
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MOCO is the first International Workshop on movement and computing. MOCO aims to gather academics and practitioners interested in the computational study, modeling, representation, segmentation, recognition, classification, or generation of movement information. We welcome research that models movement, technology and computation, and is positioned within emerging interdisciplinary domains between art & science. We invite participants interested in exploring how movement experience can contribute to computational knowledge through movement modeling and representation. The workshop references the challenge of representing embodied movement knowledge within computational models, yet it also celebrates the inherent expression available within movement as a language. While human movement itself focuses on bodily experience, developing computational models for movement requires abstraction and representation of lived embodied cognition. Selecting appropriate models between movement and its rich personal and cultural meanings remains a challenge in movement interaction research. Many fields, including Interaction Design, HCI, Education and Machine Learning have been inspired by recent developments within Neuroscience validating the primacy of movement in cognitive development and human intelligence. This has spawned a growing interest in experiential principles of movement awareness and mindfulness, while simultaneously fueling the need for developing computational models that can describe movement intelligence with greater rigor. This conference seeks to explore an equal and richly nuanced epistemological partnership between movement experience and movement cognition and computational representation.
 
MOCO will bring together people working in interdisciplinary intersections of Human Computer Interaction, Computer Graphics, Machine Learning, Artificial Intelligence, Robotics, Affective Computing, Cognitive Science, Neuroscience, Psychology, and Artists from Media Art, Choreography, Composition, Dance and Design. The workshop aims at promoting scientific and artistic collaborations within this inter-disciplinary boundary. It will offer opportunities to disseminate emerging research works through presentations, demonstrations, and group discussions.
 
= Keynote Speakers
=======================================
 
  * David Kirsh, Professor at University of California San Diego
  * Norman Badler, University of Pennsylvania.
 
= Suggested Topics
=======================================
 
  * Expressive movement-based interaction
  * Machine learning for movement 
  * modeling movement qualities
  * Gestural control
  * Movement generation 
  * Movement and sound interaction
  * Sensori-motor learning with audio/visual feedback
  * Embodied cognition and movement 
  * Visualizing movement 
  * modeling kinesthetic empathy 
  * Somatic practice and design 
  * Whole-body interaction
  * Expressive movement analysis and synthesis
  * Design for movement in digital art 
  * Semantic models for movement representation
  * Laban Movement Studies and computation
  * Dance and neuroscience
  * Biosensing and movement
  * Movement expression in avatar, artificial agents, virtual humans or robots.
  * Music and movement
 
= Participation to the workshop
=======================================
 
The workshop is an opportunity to present a research or a collaborative work. Participants will have the possibility to make a presentation of the results of their research on one of the themes of the workshop, and to interact with their scientific, artistic peers, in a friendly and constructive environment.
If you are interested in an oral presentation of your work with an optional demonstration, please submit a paper. 
 
= Submission date and format
=======================================
 
Technical papers with optional demo, 4 to 6 pages: 15th February 2014.
Notification 16 March 2014.
All submission will be peer-reviewed.
 
Please use the ACM template (alternate style): http://www.acm.org/sigs/publications/proceedings-templates
 
All submissions must be done through EasyChair: 
 
= Venue
=======================================
 
Ircam - Centre Pompidou, 1 Place Igor Stravinsky, 75004 Paris, France, http://www.ircam.fr
MOCO14 will be  co-located with the Manifeste Festival  
 
= Workshop Chairs
=======================================
 
  * Frederic Bevilacqua, Ircam, Paris, France
  * Sarah Fdili Alaoui, SIAT, SFU, Vancouver, Canada
  * Thecla Schiphorst, SIAT, SFU, Vancouver, Canada
  * Philippe Pasquier, SIAT, SFU, Vancouver, Canada
  * Jules Françoise, Ircam, Paris, France
 
Contact email: moco14@easychair.org
 
= Local Organization Committee
=======================================
> Ircam - STMS joint research unit with CNRS and Université Pierre et Marie Curie - Paris
 
  * Sylvie Benoit, Ircam, Paris, France
  * Frédéric Bevilacqua,  Ircam, Paris, France
  * Eric Boyer, Ircam, Paris, France
  * Emmanuel Fléty, Ircam, Paris, France
  * Jules Françoise, Ircam, Paris, France
  * Norbert Schnell, Ircam, Paris, France
  * Diemo Schwarz, Ircam, Paris, France
  * Hugues Vinet,  Ircam, Paris, France

 

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WE- second post: How can I make it accessible?

As the qualities and the layers of the work are getting more clear, I'm busy with thinking HOW CAN I MAKE IT ACCESSIBLE?
How can I create something that can touch different people, from different places, with different interests and different backgrounds.
I need to find something that is common for EVERYBODY. something global. Something universal. something that is beyond the specificity of what I do, and then, when I catch them, I can slowly and gradually lead them by the hand into my world.

Things that we can recognise and connect to are the things that we know from ourselves.
We can recognise when someone is having fun because we know how it feels to have fun.
We can identify with someone how experience loss if we experienced loss.
We feel empathy towards someone who is having a hard time because we know it is hard.
We get touched by witnessing moments and actions that we once passed through.

By understanding and analysing that, I realised the importance of humanity or reflecting humanity through my work.
I need to irrigate the human elements that are anyway existing in the process, and build the work (or we can call it the piece) in parallel to that.
What do I mean? How does it suppose to happen? Well, lets take one of examples that I gave before- FUN. Fun is something that we are experiencing together in rehearsals and outside of it anyway, so why not to bring it into the work?

This way of thinking and approaching brings me (back) to the idea of applications. Why not to use our experiences, friendships, losses, happiness, sadness and all the rest, in different fields of our lives? Why should we separate it? Why would I want to avoid something that can make my work and approach so ACCESSIBLE? Why would I want to have only "dance people" in the audience when I can have different people in the audience?
If the work is directed to the dance audience, it doesn't make sense that T'ai Chi practitioners, film-makers or soccer players will connect to it. But if its directed to people, then people will connect to it.

So how much of the process and the energy should be invested in thinking about the audience? Well, thats a whole other discussion…


Curiosity is being evoked when we recognise something which has something that we can connect to, but that we don't know as much as we want to know about it.
When we can identify with something but we are not sure why.
When we see that there is quality, urge and passion that can be equal to ours, but in a different form.
Same but different.

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Photo by Bart Grietens

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WANTED: FEMALE ACTORS with movement skills or DANCERS with

acting skills, FOR ELENA BAJO'S PERFORMANCE With Entheogenic

Intent (Burn the Witch) AT 18TH STREET ARTS CENTER, LOS

ANGELES, CALIFORNIA-US- ON THE 1ST OF FEBRUARY, 2014 

DESCRIPTION

The piece is created by Elena Bajo, a visual artist who has exhibited

internationally and focuses on the social, political aspects of the site in the

city of Los Angeles. Bajo combines performance with large scale

installations to investigate the political and social conditions of change in

post-industrial structures, creating site specific work and a space of

collective action.

The performers will be required to perform in the space of 18th Street Arts

Center. They will be required to do both improvised and choreographed

script/movements determined before hand with the artist. The generator

of the piece is a political text/poem. This political text-manifesto will be

handed to the performers and it will be used to generate their individual

script/choreography. Total duration of the performance around 20 min.

REHEARSALS

3 days, total: 2 days (1h/day) one on one individual work with the

artist and 1 day (1h/day) run-through in the space with all performers

If you are interested in this project please send ASAP an email to

elenabajo@gmail.com including a web link to video file where your work

can be seen , one image and a brief bio/cv. Express very briefly why you

want to participate in the project. You will be contacted by email to

proceed forward. If you don't have a link to video online let me know and

Ithe artist would send you a text fragment to prepare something short 1-2

min that you could record in Skype or video camera or iphone.

For your participation you will receive a small fee, copy of video footage

and photos of the performance as well as credits in the program. This is

an event widely advertised and expected to be a good exposure. Please

only apply if you are interested in being part of an experimental piece,

outside of the comfort zone, that is the spirit of this project.

More information about Elena Bajo’s work:

http://18thstreet.org/events/elena-bajo-exhibition

www.elenabajo.com

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CALL FOR PERFORMANCE SUBMISSIONS

Between the Seas Festival in New York City,

July 21st- 27th 2014

at the Wild Project (195 East 3rd str.)

www.betweentheseas.org

DEADLINE EXTENDED TO FEBRUARY 10TH 2014

Join us in celebrating contemporary Mediterranean culture in NYC!

Between the Seas Festival, New York City's only international Mediterranean festival, is inviting submissions for its fourth edition (July 21st to July 27th at the Wild Project)

We are looking for full and short length works, fully developed or works in progress, original or previously presented, in the fields of theater, dance and music by artists of the Mediterranean and Mediterranean diaspora. Selected applicants will perform alongside a group of curated artists in a total of approximately 15 different performances during one week. Some of the themes that the works may address are:

  • Mediterranean identity/ies: Works that explore or are inspired by life, identities and histories in or across Mediterranean societies

  • Living in-between: Works exploring or inspired by diasporic Mediterranean identities

  • Contemporary works and adaptations; Performances of existing and new works by contemporary Mediterranean playwrights/choreographers/composers. Adaptations or new interpretations of the classics in ways that highlight contemporary Mediterranean realities or explore new aesthetics; original works showcasing techniques, interests and interpretive models emerging in the Mediterranean region.

Submission Guidelines:

Please submit

  • A brief cover letter explaining your interest in the festival

  • A detailed project description (not longer than 3 pages). Make sure to specify your technical needs. We strongly advise that you keep your technical requirements very simple as all performances will be staged in the same theater space using the general festival lighting plot. Make sure to check the theater space and its technical specs to determine if it meets the needs of your work: www.thewildproject.com

  • Work samples. These may include: videos and photos of past work or of previous presentations of the proposed project; script (please send us the full script); reviews and press clippings of your show.

  • Resumes of the primary artists involved and company information

  • A non-refundable application fee of $40 [USD]. The application fee can be paid online on our website or by check payable to “Between the Seas Theater Productions LLC” and mailed to c/o Aktina Stathaki, 152 W131st str New York NY 10027. Make sure to write “BTS application fee” on the memo line.

The new deadline for applications is February 10th 2014. Application materials can be emailed to betweentheseasfestival@gmail.com (please indicate “BTS PERFORMANCE submission” in the subject line) or sent by mail to the following address: c/o Aktina Stathaki 152 West 131st street #1 New York NY 10027. Please review the full submission and selection guidelines on our website before submitting.

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It started from an idea. From a moment of inspiration that lightened my passion to start to create something.
Its not that first I wanted to create and then I had to think about what to create, but it was more like the inspiration brought this urge to me.
Then, I found the material- the people I want to work with. The people that understands me, that interest me, and that share interests with me.
Then, I turned to look at the ingredients. What is the vocabulary and the language that I want to create and to use in the piece? What do I already have (from the idea itself and from the people) and what do I have to build and develop?
This led me to building some kind of a daily routine that will (hopefully) develop abilities, qualities, expressions and textures that I'm interested in having in the piece.
This routine is not directly connected to the work, but if we will be able to make the right applications, it will serve that goal.
In general this is something that I'm trying to apply in my life- to work and to practice different things that I'm interested at and to create the applications between them. Sometimes its good to separate things, but in the end, if we learn and practice things and then we don't use them its a bit pointless…

So after having the idea (my initial inspiration), the material (people) and the ingredients (physical language), I arrived to the point of asking myself what do I want to do with all this? What is my personal taste in relation to all this, and what do I want to say about it? Or in different words- the choreographic and dramaturgy side of the work.

So to start the work together we started with a very similar process to the process I just described until now. First we got connected to the initial idea that I got inspired from, on top of that we put the individuality and personality, and on top of that we started to create the physicality that comes from all this, with my guidance and my personal taste.

Working and dealing with all these aspect of the process, it became part the process itself.
Everyday we put time to invest in each one of the layers of the process and also time to mix them and let the applications take part.

I think this is what they call PROCESS.

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12249565875?profile=originalPhotos by: Anette Wörner

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MOOCing?

Ever wonder how online instruction in higher education is going to impact dance? Might teaching composition courses online add a layer of richness on top of physical practice? Perhaps, so long as administrations don't reduce our course content to online instruction.In MOOCing?, a new composition that I am working on for UC Berkeley students, I will choreograph and set a dance remotely. Of course distance collaboration is nothing new to the arts, but under the heading of "online instruction" we will consider the future of higher education in dance.Follow our process at moocingbdp.wordpress.com. We will begin regular postings next month.
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programmed theatre lights by Fred Nicais
6 dmx motors with 6 meter articulated origami mobile screen by Peter Maschke
5 video projectors
5 computers on network
max msp
Live and max msp and interactive sound by Fred Braye, recorded composition George de Decker
unity
syphon
madmapper
osc
dlight
specialized softs : EBA effects sequencer/editor, Video Malaxer by Yacine Sebti
2 custom 9 variable wireless motion bracelets with custom software by Vincent Paesmans
3 kinect cameras
IDQ photon detector
webcam
prepared animations, graphics and video files by Lucas Racasse and Unity 3D animations by Robin Yerles
costume by Heidi Erhardt
dance by Bud Blumenthal
and
a
candle

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The Paris based interdisciplinary artist  and sustainability specialist Jeanne Bloch was awarded the dance-tech AIR Berlin for the month of FEBRUARY 2014.

Congratulations!

This is her page  in dance-tech.net

http://www.dance-tech.net/profile/JeanneBloch

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During her residency she will work at the beautiful  Lake Studios Berlin next February she will work on her project Augmented Dance by light: A research on e-textile and dance

During her Dance-Tech/Lake Studio Residency, she will continue her research on e-textile and dance with the help of Pauline Vierne,http://www.dance-tech.net/profile/PAULINEVIERNE.

By using different techniques to light the body space, she creates a material that is neither light neither movement but can exist only by the combination of both.

"Work at the Lake Studios will help me create a vocabulary based on movement and light. As an outcome of this work, I will design a framework for a 4D dance/light class!!".

This research is part of TAFO#2 - The Temple Had Oblique Window. A dance performance that discuss today's role of climate change discourse.

http://jeannebloch.com/work-in-progress

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Jeanne Bloch is an interdisciplinary artist using her mixed background as a choreographer-artist and sustainability specialist. Jeanne worked on issues such as fair trade, child labor, sustainable consumption and global warming…Issues that drive her artistic work as well.

In December 2009, she started at the occasion of the Copenhagen Summit an ongoing artistic project: “The Man with a Dove” and was also a member of the Climate Sustainability Platform at COP15. In the same time, she initiated Twice Out of Paradise, a research program integrating ecological experimentation and choreographic creation, which benefited from a residency “d’essai” at the Paris based cultural center,104. In 2012, she organized in collaboration with the artist Prue Lang a workshop on ecological experimentation in dance performance hosted by Théâtre de la Ville in Paris.  In 2013, she was selected to present her approach at FASTE#1 professional day on Arts and Sciences @ La Faïencerie, Théâtre de Creil.

She was an invited artist to Imagine 2020 (Art & Climate Change) Summer Lab #2 in Portugal.  Jeanne isIRCASE (International Research Chair in Art and Sustainable Enterprise) associate artist and a member of the AACORN Art & Business Network. She enjoyed being a student at Stanford Practice Based Research in the Arts MOOC/course from Leslie Hill, Associate Professor, Performance Making and Helen Paris, Associate Professor, Performance Making.

Jeanne lives in Paris and worked in Europe, the United States, South Korea, Republic of the Congo, Israel and El Salvador.

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Por Sabela Mendoza Fernández para A cuerpo de Baile


Hoy es mi último día de Costa Contemporánea, el último día de la mejor inmersión en danza que he podido disfrutar en mucho tiempo. Tanto, que no he conseguido encontrar ni un segundo para actualizar el diario de danza, hasta hoy. Es difícil explicar la experiencia sin estar aquí. Pero lo voy a intentar.

Lejos, muy lejos de la vida cotidiana y de la rutina, llegando al parque natural de Cabo de Gata, en Níjar, Almería, existe un lugar donde disfrutar de la danza de la mañana a la noche. Un lugar que además es un paraíso natural y que en estos días está habitado de personas en movimiento, en transformación, en compañía y, en definitiva, en muy buen rollo.

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Desde Madrid el viaje es un poco largo, pero todo se olvida y se deja atrás cuando se comienza a ver el paisaje desértico, montañoso, arenoso, casi lunar, de Almería. Y su línea azul en contraste al fondo. Hemos llegado al mar. Cinco días por delante para dedicarse en cuerpo y mente a la danza, sin olvidar el entorno, la naturaleza y toda la vida que nos rodea en este espacio maravilloso.

En esta IV ediciónde Costa Contemporánea nos acompañan Jordi Cortés y Cobosmika, la compañía creada por Olga Cobos y Peter Mika. Aquí van unos trocitos de lo que hemos estado construyendo estos días:

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Sigue leyendo en el Blog A cuerpo de baile de Sabela.

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The israeli dancer and choreographer Shai Faran, was awarded the first dance-tech AIR Berlin for the month of January 2014. Congratulations!

Visit her page on dance-tech.net

During her residency she will work at the beautiful  Lake Studios Berlin on her new creation WE (working title) where she explores with a group of 6 dancers ...

The subtle changes in the way that we position ourselves, in space and in time, the forms and the relations between different body parts, changes in the way that we use the space and the location where we decide to do things, the relations between different bodies and different kinds of interactions, the relation to music, the way that we touch someone and where, where do we look, how do we breath. Those changes have a huge affect on the EXPRESSION of the body and on the way that the spectator perceive things. It can take us from the small detail back to the whole body image and more then this- the image of the whole space

How much of the way that we perceive and translate things is decided by the way that we are used to see things around us, and how much can we actually stay open and let ourselves see new things in what we think that is obvious(text from proposal)

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Shai Faran is an Israeli dancer, teacher and choreographer, based in Europe.

 After studying in the dance department at the Misgav High School, she continued her studies at the Haifa dance workshop for dancers and choreographers. She danced for the Kibbutz Contemporary Dance Company II,  the Sigma Ensemble, the Dafi Altabab Dance Group and then moved to Europe, where she has worked with different choreographers such as Matej Kejzer, Maya M.Caroll, Zoe Knights, Michael Miler, Yuval Pick, Shumpei Nemoto, Maura Morales Alessandro Sciarroni and more, and performed around Europe. 

She created several works which won scholarships from the America- Israel Cultural Foundation and the foundation named after Ehud Manor.

For two years she went through the teachers’ training for GAGA - the movement language developed by Ohad Naharin at the Batsheva Dance Company.

In the last few years she has been teaching contemporary dance and improvisation classes and workshops around Europe while developing her own work and working as a free lance dancer, teacher and choreographer.

Due to an unexpected big number of applications we decided to separate residencies per month and give opportunities to more artists.

February 2014 Artist in residency will be announced no later than December 8th

Image by Bart Grietens

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I will be presenting my real 3D movie project WOMB in Valenciennes, France as part of a 2 days symposium about 3D imagery for stage. 27th and 28th of November. I will present exclusive fotage 3D tests of my stereoscopic projects in Black and White anaglyph and images of the storyboard.

My presentaiton is on the 28th, at 17h00

6 – De la scène au relief

Présidents de séance : Eric Prigent, Le Fresnoy – Studio national des arts contemporains et Christl Lidl
École Supérieure des Beaux-Arts de Valenciennes
16h30 : Images 3D/relief en microgravité – Kitsou Dubois, directrice artistique de Ki Productions
17h10 : Womb, un projet de film stéréoscopique – Gilles Jobin, chorégraphe

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Depuis plusieurs années, les images envahissent l’espace scénique. La présence des écrans sur la scène a été maintes fois remarquée et commentée. Pourtant, l’avénement d’une scène-image – scène et écran se superposant jusqu’à se confondre – n’a que rarement été pris comme objet d’étude. Dans la scène-image, les interprètes et/ou les spectateurs sont immergés dans des images sans écran, en 3D, grâce à divers stratagèmes optiques, à des machines de vision. Le numérique, avec l’interactivité, permet d’agir sur ces images, de les modifier, en temps réel ou en temps différé. Les images deviennent des espaces habitables. Certaines mises en scène de Mark Reaney, Teatro Cinema, Dumb Type, Victor Pilon et Michel Lemieux, Kris Verconck, Kitsou Dubois, Gilles Jobin, Jean-Michel Bruyère… sont caractéristiques de cette démarche.

Des images habitables : Arts de la scène et 3D

http://www.imageshabitables.com/

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Dance and Architecture

Both dance and architecture have moved away from traditional notions of space and form. Previously constrained, architecture now embraces dynamism and rhythm; dance, the chaotic and random. Cecil Balmond’s non-linear forms now take architecture further into the unpredictable realm. Journalist Patrick Steffen explores this phenomenon, examining the reciprocal relationship between the disciplines. - See more at: http://thinking-in-practice.com/dance-and-architecture#sthash.HQG3VE5l.dpuf
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Call for Applications for Residency  for FEBRUARY 2014
dance-techAIR@Lake Studios Berlin
www.lakestudiosberlin.com

February 1st to March 1st 2014

dance-tech artist in residency in Berlin offers to international interdisciplinary movement and media artists the possibility to live and make art in a peaceful artist run working, living and performance space in Berlin, Germany.

The artists will enjoy the recently opened Lake Studios Berlin, a unique living and creative working space with fast connection into the exciting creative center of Berlin and with the advantage of the quiet and beauty of Mueggelsee lake and a forest at only 5 minute walk for depth concentration on research and creative process.

The resident artist will enjoy a private apartment and access to a dance space with sprung wooden floors. Lake Studios Berlin is primarily a working space for 8 diverse movement artists with the need to go deeper into their work and practice. It is an experience of collaborative living and creation, and the resident will have the opportunity of artistic exchange as well as access to inside information about the dance scene in Berlin.

 

INCLUDES:

  • The resident artist will have access to 100 hours of studio space per month, divided between the large and small Studios.
  • There is a possibility to teach classes, workshops and / or organize a performance or work-in-progress showing at the end of the residency period.
  • The artists will be featured  and should blog about their process on dance-tech.net for the months of the residency.
  • The artist also may decide to use dance-tech.tvLIVE channels to share the  process of exchange with the community.

NOTE: the selected artist brings his/her own equipment. The residency  does not provide any equipment. 

There is one projector available in the big space.

 

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The selected artists will pay his/her transportation expenses, meals and will pay 500 Euros  for the Month.

 

Artists, scholars and practitioners can apply for the residency. Their practice and research should relate to the  topical themes (not exclusive):

 

Choreography and creation process

New media and performance

Movement practices  and economy

Improvisation and real time systems

Screen-dance  and movement based installation

Choreographic scores and new media tools (generative tools)

Movement, somatics and technology

Mobile devices, locative media and choreography

Social media  and trans-local collaborations

Contemplative practices and movement

 

Application Process:

The applicants must be a dance-tech member where you write you bio  and profile.

Please send an email including:

1.-Your research goals

2.-What would you like to work on and if you would like to offer master classes, workshops, etc.

3.-Two samples of you work posted on your dance-tech account (urls)

 

Send it via email to Marlon Barrios Solano to

<marlon@dance-tech.net>

 

IMPORTANT:

write in the email subject: dance-tech Berlin FEBRUARY 2014

 

 

Deadline for application for February: December 5th, 2013.

We will let you know by December 15th about the decision.

 

Note: this residency is conceived as a sustainable collaboration between dance-tech and Lake Studios Berlin as a way to generate alternative and affordable spaces for independent artists and creative researchers.

 

 

Questions?

marlon@dance-tech.net

 

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In May 2011, Tina Tarpgaard published this article in one of the modul-dance newsletters. How does she work as an independent artist in Denmark?

Tina Tarpgaard_Living Room_photo Søren Meisner 1

In the fall 2011 I will start the first residency as part of the modul-dance project. Together with my group of dancers and software artists (recoil performance group) I am invited to spend two weeks in the excellent facilities at the Tanzhaus NRW in Düsseldorf. Later we will travel to Ljubljana to spend a week researching in collaboration with the innovative dance house Kino Siska. Both giving us a great opportunity to work focused with the concept we have developed as a base for our new production Living-Room. The performance will be produced at Dansehallerne in Copenhagen with the premiere on March 10th 2012.

The advantages of moving yourself and the group you are working with, to a place "away from home" are many. I think most people know the feeling of the intensity that can buil within a group when you not only work together, but also have a mutual experience of new sorroundings, finding your way together, get lost together, dining together. etc.

It amplifies that feeling of a journey and ties connections that are priceless in a working process - at least to me.

But of course you don't move yourself just for the comfort and team building. The challenges and inspirations are equally important. So the prospect of meeting professionals from different arts communities is exciting, both professionals I usually work with but also to meet different approaches.

For example: The way our support system in Denmark is put together (as well as the habits and traditions I suppose) makes it quite rare that choreographers have the means for close collaboration with dramaturges. I believe that this can be unfortunate for the artistic processes and eventually for the performance that is presented to the audience. I am therefore excited to have the chance to meet and collaborate with with dramaturgical professionals at Tanzhaus NRW. In Ljubjana I will have the chance to meet and collaborate with local dancers, a great source of inspiration for me and the group.

Recoil performance group, with whom I usually work and create performances, has a quite specific interest in the collaboration between dance and software art. The amount of work that goes in to this collaboration is usually quite substantial and of high significance to our productions. Therefore I am hoping, that besides meeting dancers, choreographers and dramaturges, I will have the chance to meet professionals from the visual art, video and software art communities. More over I hope to get the artist from the different ways of creating performing arts, to meet each other. This could be in showings, roundtable meetings or other situations that could facilitate dialog, exchange of experience and ideas etc.

Already being part of the initial meeting in Lyon, late summer 2010, it struck me (not surprisingly) that the production habits, economical support structures, level of intervention/collaboration between dance houses and artists etc., are significantly different in between the European countries represented in the modul-dance project. I hope that by visiting both Tanzhaus NRW and Kino Šiška I get at chance to get a deeper understanding of the structures there and how it affects the work of the artists, the audience building and the general working and presentation frame of performing arts.

Working as an independent artist in Denmark has caused me to raise a number of questions to how our structure is put together. For me the participation in the modul-dance project is a great opportunity to seek inspiration and exchange experiences with houses and artist communities on both the creative process as well as the structures that we as independent artist are surrounded by. Especially as the project spans over all the different steps of creation: research, residency and production/presentation. I find this very valuable and hope to exchange constructive ideas that can facilitate the development of artist communities as well as personal development as a performing artist.

Picture: © Søren Meisner

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ASSOCIATE ARTS PROFESSOR

Dance and New Media

Department of Dance

Tisch School of the Arts

New York University/Tisch School of the Arts Department of Dance seeks to fill an Associate Arts Professor faculty position in its conservatory dance program to begin Fall 2014. Long recognized as one of the nation's leading dance departments, the program offers a spectrum of courses integrating artistic process and intellectual enrichment, with a focus on technique, performance, dance composition, and a developing interest in Dance and New Media. The Department of Dance faculty and performing arts professionals maintain a supportive atmosphere of collaboration and continuing artistic achievement.

We currently seek a leader in the field of Dance and New Media with well-rounded knowledge of the latest cutting-edge digital, video/audio software and hardware, interactive movement/sound/image technologies, and an artistic vision that integrates digital media and dance. The ideal candidate will foster a creative environment that will inspire our students to use the latest technology in the creation of new dance/performance, and to publicize their work through digital media. The department wishes to develop global dance theater collaborations by utilizing interactive technological practices such as digital streaming to connect our dancers with other artists across the world. We are looking for a trailblazer with a desire to help build and implement a significant course of study in this broad, evolving field.


Responsibilities include: developing and teaching dance and new media/production courses, and courses in classic and new technologies in film, digital media and online development, specifically as it relates to dance; developing and mentoring students in the filming and broadcasts of multi-camera HD recordings and streams of departmental concerts; and updating the Tisch Dance and New Media site and the Department of Dance site.

Other responsibilities include mentoring student choreographers across the department in using digital technologies to capture their work, as well as teaching students how to use digital media in their performances. This faculty member will serve as advisor for student concerts (particularly involving dance and media), and will counsel students on academic and career goals, create professional media partnerships, and advise dance and new media internships and fellowships.
S/he will also train and mentor graduate assistants and digital student production crews in filming, digital workflows, and dance and new media pedagogy. Service on departmental, Tisch and University-wide committees is required as is continued engagement in professional, creative and scholarly activities.


Minimum qualifications: relevant degree (preferred) with significant experience as a university-level teacher in dance and new media; a national reputation as a dance and new media artist; high-level professional experience with technology and new media; the ability and desire to collaborate with a collegiate faculty on problem solving within the department; and active experience in European or other international dance media contexts. Salary commensurate with experience.


The Tisch Department of Dance enrolls 90 undergraduate dance majors and 30 MFA students. In addition to two theaters and five
dance studios, department facilities include digital media and music studios. Students perform in 13 concerts yearly, with internet-based and inter-departmental collaborations involving composers and media artists.
Applicants should submit: A DVD with a creative sample of their work (dance for the camera, projection design, etc), curriculum
vitae, letter of intent, and 3 references with contact information no later than December 15, 2013 to: Andy Teirstein, Chair of the Search Committee, The Department of Dance, Tisch School of the Arts, New York University, 111 Second Avenue, 3rd Floor, New York, NY 10003. For additional information about the department, please visit: www.dance.tisch.nyu.edu

New York University is committed to diversity in both faculty and students, and encourages applications from women and minorities. New York University is an affirmative action/equal opportunity institution.

http://www.dance-tech.net/profile/AndyTeirstein

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