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WORK IN PROGRESSEukinetik Tech es un proyecto de Caída Libre / Brisa MP, que tiene como sentido estudiar el cuerpo en movimiento a partir de la informática. Más allá de la situación misma de interactividad que permita controlar video y sonido en tiempo real, entendiendo que un movimiento podría tener un sonido o una imagen, no como representación sino más bien como interpretación; los que preocupa en esta primera etapa, es estudiar el cuerpo desde lo que Laban nombra como “Eukinética”.Eukinetik-tech es un proyecto de creación de un software para danza y performance diseñado bajo un sistema interactivo en tiempo real que involucra imagen, sonido y cuerpo en movimiento. El proyecto experimenta en "physicalcomputing" teniendo como base el estudio realizado por el coreógrafo Rudolf Laban en 1928, quien determinó que los movimientos corporales se realizaban en base a tres cualidades: tiempo, espacio y energía l (“Eukinética”).

Creación de dispositivos inalámbricos para mapeo del cuerpo. Como primer problema " el espacio" , creando un sistema de motion capture (Mocap), en base a un sistema electrónico, un sistema de captura y programación que envíe datos sobre la posición de la zona mapeada en un espacio kinesférico. Tenemos que tener en claro que tenengo que alimentar un dispositivo inalámbrico, como lo hago seguro y liviano, que el cuerpo sea mapeable con luz o sin ella, que permita moverse sin demasiado peso en el cuerpo para que no nos limite tanto el movimiento.. desde acciones cotidianas hasta complejos movimientos de danza.Brisa MPFONDART Nacional 2009Santiago_ Chile
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tips for work

Living as an independent dancer has its challenges. While you have to provide your own Dental Plan, you do have the freedom to work when and where you like. Wildblue has offered me a job doing work. I may take them up on it.Have any of you had experience with this outfit? Have you been impressed by their treatment of workers or have you had a bad experience. Any tips or advice welcome.
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The Nature of Release

I had the first of 4 session on academic skills with the first yr performing art students today that focused on their physical preparation with regards to a warm up. I have always started with the practice of release. What I did was introduce them to some practical techniques regarding the phenomenal encounter of release, which I have broken down into 3 bits1 The release that is a result of letting go, concerning one's breath after breathing in; and how it affects the quality of effort and relaxation2 The release that results from a fall in movement and its smooth recovery3 The release that is a created after the relief from a good and demanding stretch that will align thephysical journal.There are more examples, including the release the comes after an emotional outburst and the release that comes after physical exertion. But I chose to concentrate the above 3 as it allowed me to focus on posture and alignment.
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Rhythmic code and Ifa

Hi PeepulsI have been working on how to utilise Simon Blackmore's experimental coded system that can trigger individual rhythms by tapping out a simple binary code with two sticks. Each code is tapped out in time with a guided click track, which then triggers a recorded cyclical pattern of rhythm in real time. There are similarities between 'binary code' and the 'Ifa code' in terms of their numerical structure. The Ifa is the traditional Yoruba's Divination code. The question that I am asking currently is, putting belief and divination aside, could there be a rhythmic link between the two codes that emerges as a result of their simularity? Is there inherent values/logic to certain patterns of rhythms or are they just arbitary? The concept of the return beat both organic and digital, is key to understanding the context of this research.This idea of 'code' is one of the components of Johannes Birringer's research project 'Ukiyo', floating worlds. We are going to Japan in Dec 09 to explore some of these ideas further. I am interested to see how the concept of code can be research practically within 'Ukiyo'Olu
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Roller Street Dance by Amirella


My dance is called Improvised Inline Street Dance : I skate only by dancing in the street. I invite you to discover some videos showing 'I and I Street Dance' on my favorite songs.

Nina Hagen - African Reggae


Crooked Stilo (USA) - La Charanga, from their album Cumbia Urbana




Let me present you my best friends from Argentina horny.gif

Axel Krygier - Looking for Summer Hit, from the album ZORZAL (zzk records)




Villa Diamante - Juana Molina Vs Benga, from the new album EMPACHO DIGITAL (zzk records)




REGGAETON!!!
DJ Alemegamix
- Cambio (Daddy Yankee Mix), from his album La Escuela de los DJ's



MORE REGGAETON ?
A mix of Atrevete Te Te from a friend of mine... with la traduction in english et en français sur mon blog hungry.gif





I love Cumbia, and I'm preparing a selection of Roots Cumbia for soon!

Super Grupo G
- Princesa Talibana (Mexico)



My first favorite song when I was 13: Live On Mars, from the unforgettable album Unbehagen




I do love Reggae and Dub music! I hope to built a reggae collection with Reggae Music from all over the world

This is a tribute to my friend Manutension, the leader of the band Improvisators Dub, who left us suddenly in May 2009. RIP Manu, we miss you.




I like the Oriental Dub of Fedayi Pacha, here's a Causasian Blues, from his new album From The Oriental School Of Dub



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Augmented Reality Ecosystem

V2_ is organizing an afternoon on Augmented Reality in which we will bring together, experience and discuss the emerging ecosystem around Augmented Reality in the Netherlands and beyond.Augmented Reality EcosystemDecember 4, 200912:00 - 18:00V2_, Eendrachtsstraat 10, Rotterdam+31 (0)10 206 72 72We will focus on the following sectors:- public/governmental- technology- commercial- education- culture & heritage- artistsThe participants will experience a small number of AR applications but the goal of the program is to have personal interactions and start a dialogue around how this "new" medium - which is expected to have mass impact on society in the near future - might develop and how useful collaborations between the sectors can evolve.More information on the program and guests will be announced on this website in the coming weeks. Layar, Second Life Europe, Marcel Wanders Studio and Wikitude have confirmed so far.This is a private event, if you are interested to join please contact us at ar-ecosystem@v2.nlAugmented Reality Ecosystem is part of the MultimediaN research program.External LinksDutch company Layar win Picnic prize 2009http://www.amsterdamcitymarketing.com/?tag=augmented-realityHow will Augmented Reality affect your business by Havard Business Reviewhttp://blogs.harvardbusiness.org/sviokla/2009/10/how_will_augmented_reality_aff.htmlThe respected Economist on ARhttp://www.economist.com/search/displaystory.cfm?story_id=14299602
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Invisible Dancer

As a dancer, I see music and all of the shapes, lines, spaces and synergies within the moving music molecules. Jerry Leake’s “Cubist” CD sparks combustible creative energy, the context of which changes every time I encounter it … like “Aldebaran,” which starts with a ‘big bang’ on the tam tam, simple glass chimes, flows into jingles of hanging and Tibetan bell choruses, balafon, vibraphone and glockenspiel interludes, and timbres of low log drum and tabla (body shakin’) grooves. My “invisible dancer” responds and anticipates, expands, contracts, releases, spirals up/down, falls and recovers…whirling cosmic images within a rich musical tapestry that just won’t let her rest. “Cubist” will certainly inspire interesting and novel choreographies, the world round.

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Festival Panorama 2009 @ dance-techTV

Hello all, this is Marlon writing from Brazil! Tune in dance-techTV to watch performance excerpts, interviews and live broadcasts from Festival Panorama 2009, Rio de Janeiro. Watch video podcast about the opening night with excerpts of Lamentation (Martha Graham, 1930), La Mère e Étude Révolutionnaire (Isadora Duncan, 1921), Duo dEden (Maguy Marin, 1986), Steptext (William Forsythe, 1985). Also see, Nayse Lopez and Eduardo Bonito, festival curators talk about the festival activities. You can also watch the festival loop here: http://www.dance-tech.net/profile/dancetechTV
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Back in June, during Eurokaz – The International Festival of New Theatre, Arlene Hoornweg and Pauline Kalker from theatre company Hotel Modern gave me an interview about their work. We weaved our talk around two of their performances - Kamp and The Shrimp Tales.

Photo by Herman Helle from Kamp

Hotel Modern is not a typical theatre company. Because of their visual aesthetics and the multiple use of cameras, sculpture, puppetry and various sound devices, you can find them regularly in books that cover topics of expanded, live cinema and new media art in cinematic context.For those of you who admire the work by Slinkachu, Nathalie Djurberg, Marcel Dzama, Josef Nagj, Tadeusz Kantor, Walter Martin & Paloma Munoz etc, the relation with Hotel Modern is like a theatre extension of visual arts.

Let’s start with the concept of your company… the concept is wider, it involves theatre aspects, but you are also notable company in the field of expanded cinema… but there is a lot of applied arts present even on your web site… I would call it visual art…. When did you decide to choose such aesthetics?Arlene Hoornweg: We like that!Pauline Kalker: Yeah, we have the website with many rooms. I think, it’s because when we made our first performance somebody suggested us if we would like to do a music theatre. That person thought that this was maybe something for us, we were very young at that time. Then she got an idea…Arlene Hoornweg: Yeah, I was playin’ guitar. That was after theatre school, and Pauline and I were searching a bit. After theatre school I realized I want something else. I wanted to perform, but I also liked music. So, I started to play guitar and I really liked making songs and I really got into that. Then the theatre director said, you can make a music performance if you want. I said, OK! Let’s do that. Then we asked Arthur Sauer, the composer to work with us. He still works with us. And then the three of us made a music performance and it was fun.

Photo by Leo van Velzen from The Shrimp Tales

Arlene Hoornweg, Herman Helle and Pauline Kalker

PK: Yeah, it was fun to go really into technique, because he had these little boxes which distorted our voices, like making high voices and pitched it. He had many different instruments, and Arlene gathered texts around the theme of life and death. She made a number from every text, like a song and Arthur had all these instruments and it was really like playing. It was fun to play with the technique of his music and sounds, to make a kind of landscape of sounds. I think we both like playing with it.AH: But we also found out what we can tell with text, what we can tell with music, for example. And that’s also what we do now, what we tell with images? What we can tell with text? We can tell a lot with images, and you can tell a lot with music; and you can tell something with text…

Photo by Leo van Velzen from The Shrimp Tales

PK: They all have their own possibilities. We both like the fact that the level of imagination in our performances is very high. I think we like to be in another world, to create the whole world, not only text. We want to create a really new universe. You need different senses for this. Because it’s not only one dimension, it’s not only people and text.For instance, like our latest performance we did with shrimps. It’s called The Shrimp Tales, actors are real shrimps. If you have a world that is populated by shrimps, which perform human activities that’s even more imaginative. Especially with cameras and small models Herman (Helle) is using in ‘Kamp’, you have literally a whole world build.

Photo by Herman Helle from Kamp

You have small models and you can be in that world, then you can make them talk with one another. You need sound to make an atmosphere. I think, if you have different media like music or visual art with sound and little bit of text sometimes, the imagination becomes even more intense, more then having only a painting. Well, it’s not better then another, it’s just what we like.You have many layers; that’s natural…AH: Yes, that’s the way we look at life. That you have so many layers, that there is not only one. There are lots of artists who want to have the essence, or a focus they are trying to pick up. That’s also very nice, but we want to pick everything out of the world to show the richness, and the layers. We also want to show the enormous cosmos.

Photo by Hans Werlemann from Rococo

Your performative technique is very specific… where would you place yourself as performers?PK: That’s different from each performance. For instance, in The Shrimp Tales we are using these little microphones and we are dressed up like we are a kind of glamorous or punk band with light on our faces. We are moving the shrimps and we do a lot of voices, we really have to make shrimps performing. At the same time we also have screenings and projections on the wall.So, the audience can see huge shrimps in a shrimp world and can be focused on it. They can also look at us; we are also performing as actors, playing the scenes and animating the shrimps, doing the voices of shrimps. The audience can watch us, too. We are really performing as actresses, we are really there. We are showing emotions on the face, and we are aware that the audience is sometimes looking at our faces to see our emotions, and then they look at the shrimps again.

Photo by Herman Helle from Rococo

With ‘Kamp’ is more sober. We are part of a machine. We are there, but we are like in a machine. In that way our bodies are telling the kind of objectivity that in ‘Kamp’ is kind of objective, in factual way. Our performing is anonymous and factual, we have really choreography. We sit down or get up in the same time, the rhythms of our bodies and the moves in that way are related to dance. We are really aware of how we stand or how we look. We choose a neutral way of being there. In ‘The Great War’ we have the text, and the text is a bit like songs, but for acting… it’s very very short. We do it like text but more in a song way. We are aware of our voice.When we are a part of the machinery we are also partly technicians at the stage, like cameraman. We have to run around getting the machinery going. At the other hand we also make sounds on the stage.

This multi-functionality is pretty logical these dayz… Besides, it’s the way you express yourself within many different techniques… you function like a post rock band…PK: Because we are a group, it’s more like a band. Herman brings his models, I bring the story line, Arlene her performing skills, you know. So, when thinking about the content, we did all things together. Composers are bringing sounds, and we all bring stuff together into the whole artwork. So, the artwork has a special energy.Yeah, it’s a mash up of your ideas and thoughts…. Could you describe me the processes of your work?AH&PK: First, we never now! (laughter)PK: After every show we have to start all over again. It’s like a cliché, but it’s true. You think you know nothing.AH: Yeah, nothing. What we are going to do?! Sometimes you get nervous, but sometimes you don’t. Then we start to write down our ideas and thoughts. But it also depends of the project. For ‘Kamp’ it was a very specific idea that came up. For ‘The Shrimp Tales’ the ideas came from many different ways and we had gathered them and developed it from ideas we had last few years.

Photo by Joost van den Broek from The Great War

PK: There is always a starting point. There is always this one person who has the beginning idea, because only one head pumps up. So, for ‘The Shrimp Tales’ it was my idea to get shrimps out. Actually it was a comedy idea; basically I wanted shrimps performing people. Then we had some ideas and we decided to do it on the stage. So, that’s much opened and very specific. We had an idea from before, the idea of showing the city. So, that’s how we connected it. What’s in the city?! What happens in the library, or in the museum, or hospital?AH: Then we decide either we want them on the ground or on the tables.

Photo by Joost van den Broek from The Great War

PK: Going from these ideas there are many moments to turn on your fantasy. We really have to make it work. We collect many ideas and then we choose the one we like the most. After that, Herman makes the model of that and we collect our stories and connections in the plot. We want to get the atmosphere of these places.Herman first makes very simple model which we use for improvising things. Then we start to talk and write a little bit to work it out. We combine many ideas, and then we choose the one we like most. We pick them together and make a good scene of it. In the process we also make a lot of crap, so we choose really good ones. That’s basically like shooting with a lot of bullets.

Photo by Joost van den Broek from The Great War

You are cleaning the mess of ideas…PK: Yeah! First, we create a mess of ideas, because we have to create a lot of ideas in order to play with them.AH: And, of course, we discuss a lot about it. What the performance is about, and what structure does it have? Why we want to use some things, why not other, and so. In ‘Shrimps’ we ended with fifteen scenes in thirty minutes, and that’s a lot.PK: In ‘Kamp’ it was different, because the story was already there. We just had to decide what part of the story we want to show. At the end we finally chose the basic things, maybe like a cliché – gazing, crimes. For us, we don’t want to be original in what we tell. We want to tell the basic things and the most shocking, the basic things in a way.

Photo by Joost van den Broek from The Great War

For instance, there were also medical experiments in Auschwitz and we wanted to have a scene also showing that. Because, we didn’t want to use texts, the image of medical experiments that we made didn’t communicate at all. Then we decided not to put it in. Not everything has to be in and dedicated. Instead of that, we thing that it has to be consistent and in a way balanced. We also have execution in performance, but we didn’t show every way of execution, but only one. It was quite difficult to choose which element we want to show. So, that was another path.AH: Some things are the same, and some not because the material is different.

Photo by Herman Helle from Kamp

Seems like covering the topic of Auschwitz in ‘Kamp’ had stronger effect with puppets and big screens, instead of acting… People find hard to comprehend the fact of evilness… Atrocities and killings are happening now in this very moment in Africa, Asia… but we are never enough prepared for those facts…PK: I think it’s good to have different ways of telling. As preparations for Kamp we were watching documentaries with interviews of the survivors. I think that’s the best way of telling… just listen to the stories by people who were there. That’s really authentic, but it’s good to have other ways to complete the whole image. There is not one way, the best way of showing that.I think, with the testimony you can get the story from really the first source. It’s very very good to try to show it with images, documentaries or, like us, with puppets. It’s good to have these different ways of going around the theme.There is not one good way. It should be from different art forms to different media. Monuments, radio and so, actually everything that contributes the commemoration, reflection and realization of what happened.

Photo by Leo van Velzen from Kamp

AH: There are so many artists using different ways to talk about this theme for very different audience. There are different ways to get in touch with it. Some people came to our performance and they said: it’s so distant to me, you know. It doesn’t click. It’s good to have all these books and art forms to trigger them. That’s the way people can connect with the image and to get to emotions. Some people can easier connect with books, some through image…PK: People have different portrayals. It’s also different if you want to commemorate or if you want to grab information. These are different things. Those are different purposes actually. There are different things you can do towards the theme: memorizing, contemplating…

Photo by Herman Helle from Kamp

Connecting these things with what happened in Bosnia, or in Rwanda. That’s also a relation, to make connection with the world today. I’m happy to see that many artists within different media are relating with the theme, making different relations and actions towards it.Arlene & Pauline, Thanks a lot!Hotel Modern is at the moment at world tour. Check here dates; maybe they will stop by near your neighbourhood soon…(This interview was originally published on Personal Cyber Botanica: www.lomodeedee.com)
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Tiradentes square, subway stations and, of course, the main theaters in Rio de Janeiro, São Gonçalo and Baixada Fluminense. These are the "stages" of the 18th edition of Festival Panorama de Dança. This year, the program goes from 5th to 15th November, bringing to the public dance shows of more than 30 artists, from Brazil and abroad, and also a video installation by William Forsythe, a seminar on the economy of dance, a university showcases, a project of audience development for training the public, dance workshops and "Panoraminha”, a program dedicated to kids. The activities have popular prices or free entrance.Panorama’s opening night on November 5th is a tribute to the Brazilian critic and curator Roberto Pereira, who died in June, at age 43, leaving a legacy of solid academic research and appreciation of dance history.A small but precious program, with the pianist Cadu Pereira as a special guest, is set to remember the beginning of the movement in film, something that Roberto would love to share once again.The opening night goes on with CNN Ballet de Lorraine (photo) and its Répertoire, a journey through the multiple possibilities and conceptual breakthroughs that helped to set down contemporary dance as we see it today, with pieces by Isadora Duncan, Martha Graham, William Forsythe and Maguy Marin."More than 18 thousand people were attended in 2008. What sets us apart from any cultural event held in the city is our ability to expand the circuit of dance to underprivileged neighborhoods with popular prices" said Nayse Lopez, Festival Panorama de Dança’s curator.Stay tuned! Visit www.panoramafestival.com for more information and follow @panoramafest on twitter.
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RED SUDAMERICANA DE DANZA MARTES 3 Y MIÉRCOLES 4 DE NOVIEMBRE, 15 A 19HS TALLER Ideas, herramientas y nuevas tecnologías para el trabajo en red MARLON BARRIOS En el marco del Festival Internacional de VideoDanza - FIVU - Uruguay Ver más información sobre talleres del FIVU 09 aquí.pdf Este taller organizado junto a la Red Sudamericana de Danza planteará una introducción accesible y dinámica a la Nueva Internet y la tecnología Web 2.0. a través de actividades teórico – prácticas. Se explorará el potencial de estas arquitecturas tecnológicas para el desarrollo de nuevos modelos de interacción, intercambio y colaboración. Los nuevos medios como generadores de cambios en la creación artística y la utilización de la web como prolongación de la creación propia. En la primera jornada se experimentarán y clarificarán usos y protocolos de las tecnologías de red social utilizando la plataforma movimiento.org. Como maximizar su potencial interactivo y de distribución de contenido. En la segunda, se verán las nuevas plataformas de Video en Internet. Exploración de transmisiones en vivo, sus posibilidades creativas y de distribución. El taller está abierto a toda persona mínimamente familiarizada con el uso de Internet e interesadas en experimentar nuevos modos de colaboración mediante las redes sociales. dance-tech.net dance-techTV Interviews movimiento.org (La Red Sudamericana de Danza) vida arte proceso producto investigacion conocimiento creatividad colaboration arte investigacion creacion collaborativa proceso creativo Plan, estrategia, accion Organizacion Cambios Generales Mundiales siglo 21 Economia Global/mercado Iniciativas transnacionales Movimientos sociales urbanos Nuevas tecnologias Interconecion Ecologica/Impacto Como estamos conectados? Conectividades? Contactos (mediacion) Movimientos (migraciones/mobilidad) gentes, lugares, ideas/intereses Transporte y Comunicacion Mediacion en espacio y tiempo Sincronia y Asincronia Presencia?? Historia/s/storytelling Jonathan Harris: We feel Fine Transmision Registros/trazos fracaso de sistemas prevalente?? Mayores cambios dentro de la sociologia/dinamismo de las redes culturales: Creatividad Connectada/distribuida Espacios de Intercambio/differentes tipos de espacios Espacios Contestados/rastros emergentes Mundos Paralelos/coexistencia Planes y estrategies/coexistencia: design top-down/bottom-up Que es una red? Relaciones Vs Objeto Gregory Bateson Una forma de Organizacion Una forma de operar/protocolo de interaccion Un Proceso Generativo en si mismo Coneciones Procesos Cursos de accion intercambio entre todos estos aspectos Promete Flexibilidad! En red, la organizacion se convierte un fin en si mismo: es el contenido y el logro reflejan la logica de la vida social Plataformas de accion politica/intervencion de sistemas

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Pristina House Marjetica Potrc Ljubljana-based artist and architect. Produccion Colectiva Trabajo orientado el proceso Plataformas transversales de projectos Circulacion/Emergencia Uso y modificacion de redes existentes y creacion de nuevas Uso autodeterminado Geografia Movible/Fluida Exito o fracaso/para quien/ Laboratorio/investigacion... Legislacion Principio de Generosidad Infraestructuras de confianza Sistema Ejercicio automatizacion transmision organizacion/indexacion limites/boundary CAMBIOS ESTRUCTURALES Y FUNCIONALES TECNOLOGICOS: Infrestructura de Fibra optica Protocolos y estandares Convergencia Miniaturizacion Portabilidad Conectividad masiva dentro del disenio urbano Gran Capacidad de almacenamiento y rescate/llamada de datos en forma interactiva Data base driven websites (PHP/Mysql) Video/procesamiento de la images con Flash video/flash servers Ajax (procesamiento en el browser) Movimientos Sociales/culturales: Open source/free software Publicacion de API desarrollo collaborativo/inteligencia distribuida Nuevos modelos de produccion y atribucion de derechos de autoria Bajos Costos Acceso Cambio Funcional Arquitecturas Bottom-up permiten participacion de los usuarios en el desarrollo de contenido y organizacion de contenido. reflejan la logica de la vida social Sitios web de estaticos a dinamicos/ informacion es dinamica y cambiente creada por los ususarios EL NUEVO INTERNET Cambios FUNCIONALES: Forma y contenido estan separados!! XML XHTML CSS PHP MYSQL APACHE LINUX FLASH VIDEO Implicaciones para: publicacion, prensa, mercadeo, investigacion Industrias de reproduccion y distribucion de ideas y formas culturales. ENTONCES WEB2.0 Proceso/proceso/proceso Servicio no producto Participacion en el desarrollo del contenido (PROSUMER) Platafomas que cambian Esfuerzo colectivo muchos a muchos Transparencia Auto-organizacion reflejan la logica de la vida social Subir, bajar, lateral: transmision horizontal "sideloading" RSS

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API Application programing Interface AGREGADOR Generadores de Codigo de insertar (embedding) VIRAL Lista de Agregadores Projeto RSSificado Ejemplos... DanceBloggers BROOKLYN MUSEUM 1st Fans Dance Theater Workshop, NYC Project52

08: Marina from Caleb Custer on Vimeo.

Umove festival http://movetheframe.wordpress.com/umove-festival/ Side by side http://www.side-by-side.org/ Steal this dance http://stealthisdance.com/ Clytemnestra ReMash Challenge http://clytemnestraproject.com/ Beyonce http://www.beyonceonline.com/us/news/beyonc%C3%A9-announces-official-single-ladies-dance-video-contest Move out loud http://www.moveoutloud.net/
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Zagreb Dance Centre on October 26th, 2009

Dear Friends and Colleagues in Dance,We are pleased to announce the opening of Zagreb Dance Centre on October 26th, 2009.This long awaited moment is the highlight of our many years of engaging as Croatia’s primary dance organization and the engagement and endeavors of Zagreb’s contemporary dance community.This 1500 sq meters of space on the location of an abandoned movie theatre, only 100 meters away from the very heart of downtown Zagreb, is now renovated and comprises of three multifunctional studios which includes a black box theatre with retractable seating for 140. Ancillary content includes a summer terrace conducive for outdoor events and film projections (retaining the functionality of the previous only outdoor movie theatre in Zagreb), office space, change rooms, a mediatheque, a meeting room, dance information service desk (Dance Contact Point) and a caffe. The courtyard also offers opportunity to host events. This transformation of an old cinema into a purpose built dance venue was financed solely by the City of Zagreb through the Office of Cultural Affairs. The project of the Zagreb Dance Centre was delivered by the award winning group of architects of 3 LHD studio (www.3lhd.com).The Zagreb dance community was waiting for this moment for a very long time and now it is here! A weekend of dance activities of all sorts, free to all interested to engage in dance activity (October 24 and 25) including film projections and lectures on the history of Zagreb/ Croatian dance, and an intro into how to watch contemporary dance for those new to the art form - leads into the official opening on October 26 which comprises of a dance gallery type tour of the venue – culminating in the presentation of excerpt of works by local dance companies. All concludes with an all night dance party for the dance community and citizens of Zagreb.The Zagreb Dance Centre fulfills the vision to establish a centre for choreographic research but also a production house for small scale contemporary dance works, nurturing a new generation of Croatian choreographers and contributing to the maturing of the local scene within its multilayered involvement with the international world of dance. Within its mandate HIPP will also continue to offer opportunities for professional development to dance makers in conjunction with a broad based world-wide web of partners. In addition and because of its central location the Zagreb Dance Centre will also seek to create engagement with audiences and to develop the dialogue between artists and audience members as well as to establish a deeper appreciation for the art form among a broader public including funding bodies and media.The Zagreb Dance Centre will be operated by the Croatian Institute for Movement and Dance (Hrvatski institut za pokret i ples/ HIPP) , established in 1990, a not for profit organization. HIPP is also the producer of international festival of contemporary dance Dance Week Festival (Tjedan suvremenog plesa) – Croatia’s primary festival of dance which in 2010 celebrates 27th edition.We with to invite you to join us in celebrating this moment and hope that perhaps you might join us. If not now – then sometime in the future. To all of you we express our thank you for your supportive collaboration and encouragement which inspired us to pursue this dream now a reality.We look forward to furthering our partnerships as well investigating new opportunities in enhancing the collaboration between Zagreb/ Croatian dance community and the international world of dance. With this we invite you to consider us as potential partners in future deliberations of projects and initiatives. Please continue to inform us about your activities!For more information and to learn more about the Zagreb and Croatian dance scene as well as to follow activities of the Zagreb Dance Centre moving forward look us up at:www.danceincroatia.comWith best regards,HIPP team: Mirna, Nikolina, Nora, Bojan, Dora, Nada, Mirzada…..and from ourDiverse and multitalended dance community as well as our many volunteers who cheers us along!Mirna Zagarartistic directorCROATIAN INSTITUTE FOR MOVEMENT AND DANCEDANCE WEEK FESTIVALBiankinijeva 510000 Zagrebtel. +0385 1 4621 967+0385 1 4621 969fax. +0385 1 4641 154mail. hipp-tsp@zg.t-com.hrwww.danceincroatia.com
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(October 9, 2009, New York, NY) Exhilarating and meditative, Kurt Hentschläger’s stroboscopic, mind-altering ZEE pushes the boundaries of perception and creates an intense audiovisual journey - complete with hallucination. This is the latest installation by Hentschläger, known for constructing immersive environments that fuse sound, video, performance, and sensory overload. ZEE will have its New York premiere from October 28 through November 15, 2009 at 3LD Art & Technology Center, 80 Greenwich Street, Lower Manhattan. ZEE is the inaugural event of FuturePerfect, a new citywide performance, media & technology initiative. Entering ZEE, the visitor is immediately absorbed in a vortex of dense, odorless fog that completely obscures the walls, floor and ceiling. Individuals freely roam this environment with the help of ropes, while flickering light filters through the haze, inducing spatial disorientation and visual “distortions”.. All the usual cues that contribute to depth perception—texture, shadow, size, perspective—are erased, returning each spectator, as it were, to a state of “tabula rasa”, where one’s perceptual framework is reset and then recalibrated. A droning soundscape creates an almost tactile aural field, intensifying the experience and shifting dynamically according to changes in the color, light and frequency. ZEE succeeds without a narrative or reproducible imagery, since what is seen is not captured through the eyes, but rather first produced in the brain. As James Turrell has said, “Objectivity is gained by being once removed. As you plumb a space with vision, it is possible to 'see yourself see'. This seeing, this plumbing, imbues space with consciousness." "The question of how, and what we perceive as the world, around and within us—what is real, a dream or illusion—continually occupies me,” stated Hentschläger. “When the fabric of our minds is manipulated, whether through psychedelic drugs or other sources that confuse the synapses firings, such as the strobe lights in ZEE, this "enlightening" reveals the malleability of our minds and consciousness. The question of what originates from within us, and what are reflections of the world around us, is the basis of my work.” For over a decade, Kurt Hentschläger has been exploring ways of enhancing and intensifying perception. Wishing to expand beyond the two-dimensionality of video and film projection, and the limitations of adapting to a given architectural space, Hentschläger has constructed his own alternative worlds through live performance, installations, multi-screen projections, and recently through environments that disorient through stroboscopic lighting and shifting color fields, intense soundscapes and sub-bass. From the large-scale audio-visual events produced as part of the Austrian duo Granular-Synthesis, to collaborations with French choreographer Angelin Preljocaj and vocalist Diamanda Galas, to his solo immersive installations, Hentschläger finds ways of collapsing the gap between viewer and work, image and reality, inside and outside. Offering a compelling contemporary version of the aesthetic of the sublime, Hentschläger’s work insists that we not merely “watch” and “listen” to images and sounds at a safe distance, but that they penetrate, confront, and overwhelm us by their sense of limitless power and complexity. “Artist Kurt Hentschläger makes immersive experiences that disorient and even overpower the senses, taking daring art lovers to new places of perception. Pushing through discomfort and lack of control, not an easy task for New Yorkers, one is rewarded with new sensations and a mind expansion that actually allows one to create new images. It is so exciting to have the artist back in NY from Europe after his breakout Noisegate debut with Gran-Synthesis at Creative Time's Art in the Anchorage in 2000," stated Anne Pasternak, Director, Creative Time. This is ZEE’s New York premiere. The project was originally co-commissioned by OK-Center Linz, and Wood Street Galleries, Pittsburgh, in 2008. About the Artist Chicago-based Austrian artist Kurt Hentschläger creates audio-visual compositions that lie somewhere in between performance and installation. The immersive nature of his work reflects on the metaphor of the sublime. Trained as a fine artist, in 1983 he began as a sculptor by building surreal machine objects, followed by works with video, computer animation and sound. Between 1992 and 2003 he worked collaboratively as part of the duo Granular-Synthesis. His most recent solo work is more poetic and further researches the nature of human perception and accelerated impact of new technologies on individual consciousness. www.kurtHentschlager.com Kurt Hentschläger is represented by Richard Castelli / Epidemic. Technical Assistance for ZEE New York is provided by Ian Brill. About FuturePerfect ZEE is the inaugural event of FuturePerfect, a new citywide performance, media & technology initiative. Its mission is to research and present hybrid performance practices, media forms, and artistic ideas that continue to emerge as computer technologies and electronic networks mature and become inseparable from contemporary culture. In particular focus is the future of live performance and related visual culture. Wayne Ashley is the founding director and organizer of FuturePerfect 2011, a performance festival and exhibition, is slated for New York City during Spring 2011. He was formerly the Director of Arts in Multimedia at Brooklyn Academy of Music, BAM. http://www.futureperfectfestival.org Contact: wayne@wayneashley.net PANEL DISCUSSION in conjunction with ZEE Performance, Installation and Immersion Presented by FuturePerfect and CPR—Center for Performance Research CPR, 361 Manhattan Avenue, Unit 1, Williamsburg, Brooklyn Sunday, October 25, 2009, 1:30pm – 3:30pm, Free More than any other concept, “immersion” has become one of the most taken-for-granted expressions in writings on technology, and increasingly used to describe a vast array of different media, creative processes, and ways of audience engagement. From video games and 3D cinema, to new counterinsurgency strategies for simulating theaters of war; from realistic touch feedback medical training systems, to the aesthetics of site specific performance and installation. They all share the same desired effect: collapsing the gap between viewer and work, image and reality, inside and outside. Five distinguished panelists will show and discuss their work in relationship to these and others issues. Panelists include: Kevin Cunningham (Director, 3-Legged Dog Media and Theater Group), Kurt Hentschläger (Artist, Austria/US), Kora Van den Bulcke and Thomas Soetens (Workspace Unlimited, Artist Collective Belgium/Canada), and Allen Feldman (Associate Professor, Anthropology, NYU). Discussants include Vallejo Gantner (PS122), Morgan von Prelle Pecelli (PS122), Wayne Ashley (FuturePerfect), Jonah Bokaer (CPR), Dr. Frank Hentschker (Martin E. Segal Theatre Center, CUNY) and others. http://www.cprnyc.org Thanks to ZEE’s producing and presenting partners 3LD and Performance Space 122 Performance Space 122 has been a hub for contemporary performance and an active member of the East Village, as well as the wider cultural community in NYC and across the globe for the past 30 years. In just the past 4 years, under the curatorial vision of Artistic Director Vallejo Gantner, P.S.122 has opened the curtain for more than 2,100 performances, welcomed more than 100,000 visitors, and supported the work of more than 1,800 artists, performers, choreographers, playwrights, directors and designers. P.S.122 is dedicated to supporting and presenting artists whose work explores innovative form and content and challenges the traditional boundaries of dance, theatre, music, and performance, and continues its steadfast search for pioneering artists from a diversity of cultures, nations and beliefs. 3LD Art & Technology Center is a non-profit theater and media group focusing on large-scale experimental artwork. Their work has been seen in New York City at such venues as the Kitchen, La Mama, The Ontological-Hysteric Theater, PS 122, and Signature Theatre Co. Since 1994, they have become a mainstay in the experimental arts community and have been performing downtown ever since. 3-Legged Dog (ELD) is the first producing arts group to sign a lease in the Liberty Zone and the first to rebuild downtown. A cultural anchor for the Greenwich Street Arts Corridor, the new center provides complete production and presentation facilities for emerging and established artists and organizations that create large-scale experimental works, many of which incorporate and create new tools and technologies.
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