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Dancing in the Light

Randy Felts (Berklee Prof, saxophone guru and synthophone expert) assembles another "Dancing in the Light" multimedia performance at Berklee's David Friend Recital Hall, Monday, July 27, at 7:30 pm. He will be joined by Ricardo Monzon (Berklee Prof, expert world and drum set percussionist) and Lisa Leake (M.Ed., dancer, teacher), blending wild images from the computer, Lisa's dance moves, and the bending of his own and Ricardo's notes, for a total improv act that continually changes, according to the "beat, the light, and the spirit."
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Les Enfants du Soleil

Even though the Ndaje West African dance festival has commenced for 2009 in Massachusetts, it is moving to New York City in August. Some of the recent photos posted are of the magnificent cast of dancers and actors from the Ndaje School of African Arts, Inc., founded and directed by Pape N'Diaye (who fortunately co-teaches in NYC and Boston). Go to his website for more info: wwwpapendiaye.com. And enjoy - the sizzle is commin' at ya, if you live in NYC.
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Move Music at the Creative Alliance!

For Immediate ReleaseContact: Lauren Withhart, Press Coordinator443-845-0779 cellwithhart@comcast.net“Move Music” on July 30th and 31st : new dance, live music“Move Music” will feature new work from local choreographers: Reggie Cole, Cindi L’Abbe, Kelly Mayfield, and Lauren Withhart. Each choreographer will present an innovative collaboration between movement and live music. “Move Music” will be presented at the Creative Alliance at the Patterson Theater located at 3134 Eastern Ave. in Highlandtown. Performances are on Thursday, July 30th at 7:30pm and Friday, July 31st at 8:00pm.“Move Music” is a unique opportunity for dance to live symbiotically with musicians live on stage. Each choreographer will showcase their creativity along side talented local musicians. Representing the wide spectrum of modern dance, each choreographer builds a unique relationship that highlights musicality and virtuosity.Cindi L’Abbe founded Dilettante Dance Company in Baltimore. Her work is a true collaboration with guitarist David Ross as they explore literary works of Edgar Allen Poe and the photography of Georgia O’Keeffe, the process of which is documented at www.dilettantedance.blogspot.com. Reggie Cole has dance and choreographed with CityDance Ensemble, Edgeworks Dance Theatre, and Contradiction Dance as well as performing solo work both regionally and internationally. In this concert, he is presenting solos and duets with cellist Henry Mays and percussionist William Goffigan. Kelly Mayfield, founder of DC’s Contradiction Dance explores the life between internal and external realities with Imaginary Clouds, accompanied by Aligning Minds. Lauren Withhart, an MFA candidate of Dance from UMD and professional member of Baltimore’s The Collective, VTDance, and Gesel Mason Performance Projects in DC, presents two restaged works, including a distinctive improvisation with partner Betty Skeen.These four choreographers along with professional local musicians unite for a two-evening engagement at the Creative Alliance. The performance will feature professional dancers from the Baltimore and DC area with original scores by local composers.“Move Music” is the perfect performance to invigorate the senses and stimulate the Baltimore dance community.Ticket info:Tickets are $12/adults or $10/students & members on Thursday, July 30th. Tickets are $15/adults or $12/students & members on Friday, July 31st. Tickets can be reserved by calling 410.276.1651 or visiting www.creativealliance.org. Performances are at 7:30pm on July 30th and 8:00pm on July 31st.
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Go to dance-tech.net interviews @ mouvement.net Starting this month, the dance-tech.net interviews are been syndicated by the well known french magazine and website Mouvement.net! dance-tech.net add the prestigious and interesting publication Mouvement.net as a media syndication partner becoming its exclusive video content provider.

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The 7th International Interaktionslabor takes place from July 20 to August 2 on the site of the former coal mine Göttelborn in southwest Germany. This year the main focus of the workshop is on perceptual processes. The project title -Halbinseln der Wahrnehmung/Peninsulae of Perception - is a reference to a diary written by a person afflicted with Asperger’s Syndrome. The diary has been proposed as research libretto for investigations into differing perceptual channels and psycho-social research on autism, synaesthesia, music composition and real-time performance. The acoustic-musical dimension of the 2009 laboratory is complemented by research into design or wearable audiophonics and acousmatic architectures and sound perceptions. The workshop brings together artists, scientists and researchers from different backgrounds committed to sharing their experiences and catalyzing multidisciplinary science-art collaborations. Special guests in residence at the summer lab are Stefan Scheib and Katharina Bihler from the Liquid Penguin Ensemble, an experimental music-theatre group that gained wide recognition through their award-winning radio music dramas. Their latest production, "Bout du Monde," has just been selected radio drama of the month (June 2009) by the German Academy of the Performing Arts. Previously, "GRAS WACHSEN HÖREN - das biolingua Institut wir 100 Jahre alt" was awarded the prize for best german radio drama and the ARD Online Award in 2008. Their music theatre performance "Eurydike hinter den Grenzen" (2007) was shown at festivals in Luxembourg, Düsseldorf, Saarbrücken and other venues. The laboratory is organized by theatre director and media artist Johannes Birringer who founded the Interaktionslabor in 2003 and currently holds a professorship in digital performance at Brunel University, London. "We have had many inquiries this year, as our subject combines research into media arts and psychology," Birringer says, "and the lab also has a continuing commitment to challenging our assumptions about space and perceptual constructions. We look forward to the participants from Latin America, Great Britain, France and Switzerland who will join artists and educators from the region." The lab ensemble plans to create a sonic installation in the 10KV, a former electric plant on the campus of the mine. The Interaktionslabor, which went on tour last summer to Belo Horizonte, Brasil, has become increasingly well known for its unique peripheral location, its independent, autonomous status, and the transcultural partnteships it has helped to build over the years. The lab ensemble plans to create a sonic installation in the 10KV, a former electric plant on the campus of the mine. The Interaktionslabor, which went on tour last summer to Belo Horizonte, Brasil, has become increasingly well known for its unique peripheral location, its independent, autonomous status, and the transcultural partnerships it has helped to build over the years. The activities are open to visitors, and information about the proceedings and the research process can be found at http://interaktionslabor.de. Interaktionslabor is supported by private-public partnerships and donations, and by the IKS IndustrieKultur Saar. Photo credit (c) Zeitgenossen/dans sans joux
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Read Original post Aproveitando a presentação da performance Protomenbrana do Marcel.lí Antunez no FILE 2009, o artista ministrará um workshop com o tema “SISTEMATURGIA", -Transmissão de conhecimento e experiências”- literalmente dramaturgia dos sitemas computacionais na Oficina Cultural Oswald de Andrade . As oficinas acontecem dias 29, 30 e 31 de julho, das 10 às 14 horas. Para participar, os interessados devem enviar currículo e carta de interesse para cultura3@ccebrasil.org.br até o dia 26 de julho. Mais informações podem ser obtidas pelo número 3822 2627 no ramal 22. Programa de trabalho do workshop: Dia 1:Teoria de dois ámbitos, a maquinaria de creição coletiva. A Trilogia de la Fura dels Baus 1984/88 (ACCIONS, Suz/o/ Suz & Tier Mon), outros trabalhos dos anos 80’ (Los Rinos, films Aixalà/Antunez….) Dia 2: Sistematurgia 1 e outros desdobramentos do trabalho de Antunez-Roca. O exemplo de Afasia (Satel·lits Obscens / Afasia / Afalud). Outras performances mecatrónicas Epizoo, Pol e instalações interativas; trabalhos biológicos. Dia 3: Sistematurgia 2. Formas de interação, Interatividade sequencial, microrrelatos… A dimensão do desenho. O projeto Membrana episódios e satélites Protomembrana, Hipermembrana e Metamembrana. DMD Europa. Organização: Oficina Cultural Oswald de Andrade- Secretaria de Cultura do Estado de São Paulo e CCE_SP
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CIMATICS\09 \FESTIVAL - call for artists

Cimatics - Brussels International Festival for Live Audiovisual Art & VJing - invites all artists, creatives and producers to send their submissions for the next Cimatics festival.Cimatics festival takes place from 20th - 29th November 2009 at various locations in the centre of Brussels.Festival theme: New CitiesCimatics is an audiovisual festival that is closely connected to contemporary digital and urban practice. Cimatics 2009 aims at encouraging all projects that focus on the relation of both cultures. This theme is not a statement but utters the question of how to approach digital and urban culture not as 2 separate layers, but as a single given. Send us your ideas, lectures, performances or videos for 'New Cities' by using the form below. Note that also non-audiovisual work is highly appreciated.Pre-selectionAccepted media: DVD, Blue-Ray, HD DVD, Mini-DV, CD (please don't send any original/master work, only copy of good quality or first gen, also don't send data DVD with movies on: DVD's should play on a consumer DVD player & CD-ROM's should play on a Mac/PC)Mailing costs will be borne by the entrant. Hard copies will NOT be returned.LanguageWorks submitted must be in French, Dutch or English or have subtitles in either of these languages. Works in other languages must be accompanied by a text list in English.Deadline: 31/07/09Contact:CIMATICS 09c/o Cimatics vzwOnderwijsstraat 51B-1070 BrusselsBelgiumPhone: +32 [0] 2 520 07 82Fax: M: +32 [0] 475 497 110E-mailinfo@cimaticsfestival.comURL: www.cimatics.com/entries
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One Step - Hickle-Dee-Pickle-Dee

Title:"One Step - Hickle-Dee-Pickle-Dee"The following video has been inspired by TheScotsman report 'One giant gaffe for mankind'about the Nasa taping over the original footage of1969 Moon landing.Produced for the Dance Films Association, Inc'scompetition 'What moves you? 48 Hour Challenge'.17th - 19th July 2009Brief:The four performers are elderly people who havedementia trying toremember watching thefirst steps on the moon by Neil Armstrong.This video draws an analogy betweenlosing memory and lost visual documentationthrough words and movements.Inspiration:The trying steps and movements of the elderlyperformers and the first step on the moon byNeilArmstrong as well as losingmemories and materialistic things.
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Watch the first pilot broadcasting of MovimientoTV from Asuncion, Paraguay. It will be a workshop on Improvisation and composition called Creadon Espacios (Creando Espacios). This channel is created in collaboration with dance-techTV Network and movimiento.org. Broadcasts will the 19 to the 28th of July. More about the workshop: TALLER DE IMPROVISACION Y COMPOSICION EN DANZA En el marco del Programa de circulación e intercambio de procesos creativos El Proyecto “Creando Espacios”, es una iniciativa de integración y colaboración, por parte de la productora local Diana Fuster junto a OTRAPIEL Compañía de danza, en el marco de las actividades del Programa de Circulación e intercambio de procesos creativos creado por Vanilton Lakka (Brasil). Esta propuesta cuenta con la colaboración de la Red Sudamericana de danza y elpatrocinio del Centro Cultural de España Juan de Salazar en Asunción y el Centro Cultural de España en Buenos Aires. Click here for more information
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PAF (=PerformingArtsForum)

PAF (=PerformingArtsForum) is a place for the professional and not-yet professional practitioners and activists in the field of performing arts, visual art, new media and internet, theory and cultural production, who seek to research and determine their own conditions of work. PAF is for people who can motorize their own artistic production and knowledge production not only responding to the opportunities given by the institutional market.Initiated and run by artists, theoreticians and practitioners themselves, PAF is a user-created, user-innovative informal institution. Neither a production-house and venue, nor a research-center, it is a platform for everyone who wants to expand possibilities and interests in his/her own working practice.PAF is- a forum for producing knowledge in critical exchange and ongoing discursive practice- a place for temporary autonomy and full concentration on work- a tool-machine where one can work on developing methods, tools and procedures, not necessarily driven toward a product- a place for experimenting with other than known modes of production and organization of work, e.g. open source productionMost importantly, PAF offers all these possibilities without imposing them. In other words, PAF depends on how you affect and are affected by taking an active part in shaping your own activity in your workplace.more info on: www.pa-f.net
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Oh, I wish I would have known about this: Computational Creativity : An Interdisciplinary Approach http://www.dagstuhl.de/de/programm/kalender/semhp/?semnr=09291 This is what they wrote in the seminar website: ah, we can download the research papers in pdf!! very cool... 12.07.09 - 17.07.09, Seminar 09291 Margaret Boden (University of Sussex - Brighton, GB) Mark d'Inverno (University of London, GB) Jon McCormack (Monash University - Clayton, AU) Motivation Artistic creativity remains a mysterious, enigmatic subject — a “grand challenge” for Computer Science. While computers have exceeded the capabilities of humans in a number of limited domains (e.g. chess playing, music classification, theorem proofs, induction), human creativity generally remains unchallenged by machines and is considered a fundamental factor in our intellectual success. There is a sense that artistic creativity is somehow “special” in a way that could not be captured in an algorithm, hence implemented on a machine. This seminar aims to show that creativity is indeed special, but that it can be an emergent property of mechanical processes. The seminar will address problems in computational creative discovery where computer processes assist in enhancing human creativity or may autonomously exhibit creative behavior independently. The intention is to develop ways of working with computation that achieve creative possibilities unattainable from any existing software systems. These goals will be developed in the context of artistic creation (visual art and music composition), however the results may be applicable to many forms of creative discovery. The specific seminar aims are to: * Contribute to fundamental research on our understanding of artistic creativity in humans and machines; * Develop new methodologies for creative design in digital media, with particular emphasis on evolutionary ecosystem dynamics, where new algorithms for creative discovery are inspired by biological processes; * Bring together researchers from a variety of disciplines and backgrounds, with coverage across the arts and sciences, but with a common goal of furthering our understanding of how computers may generate creative behaviour, using an interdisciplinary approach. Creativity is a vast and complex topic, investigated by many disciplines. In broad terms it involves the generation of something novel and appropriate (i.e. unexpected, valuable). In this seminar we focus on artificially creative systems, either simulated in software or software process working in synergetic tandem with a human artist. The necessary conditions for any artificial creative system must be the ability to interact with its environment, learn, and self-organise, and this is the basis of the seminar’s approach. Darwinian evolution has been described as the only theory with the explanatory power for the design and function of living systems, accounting for the amazing diversity and astonishing complexity of life. Evolutionary synthesis is a process capable of generating unprecedented novelty, i.e. it is creative. It has been able to create things like prokaryotes, eukaryotes, higher multicellularity and language through a non-teleological process of replication and selection. We would like to investigate, on a metaphoric level, the mechanisms of biological evolution in order to develop new approaches to computational creativity.
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23 - 24 November 2009Taking place over two days, the Super Human symposium will present an invigorating and inspiring mix of keynote speakers and collaborative research projects engaging with one or more of the symposium themes: Augmentation, Cognition and Nanoscale Interventions.Questions that the symposium will address include, but are not limited to:How do scientific and artistic bodies of knowledge intersect with human, social bodies?Does art serve simply as a representational tool for the sciences or is there more to the picture than that?Does research into bodies and their systems offer an insight into aesthetics, or is it confined to the purely functional?More: ANAT - Australian Network for Art & Technology
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Dear EveryoneWe would like to invite you all to a performance of No Living Room on 29th July at 8.30pm, at the Arcola Theatre in the festival Adventures in Movement for Create 09.

watch showreel

No Living Room is the culmination of years of work combining our projected environments with dance. although some of the material has been shown before this narrative reworking creates a piece much closer to our vision of what we call Virtual Reality Theatre.

The blurb is:
alKamie presents
(No) Living Room
Cutting-edge virtual-reality meets physical theatre to playfully challenge economic mantra.…
Arcola Theatre, 8.30 pm
27 Arcola St., London E8 2D
020 7503 1646

With the icecaps and economies alike in meltdown `No Living Room' playfully empties the complexities of consumerism and economic growth into dream-like cinematic theatre. Through live virtual reality and quirky physicality we tumble into a woman's fears and fantasies, to surface from calamity, in the midst of alternative possibilities. read more
how to get there

more about alKamie:

Sincerely yours
Brian Curson & Robyn Stuart
al'Ka-mysts
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Raimund Hoghe is certainly one of the most intriguing dancer and choreographer in contemporary dance these days. I had an opportunity to interview him in May, during Queer Zagreb Festival, where his company performed ‘Boléro Variations’.Raimund Hoghe always pushes the boundaries of dance perception through profound and minimalist way of analyzing thingz. The public and dance experts from Ballettanz Magazine obviously recognized this by giving him The Dancer of the Year Award in male competition for the season 2008.

Raimund Hoghe, photos by Rosa Frank (c)

I really have to mark here that in female competition the same award was given to ex-ballerina Sylvie Guillem. They are both completely different in bodily physics and kinetics, but the result is actually the same. The result is strong and authentic.I already blogged about ‘Boléro Variations’ I saw back at Queer Festival, so I’m letting you to Mr. Raimund Hoghe and his ways of seeing thingz on the stage and in life…

Raimund Hoghe, photo by Rosa Frank (c)

While I was watching your performance ‘Bolero Variations’, I constantly thought about the line: tinny little thingz… You like to ‘dig’ through those hidden moments in our lives… exploring society and its reflection on your own inner landscape… What was the initial trigger that has brought you to this?RH: It’s different from each piece, but I don’t make pieces with big effects, for example. I’m not interested in virtuosity or how people can jump or do incredible things. I’m interested in simplicity, so very simple and the personality of dance. To share with audience the quality of dancers, and there are these very little things; and sometimes maybe you are wondering why it’s interesting?For some people, of course, it’s not interesting, but for many it’s interesting. Like for me, last time when I was here in Zagreb, three years ago in 2006 with ‘Swan Lake, 4 Acts ‘, there was a 3-year old child in the performance. And this child didn’t want to leave the performance in the break, because it was so interested. The child wanted to see the whole story. The mother wrote to me a letter and this child had very interesting comments. It was also a long piece. So, for some adults it’s very boring, for a 3-year child is different. It’s different for each person.

Lorenzo De Brabandere and Raimund Hoghe

Photo from Tanzgeschichten by Rosa Frank (c)

You have spent many years working with Pina Bausch … her pieces have a specific dramaturgy… and the set of dancers in your piece reminded me on some performances you did with Pina… having a strong female character on the stage… Ornella Balestra’s character reminded me on Mechtild Grossman…RH: Yeah, but it’s very different from Pina’s work now, because it’s much more entertain and light, not too long; all dancers are more or less young. So, I’m interested just in strong personality. And now, my works could be compared with early works by Pina, not with her works from today. Because she is working a lot with video now, and older pieces were used in films, too. I don’t use this kind of technology.And, the roads are different, like in Pina’s dance pieces women are women, and man are man. So, women have long hairs, very beautiful colourful dresses moving like women. Man wear white shirts with trousers, like this classical image of man and woman. I’m not really interested in this.

Ornella Balestra, photo by Rosa Frank (c)

People tend to stuck when they try to use canons of classical dramaturgy in contemporary dance… As dramaturge how do you make this distinction, because your field is dance dramaturgy? You are directly connected with the scene that coined the term Tanz theater…RH: For me, in dramaturgy you have to come from one point to the other and you have to know why. That’s something everybody has to find out. There is no recipe or so. For me it has to be clear how you come from one point to the other, and that you can repeat it easily… this outthinking. The dramaturgy has to be so clear, that you can just jump into the piece.We don’t have long rehearsals before performances. It’s just one day, but people do different things… Maybe one piece is for one night play and then you have one rehearsal. And it is possible, because for me, and also for dancers, the dramaturgy is very clear. You don’t have to think about it. In many dance pieces you see today, they have to sing or think a lot what is coming next. In my work you have to know why you are here.

Photo by Patrick Mounoud (c) taken from fipa

How would you describe your work with Pina Baush?RH: It was very interesting to work with her. People talk about her and her work in terms of personality and strong person. This is very personal related, but it could be said also for her art form. It was not that sort of work where you present only the feelings.Could you be so kind to describe a little bit your working process… from the beginning till the end…RH: I’m very inspired by music. So, this is the point, when I’m listening the music! I made a piece on Maria Callas, and she sang about all that: If you really listen to the music, the music tells you how to move. And this is what I’m also trying. Then this dramaturgy is coming together, I feel it. I just have to do ‘this next – this next – this next’…In this piece about Callas ‘36, Avenue Georges Mandel’, she wasn’t visible in the first performance. But I had a feeling I missed something and had to think why is this happening and then I put this motif in it as a scene or an aria or something.

Emmanuel Eggermont and Raimund Hoghe, photo by R. Frank (c)

How do your dancers react to these processes because they are all very physical, but seems like there is always a layer of trust?RH: Yeah, the trust. So, that everyone can be exactly what they are. For me, it’s also important that there is no competition between dancers. Everyone is so different, you can’t compare them, each has its own quality. For example Lorenzo (De Brabandere), who was also in ‘Swan Lake, 4 Acts’; and Emmanuel (Eggermont) have really big part in this piece. They cannot be compared. They have very different backgrounds, from education and so. This is important, that there is no competition.It’s interesting how they are bringing different experiences…RH: Yeah, different experiences … like Lorenzo, who wanted to become a football player, and he was underway to football player; and Emmanuel not at all. And Yutaka (Takei), the Japanese dancer – he did also martial arts and he have this background. Nabil (Yahia-Aissa) is a medical doctor and dancer. They all have this different backgrounds.

Charlotte Engelkes and Raimund Hoghe, photo by R. Frank (c)

Yeah, they enriched the performance…RH: Yeah! This is something you might feel when you’re in the audience – different personalities. And it’s important that they respect one another. This is also not so often on the stage.I got the impression that their bodies are not talking differently, not in a sense of different languages, but it’s something in their way of presentation, some thin line that makes them different…RH: Yes. I’m interested in which way they are different, and also to keep this diversity. This is one main point, you have this diversity – not one body, the ideal body.

Raimund Hoghe, photo by Rosa Frank (c)

One of your main drive is music, too. When did you discover this, or was it the sound itself that attracted you, or rhythm, or classic music…RH: …also popular music. It’s very simple. I grew up surrounded mostly by popular music.Which artists inspired you?RH: Oh, there are so many of them. So many movies… For example, Maria Callas inspires me, because she was so aware of the movement. She talked a lot about it. And also Japanese dance, Butoh dancers like Kazuo Ohno, Sankai Juku… I know them well, and this is something I’m very interesting in… I was also very interested in this concept of Bauhaus. This combination of fine arts, dance, theatre…

Raimund Hoghe, photo by Luca Giacomo Schulte (c)

I can relate your work with Butoh, because seems like you have similar aesthetic ground and this ‘less is more’ approach….RH: Yeah, less is more. I’m really into this, thinking about this very often. I’m into artists like Joseph Beuys, Christian Boltanski, Wolfgang Laib and his installations…I know you like Pasolini…RH: …and Pasolini, of course. So, there are many, many artists… from music and literature… I like German and Russian authors. I like a lot Anton Chekhov. But there are also some pieces by Maxim Gorki. In German literature I like Johann Gottfried von Herder, Heinrich von Kleist… Many, many artists…Mr. Hoghe, Thank You Very Much!(Originally published on blog Personal Cyber Botanica: www.lomodeedee.com)
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AUGUST 08 - AUGUST 09 GUILD HALL TO PRESENT KOOL ­ DANCING IN MY MIND, ROBERT WILSON¹S TRIBUTE TO SUZUSHI HANAYAGI Collaboration Developed at Watermill Center by Wilson and Choreographer Carla Blank http://www.guildhall.org/calendar.ihtml?id=1087 KOOL is indeed a cool experience -Linda Yablonsky, Artforum Austerely beautiful and poetic. -Deborah Jowitt, Village Voice A fascinating tribute -Susan Yung, Thirteen East Hampton¹s Guild Hall is pleased to present KOOL ­ Dancing in My Mind, a collaboration between artist Robert Wilson and choreographer Carla Blank that honors the legacy of dance icon Suzushi Hanayagi. The performance-portrait will be performed at Guild Hall on Friday, August 8 and Saturday, August 9 at 8 P.M, and will feature an introductory talk by Wilson and Alexandra Munroe, Ph.D., Senior Curator of Asian Art at the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum. On August 9, Guild Hall will also host a $250 Private Post-Show Garden Reception with cast and front orchestra seating.

KOOL is a tribute to Hanayagi¹s place in art history, featuring live dance performances that include excerpts from over thirty collaborations by Hanayagi with Blank and Wilson, as well as new dances performed by Jonah Bokaer, Illenk Gentile and others. KOOL also features archival and newly filmed material by Richard Rutkowski. Wilson¹s performance portrait, a poetic monument to a working friendship, comes at a time when Hanayagi is suffering from Alzheimer¹s. As part of the commission, Wilson visited Osaka, Japan, where Hanayagi lives in a special care facility and is almost incapable of moving or communicating. Wilson discovered that by encouraging her to make small gestures and dance movements she has made thousands of times in the past, she seemed to discover fractions of memories and the joy connected with these memories returned to her face. KOOL was co-produced and co-commissioned by Works & Process at the Guggenheim Museum, Guild Hall, East Hampton and the Byrd Hoffman Watermill Foundation with support from the Jerome Robbins Foundation and with additional support from Molly Davies. It was first presented at the Guggenheim¹s Peter B. Lewis Theater in April 2009 as a part of the Works & Process series, in conjunction with the museum¹s presentation of The Third Mind: American Arts Contemplate Asia, 1860-1989. Through this Guild Hall performance, KOOL is both revisited and revised. A 26-minute documentary film, also titled KOOL, will soon be released in Europe. Directed by by Robert Wilson and Richard Rutkowski the film was produced by Jorn Weisbrodt, Rutkowski and Hisami Kuroiwa, and executive produced by Sylvia (INA) and ARTE. Robert Wilson first worked with Suzushi Hanayagi in his 1984 production of The Knee Plays, which was partially developed in Japan. Wilson and Carla Blank have collaborated on over 15 productions‹more than any of his other close collaborators. Their work together includes the CIVIL WarS, a tree is best measured when it is down; King Lear; Gluck¹s Alceste; Gertrude Stein¹s Dr. Faustus Lights the Lights, The Forest, Debussy¹s Le Martyre de Saint Sebastien and Madame Butterfly.
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On April 25th 2009, 14 experts in media art met in the Trans-Media-Labor in the GebäudeEnsemble Deutsche Werkstätten Hellerau to discuss the topic „Innovation in the crisis – Do our ideas have a chance?“ in the context of TMA WILL. The project European Tele-Plateaus – transnational sites of encounter and coproduction (ETP) took the centre stage. At the same day just a couple of hours ago, the first presentation of the previous achievements of the project took place. Unfortunately, because of technical problems, a networked environment could not be set up. Nevertheless, the local environment was being used by the interested audience. The person inside the environment is able to control audiovisual processes just by his or her position and the quickness of the movements. Definitely, the target of ETP exceeds all mentioned facts, because it also aims the production of publicly accessible, networked Virtual Environments. Therefore, three networked performances and six networked installations are planned which will take place simultaneously in all co-operating cities (Dresden, Prague, Madrid, Norrköping). The idea of the project was put up for discussion within TMA WILL. This discussion can be divided into three main focuses: “How can a Virtual Environment be defined?”, “How notices the audience performances with networked Virtual Environments?” and “Why is the ETP-project applied as intercultural?”Jadwiga Müller for TMATranslation by Louisa Zschinzsch

(c) Sprotte
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Sadler's Wells Theatre in London, the world's leading venue for international dance is searching for new talent to perform on stage in front of a live audience. All you need to do is choreograph, perform and film an original piece of dance and enter it into our Global Dance Contest 2009. As well as receiving a cash prize, the winner of the contest will be invited to perform live at Sadler's Wells in January 2010 at Sadler's Wells Sampled, our yearly showcase of the best in dance from around the world. Read more here
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http://www.tanzplan-dresden.de/v2/en/the-tanzplan/concept.html Pdf In German!! http://www.tanzplan-dresden.de/v2/fileadmin/Aktuelles/Bewerbungsinformationen_2010.pdf Apply now for “Promoting young talent / Dance production 2010” by Tanzplan Dresden. Application deadline is September 15th, 2009. Production money of € 40.000 for two teams available. We are looking for interdisciplinary production teams to create a new piece for a dance evening at the semper kleine szene. The rehearsal period is April through June 2010 in Dresden. Contact Sabine Stenzel TANZPLAN DRESDEN c/o Palucca Schule Dresden - Hochschule für Tanz Basteiplatz 4 01277 Dresden Germany Fon +49.351.25.906-58 Fax +49.351.25.906-80 info(at)tanzplan-dresden.de www.tanzplan-dresden.de
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