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This week at the NYEAF: New Project Demos ZACHARY LEIBERMAN / LESLEY FLANIGAN / BRENDAN FERNANDES FRIDAY OCTOBER 2, 2009, 7PM FREE HARVESTWORKS DIGITAL MEDIA ARTS CENTER 596 Broadway #602 New York City (at Houston St) Subway: F/V Broadway/Lafayette, 6 Bleecker, W/R Prince As part of the New York Electronic Art Festival 2009, a month-long series of concerts, workshops, and exhibitions centered on the cutting-edge work being done at the intersection of art and technology, Harvestworks will present the first in a series of New Project Demos on Friday October 2nd with presentations by new media artists Zachary Leiberman, Lesley Flanigan and Brendan Fernandes. Zachary Lieberman will present recent and on-going works developed in the last year, including an eye tracker for a paralyzed graffiti writer who has ALS, a performance on the facade of a building, tools for new forms of magic, a 3d drawing tool, and the openframeworks toolkit, a framework for creative coding in c++. In addition, there will be presentation of an upcoming work the artist is developing in collaboration with Taeyoon Choi. Lesley Flanigan will share her work with custom-built Speaker Feedback Instruments, addressing the physicality of sound, amplification as a source of sound in and of itself, and the relationships between noise, speakers, and voice. Brendan Fernandes investigates the concept of authenticity, as an ideological construct that both dominant and subordinatecultures use to their own ends. It is a word that shapes cultural experience, and thus also shapes concepts and formation of identity. He uses the Safari-as-authentic-African-experience to provide an evocative metaphor for the inscription of culture onto his own sense of identities. In his lecture at Harvestworks he will discuss his practice and the new work that he created in his residency. -- Artist Talk CHRISTINE SUGRUE / JULIA HEYWARD / CELESTE BOURSIER-MOUGENOT SATURDAY OCTOBER 3, 2009 2PM FREE World Financial Center Courtyard Gallery 220 Vesey Street, NYC Subway: R/W City Hall, E World Trade Center, 1,2 or 3 Chambers St. In conjuction with the New York Electronic Art Festival Exhibition, Rate of Change - time and space in electronic art, Harvestworks in partnership with arts>World Financial Center present a talk with exhibition artists Christine Sugrue, Julia Heyward and Céleste Boursier-Mougenot. Rate of Change exhibits the wide range of electronic art and it’s transition from the 20th to the 21st Century. It presents the works of eight artists working in immersive video and audio installation, audience and environmentally responsive sculpture and experimental narrative. It is anchored by the newly restored digital media work “Hand-drawn Spaces” (1998), a virtual dance installation by Merce Cunningham, Paul Kaiser, and Shelley Eshkar that presents 3D hand-drawn figures performing intricate choreography in a virtual space. Additional exhibition artists include Céleste Boursier-Mougenot who recently received the 2009 Golden David Award, Hisao Ihara, Julia Heyward, Eunjung Hwang, Jessica Ann Peavy, Christine Sugrue and the CCRT Collaboration. Rate of Change - time and space in electronic art September 29 – October 24 Open Hours: Tuesday - Saturday, Noon - 4PM, FREE World Financial Center Courtyard Gallery, 220 Vesey Street, NYC Produced by Harvestworks and presented by arts>World Financial Center which is sponsored by American Express, Battery Park City Authority, Brookfield Properties, and Merrill Lynch. www.artsWorldFinancialCenter.com ABOUT NYEAF: The New York Electronic Art Festival was created to provide a responsive public context for the appreciation of cutting-edge electronic artwork through concerts, panels, workshops, and exhibitions of the highest quality across the arts and technology spectrum. Attendees will get an overview of how technology is being used in various artistic disciplines, and have the opportunity to take part in a discussion about how these technologies will continue to shape contemporary art practice. This year’s festival will be a showcase of exciting interdisciplinary work and serve as a catalyst for discussions and collaborations between artists, technology, and the public. The NYEAF will plug into a national and international network of electronic art festivals, bringing significant contemporary art and music to the city. NYEAF is produced by Harvestworks, an international digital media arts center with 30 years of experience helping artists to get ”inside the electronics” and to develop a hands-on, experimental and explorative approach to making art with technology. Produced by Harvestworks in partnership with arts>World Financial Center, Roulette and New York University with funds provided by the National Endowment for the Arts as part of American Masterpieces: Three Centuries of Artistic Genius, the New York State Council on the Arts, the New York City Department of Cultural Affairs, mediaThefoundation, Etant donnés: The French-American Fund for Contemporary Art, the Québec Government Office in New York, Electronic Music Foundation, the Experimental TV Center Presentation Funds and the Institute for Electronic Art and the Paula Cooper Gallery. Corporate sponsorship is provided by Tekserve: the Apple Specialists, Newmark Knight Frank, Original Sin and Cycling74. ABOUT HARVESTWORKS: Founded in 1977, Harvestworks offers an environment where artists can make work inspired and achieved by electronic media. Harvestworks helps the community at large to understand, assimilate, and make creative use of new and evolving technologies. Harvestworks creates a context for the appreciation of new work, advances both the art community and the public's agenda for the use of technology in art; and brings together innovative practitioners from all branches of the arts by fostering collaborations across electronic media. For more info: www.nyeaf.org www.harvestworks.org -- Harvestworks is a non-profit arts center in Lower Manhattan. Private funding for our programs has been provided by the Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts, the Jerome Foundation, New York Community Trust, the Carnegie Corporation, the Aaron Copland Fund, the Greenwall Foundation, the Edwards Foundation Arts Fund, the Trust for Mutual Understanding, Materials for the Arts, the Experimental TV Center and mediaThe foundation Inc. Public Support is provided by New York State Council on the Arts, the National Endowment for the Arts and the NYC Dept. of Cultural Affairs. Thanks to our Friends Circle, Cycling74, Digidesign, Inc. and NHT Pro.
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I have been waiting for more than five hours at the Frankfurt Airport in a stop from Dresden and will leave in two. Hopefully! See some video stills from the European Tele-plateaus Phase 3 that took place at the TMA Lab in Dresden.
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I am on my way to Novi Sad, Serbia, to attend the Balkan Platform of Dance 2009, a three days event that aims to "present the best selection of contemporary dance productions...made by established authors and emerging dance artists in previous two years in the Balkans."

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More from their website: BDP 2009 will present the latest production of BADco (Croatia), Rosana Hribar & Gregor Luštek (Slovenia), Madalina Dan (Romania), Dragana Bulut, Gillie Kleiman & Lígia Soares (Serbia), Griffon dance co. (Greece), Kinesthetic Project (Bulgaria) and Aleksandar Georgiev (Macedonia). BDP 2009 will display the best achievements in artistic, conceptual and production senses as well as the specificities of artistic, cultural and material conditions and contexts of this moment in the Balkans." I am very excited to meet the artists and to have this exceptional opportunity to see their work. I am curious to see if the so called Balkanization have affected their work and process... I was able to interview artist/activist Sasa Ascentic and dramaturg/researcher Ana Vujanovic when they were in NYC in March this year presenting My Private Bio-politics. Watch interview here edited by Ragnar Chacin
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I thank Saša Asentić, Director of the festival for this invitation to do "field work" for dance-tech.net interviews and DTW for supporting this adventure. Now the formal language: This project is made possible by a grant of Dance Theater Workshop, with Major support from the Trust of Mutual Understanding
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What: dorkbot-nyc meeting When: 7-9pm, 07 Oct 2009 Where: Location One, 20 Green Street, north of Canal $$$: $$$FREE$$$ ******* The 35.453th dorkbot-nyc meeting will take place at 7pm on Wednesday, October 7th, 2009 at Location One in SoHo. The meeting is free and open to the public. Please bring snacks to share. YUMM. We're always looking for (and playing) more dorkbot theme songs! Bring or email one and we'll play it at the meeting. ******* Featuring the pale green and salt-forming: Torino:Margolis: Action Potential Torino:Margolis is a performance art team that crosses physical and psychological barriers, using invasive electronics and biomedical tools. They explore the idea that the self is transient, elusive and modular by playing with the notion of control and free will. In their new media/dance piece, Action Potential, they harvest a dancer's neuronal impulses using electromyography machines. Using Arduino and XBees, the signals are sent wirelessly to Pure Data open source software, which transforms the signals into sound. Sound/programming by Lee Azzarello and choreography by Dana Kotler. http://www.torinomargolis.com Stefani Bardin: Chemical Proust: Remembrance of Things Pastiche I'm a media maker interested in the intersections of food, technology and science. By examining industrial food production alongside the media rich stylized presentation of food and using such tools as artificial smells (that "flavor" our food supply) and gastroenterology technology I look at food as both a mediating agent and phenomenological reference point within our society and how its role has changed through the modern influences of technology and corporate culture. http://www.petrifiedunrest.net

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Lee von Kraus: cyborgs and cybernetics I will discuss the roborat, roboroach, and other cybernetics stuff I'm working on. The roborat is a rat that is trained to move in directions specified by electronic signals sent to its brain via electrodes. The roboroach is a cockroach that is tricked into moving in specified directions by using mechanically actuated antenna stimulation. The 'other cybernetics stuff' refers to a goal of augmenting brains via induction of new circuit formation. http://leevonk.com ........................................................................ .........dorkbot: people doing strange things with electricity.......... ......................... http://dorkbot.org ........................... ........................................................................
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Manuales / Manuals

Manuales / ManualsInteractive performance in real timeBased on the text of Sergio Valenzuela “Manual 1”Performance and development of software: Brisa MPAssistant: Jose Luis SatocuatoPlatform: Max/Msp/JitterMatucana 100. 24 sept. Santiago of Chile 2009Thanks : Sergio Valenzuela and Leonardo Gamboa.
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7:30 PM Sep 17, 19, 20, 21 Rafael Lozano-Hemmer premiere at the Guggenheim Museum "Levels of Nothingness" a performance-installation by Rafael Lozano-Hemmer, featuring Isabella Rossellini, in conjunction with "Kandinsky" and the 50th Anniversary of the Guggenheim Museum. Part of the "Works and Process" series, "Levels of Nothingness"is an interactive light and sound piece that is co-written by philosopher Brian Massumi, and is inspired by Vasily Kandinsky's explorations of synaesthesia, most notably in his "Yellow Sound" (1912), a composition in which he proposes linking the senses using levels of abstraction. Lozano-Hemmer employs a computerized microphone to analyze live voice in real time and extract physical and linguistic data that, in turn, controls a full rig of rock-and-roll concert lights, creating a color show that surrounds the theater.
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Zehar magazine. Performance Issue

the new edition of the magazine Zehar, a publication by basque art centre "arteleku" is talking about performance. Publication is downloadable at the website (see link below) Languages: Spanish and Euskadi....imageZEHAR #6565 PERFORMANCE EDITIONThe current edition of Zehar asks of us, through performance, a dual task: to detach ourselves from the mere immersion in the images of which each moment of our daily lives is composed and also to refl ect on how these images are shaped and on the imperceptible relationships that are gradually woven between them.In the same way that there are different ways to understand a performance, there are also manifold ways of making use of it. The use of the performance put forward in this number is like that of a broom employed to gather up and tidy the accumulated visual material that we have. The aim, then, is to arrange all the visual material that surrounds us and the structures that are brought to life and made sense of by these images, so allowing us to develop through them and to create new spaces that can respond to our needs.We have put into print the edition exercises that different people have shown when faced by the accumulation of images of our surroundings. It will therefore be a chain of exercises in series, a kind of incomplete series of scores or rehearsals for different and possible performances. Some of the proposed exercises are theoretical, others deal with performative experiences and, fi nally, there are also actual performative exercises perse.ZEHAR_65_EN.PDF — PDF DOCUMENT, 5369KB---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------65 PERFORMANCE EDICIÓNEl presente número de Zehar nos propone, a través de la performance, realizar un doble ejercicio: abstraernos de la mera inmersión en las imágenes que van componiendo cada uno de los momentos de nuestra vida diaria y reflexionar acerca de cómo se van conformando dichas imágenes y de las relaciones imperceptibles que se van tejiendo entre ellas.Así como hay diferentes maneras de entender lo que es una performace, hay también múltiples formas de hacer uso de ella. El uso de la performance propuesto en este número sería como el de una escoba utilizada para recoger y ordenar el material visual que vamos acumulando. Se trataría, pues, de ordenar todo el material visual que nos rodea y las estructuras a las que dichas imágenes dan vida y sentido, lo que nos permitiría desenvolvernos entre ellas y crear nuevos espacios que respondieran a nuestras necesidades.Hemos trasladado al papel los ejercicios de edición que diferentes personas han realizado ante el cúmulo de imágenes de nuestro entorno. Será, pues, una cadena de ejercicios en serie, una especie de partituras o ensayos inacabados para diferentes y posibles performances. Algunos de los ejercicios propuestos son teóricos, otros tratan sobre las experiencias performativas y, por último, hay también performances propiamente dichas.ZEHAR_65_EN.PDF — PDF DOCUMENT, 5369KB
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Call for Videographers/Filmmakers

TenduTV is seeking to update its potential referral list for dance organizations seeking video and film work, and is seeking companies experienced in high-end video production worldwide.We are only seeking companies who can deliver HD product to broadcast specification (for example, PBS or BBC spec).Please submit your contact information, as well as links to your website, reels/samples and general rate cards to content@tendu.tv
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WATCH IN THE DANCE-TECTV LIVESTREAM CHANNEL PAGE AND IN FULL SCREEN WATCH IT IN THE DANCE-TECHTV PAGE TO WATCH THE DOCUMENTARY FROM THE BEGINNING CLICK MENU IN THE RIGHT MIDDLE AREA OF THE PLAYER. Then click "Browse On-demand library", then "CLICK FEATURING NOW" LEAVE COMMENTS DIRECTLY TO EMIO GRECO |PC, THEY RE DANCE-TECH.NET MEMBERS DOUBLE SKIN / DOUBLE MIND 2006 | 56mn author-film director Maite Bermudez choreography emio greco & pieter c. scholten SYNOPSIS Mind and body perceived and experienced by two, dancer and camera playing inside the ongoing duality of the human being SHORT DESCRIPTION The reference point for this documentary is Double Skin/ Double Mind a dance workshop created by choreographers Emio Greco and Pieter C. Scholten. Check out Schedule of Emio Greco | PC USA Tour Space sponsored by MAPP International Productions
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Before the upcoming ke∂ja Oslo - Dance and New Media conference I have started the ke∂ja Oslo dance video challenge on You Tube where you can post your own dance video, and challenge your colleagues and friends to do the same. Remember to credit the people that are taking part, we want to know who they are! Ask them before you post the video.https://www.youtube.com/group/kedjachallengeThe ke∂ja Oslo - You tube challenge is mostly for fun, but its also a way of exploring different sites for user generated content. We already have 19 members who have uploaded videos, and started to rate each other, but we hope for more of everything: posts, comments, ratings.
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Hello dance-techers, This is Marlon, the network producer. Welcome to new members! remember to take advantage of belonging to this engaged community: explore it!. Take ownership of your page customizing the looks and the formatting and find pointers to other members asking to connect with them. That way you create your own network inside dance-tech.net Share your ideas, work and vision as blog posts, videos, photos create and follow groups and discussions. Also review the dance-tech.interviews and dance-techTV MENU Check out the MENU>on-demand library on dance-techTV A bit of focus... I also want to remind you that the goal of this website is to serve as a platform for information and knowledge exchange on interdisciplinary and innovative approaches on the performance of movement, creativity, embodiment and therefore humanness. The site is open to any individual interested on participating in the conversation within a broad scope of topics and diverse ways contexts and word views. So, diversity is welcome. Allow your common sense, curiosity and creativity to maintain and stretch your contributions within this scope. So, please be mindful about your content and remember that due to our potential for difference and diversity it is very important to add tags and description in order to contextualize to your content...your culture... So...please make it useful for yourself and the community. Highlights: Dance-techTV features Emio Greco | PC: interviews, performance excerpts and documentaries USA dance-techTV announces Special broadcast of the documentary Double Skin/Double Mind From September 27th to October 4th 2009 we will broadcast the documentary Double Skin/Double Mind directed by Maite Bermúdez which has as a reference point a dance workshop created by choreographers Emio Greco and Pieter C. Scholten. This special broadcast is made possible by MAPP International Productions and Emio Greco | PC Some new dance-tech.interviews Interview with Radhouane El Meddeb @ Beirut International Platform of Dance Across Bodies and Systems: Interview with Susan Kozel Interview with Sonia Sobral @ Rumos ITAU Cultural Danca ( in Portugues) Interviews by deborah hustic aka lomodeedee Interview with Raimund Hoghe: Inner landscapes marked through simplicity Interview with Maja Drobac: Dancing between East and West aka lomodeedee We are featuring Tweeter feeds from dance-tech.net members on home page: Norah Zuniga-Shaw...Thank you Norah! THANKS TO ALL DANCE-TECH.NET VIP CONNECTIONS

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Hello all, I just got this information from Liz Waterhouse, dancer of the Forsythe Company. Great talk by William Forsythe & Alva Noë Dance and Consciousness Talk @ the New York Public Library Friday, October 9, 2009 at 1:00 PM Celeste Bartos Forum Stephen A. Schwarzman Building 5th Avenue and 42nd Street (directions) $25 general admission and $15 library donors, students and seniors with valid identification. http://www.nypl.org/research/chss/pep/pepdesc.cfm?id=5847 "World-renowned choreographer William Forsythe and cognitive scientist Alva Noë, author of Out of Our Heads: Why You Are Not Your Brain, and Other Lessons from the Biology of Consciousness, examine consciousness as a kind of dance. Together they will explore Noë’s assertion that consciousness is not something that happens inside of us, in our brains, or anywhere else. It is something we do, in our active engagement with the world." Watch dance-tech.interview with Alva Noë Watch dance-tech.interview with William Forsythe
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Dancer and choreographer Maja Drobac could be with certainty described as multi-talented artist... she expresses herself, parallel with dance, in the fields of photography and writing, too...

Portrait of Maja Drobac by Srikanth Kolari (c)

She is a world traveller and culture explorer that really enjoys to dance between cultures…Maja Drobac is a graduated dancer from Amsterdamse Hoogelschoole voor de Kunsten (Theaterschool in Amsterdam) since 2005. She did her stage for one year with Magpie Music and Dance company, an improvisation company based in Amsterdam. She has presented ‘Satu’ (a dance video) as her first independent project as part of Magpie Company.

Portrait of Maja Drobac by Srikanth Kolari (c)

Performance ‘Squirrels on the loose’ with contemporary dancers Darija Dozdor and Ognjen Vucinic was her first independent project made for theatre stage. She is studying Bharatanatyam (Classical Indian Dance) since 2005. This summer Maja presented two dance pieces: Spirit (prone to change) with Studio for Contemporary Dance and solo work Vipassana.I also had an opportunity to see her dancing Bharatanatyam… Hence, I find her artworkz, experiences and attitude to be very moving…

Photo from Vipassana by Srikanth Kolari (c)

First you were trained in contemporary dance, and then in soft Chinese martial art Taiji Quan, afterwards you picked up Bharatanatyam dance, instead of Wu Dang martial art… obviously you’re dancing between two cultures…MD: They say if nothing goes right, you have no other choice but to turn left. I believe some of us are just wired by the polarities of the differences. Which makes me not an exception.I know that all styles interfere your imagination and creativity, but I’m curious… when you are choreographing do you make difference in a sense of, you know, doing a piece which is more based on Western or Eastern approach?MD: If I am asked to do a pure form of contemporary dance for example, of course I will have my focus on western techniques… yet I don’t believe one can ever deny or escape his relieved experience. Even with conscious switch in mind and body, and focus on pure technique, there is always that something that makes us who we are, self special and unique… and if some people recognize it in me as pieces of West and East… than maybe that’s what it is. I never really thought of it, nor am I thinking about it when I am choreographing.

Photo from Bharatanatyam recital by Srikanth Kolari (c)

Usually I have an idea, and different ways of expressing it are just different paths I have crossed or am crossing at the moment. I mean, we all are East and West, North and South… and all the connections in between. I don’t feel green bamboos are more East than Christmas tree, though one can recognise it like that. Or if I jump around like a kangaroo, that action will make me Southern and being all dressed in white will make me Northern. Still… there are certain forms of dance, and/or movement that are characteristic for certain parts of the world. But to be honest, unless I am specifically asked to make a difference, I myself don’t make a difference in the choreography… I only use the movement if it means something to me. Or if the body can express something meaningful by it.

Maja Drobac in ‘Squirrels on the loose’, photo by: D. Gavran (c)

How would you describe your working processes when you are dancing as solo performer and when you do choreographies for other dancers?MD: It is a totally different approach. There are different ways of choreographing, and I am not sure I am an expert in any. I just go with the flow, and where my personal drive takes me. Doing a solo is the hardest, yet easy to think the easiest task to accomplish. You can play with yourself, and there is nobody to control you or say they can’t do what you ask for.At the same time, I find it very hard to observe myself. To choose what is better or more interesting to use as a movement. In this sense, I think my true heart will always be an improviser. I can feel myself in body only if I improvise. For the rest, if the material is set, then it is very much textual. I choreograph it in sentences. So that I can be sure I know what I am saying. I make very clear choices about where my dots, or comas, or exclamation marks are.Working with other dancers, on the other hand, is like taking a trip to an unknown country. It is so much an observation directed method than just clear choreography. If there is a right click in between a dancer and me… then I just allow that dancer to do what ever he/she wants, and I just try to make photos of the moments I find most intriguing, and we put it together in a sentence. I find it very hard when I am asked to choreograph and transfer the material to the dancers. It’s just that my body is very different from other bodies and it is very hard to find two bodies with the same experience. It may work nicely in a very technically based company, but it would also require the choreographer to be trained in the same technique, or at least have the time to introduce dancers with his/her body quality.

Photo from Vipassana by Srikanth Kolari (c)

Could you describe a little bit days you have spent in India while learning Bharatanatyam…MD: The first time I came to India it was entering not just another continent and different culture, it was like a discovering a complete new universe. I lived in Gurukulam, at the top of the hill, where most of the time we didn’t even have the basic facilities like water or electricity… some times there was not even food enough.At the same time, classes were very much intense and demanded abnormal discipline for someone who has never done Bharatanatyam in her life, and who all of a sudden had to dance shoulder to shoulder with dancers doing it all their lives. I had to wear only Indian clothes (saris or churidars), eat with my hands (rice three times a day), wash my saris hitting them on the stone at the back of our house and then just splashing them with little bit of water… We were not allowed to talk with boys alone, not allowed to leave the campus walls without special approval, our days were very determined by the schedule and the will of our gurus. Not to mention being locked on the first floor from 9pm till 4.30am.

Photo from Bharatanatyam solo by Srikanth Kolari (c)

It is funny to notice, but nothing I experienced before in my life could help me go though this military training, except classical ballet. Movement was something that was so much part of their daily life, and so far away from anything I have ever experienced in my body, so after a while I started noticing some similarities with ballet. There is a clear structure, and if you don’t know your body well, you can get easily hurt or lost in your own movements.Later I have joined a school in Bangalore, which was something totally different. My guru lives in the city and although Bharatanatyam is a very traditional and disciplined art, and you can see it in the class or on the stage, life in the city was much easier than on the hill. Though, life in the hill after a while became closer to my inner self from the life I led in the city. But living both was maybe the cocktail of who I am today.Anyway… it was not easy the first time, there were times I was so ready to pack my bag and run back to Europe. It took me long to accept India.

Photo from Bharatanatyam recital by Srikanth Kolari (c)

You needed about six months to accept this…MD: Yeah, about six months. And it’s a solid piece of time. I started my studies with three more girls who came from abroad, out of which two were of Indian origin so very well accustomed to Indian culture. But nobody lasted longer than few months. After they left, I really had no other choice but to come closer to India and Indians. I couldn’t talk to anyone, share anything with anyone… nobody understood anything of what I was saying or what I was trying to express. It was in fact, the moment I have started to live India. When She (India) became my only true companion.My ballet teacher who lives in India as well told me once that not everyone can survive India, since She is definitely finding the way how to confront you with the worse and the best in side of yourself on a daily base. After few years there I still haven’t stopped being smacked to my face from time to time with the new realizations of myself, and the world around me.

Photo from Vipassana by Srikanth Kolari (c)

When did this happen… this complete cultural acceptance?MD: I went to my friend’s house for a month. We had two weeks free from school, but I stayed one month. They just didn’t let me go back. Even when I think about it now, it still stays so clear in my thought. They didn’t speak English, but they were so engaged to teach me Malayalam, the language spoken in Kerala. They spent weeks just talking to me, wanting to know more about my culture, at the same time making me feel part of their Malu culture.I was very much interested about the plants they had in their garden, so my friend’s father presented me with the books on traditional Indian medicine, Ayurveda and Swami Vivekananda’s books. Her mother helped me prepare different kind of herbal medicines for the members of the family; it was a life I never lived before. My day was involved about preparing tea or meals, or helping with the house work, or just being on my own on their roof and learning about Indian medicine, history and spiritualism. It was so simple that it occupied my whole being. They treated me as their own daughter, and I don’t think I have ever felt so much respect and love coming from so much simplicity.Even on the train back to Gurukulam my role was so clear with my friend. I was an older sister returning to school, we were really there to take care of each other. It was the moment when it hit me; the phase of surveillance stopped and living begun.

From performance ‘Kanda’ by Veena Basavarajaiah and Mirra Photo by Maja Drobac (c)

The question of ‘normality’ (whatever it means) rises up…MD: Yes, because of what actually means to be normal in one particular culture?! Something that is perfectly normal in Zagreb could be completely odd for instance in China. I think we have to tend the oddity because it enables us to be more adaptable to different cultures. So many people were asking me to explain them how I felt while I was in India, but each time I would write or speak to them, they would always finished the sentence with the words: “Ok, now tell us how you really feel.” I don’t think we are able to speak out the changes that are happening to us if we are still in the process of changing. If I was really and truly changed, I don’t think I would be the first one to notice.This is how you got drowned into Bharatanatyam completely… not explaining but accepting…MD: Even up to now, I was never explained anything about India. There is a beautiful Japanese saying my first Sansei used to tell me: “Everything I ever learned, I owe to my teacher who never explained me anything.” Indians live their art. It is so much part of their beings. It is of course departing from them as well, especially in the big cities like Bangalore, Bombay, unfortunately even Chennai, though Tamilians are still the most involved with their culture and they are trying to nourish it even today. Young people are trying to approach Western models of life, and there is simply no time anymore for all the rituals and dedication that were done even by their parents on the regular base.My teacher was never explained why Lord Rama holds a bow in his left hand, and arrow in his right. And it can’t be the other way around. She has lived with the statues of Lord Rama all her life… ever since she knows about herself, she knows what Lord Rama is holding in his hands. As well, Bharatanatyam is danced on lyrics. There is a clear story behind which is sung by a singer.

Photo from Bharatanatyam solo by Srikanth Kolari (c)

It became so clear to me that dance is the oldest art form existing. Older even from drawing and maybe even music. Though I believe movement and sound can’t be really separated one from another. People used to get in touch with divinity by moving their bodies. Getting into the trans.After living in a country where first few months I could communicate only by moving my body, I became perceptive to movement and I threw away the dance. Natural constellations exist without us being aware of them. They are ready made choreographies improvised on spot. What we call today instant compositions, are nothing more but becoming aware of the space we are part of. Choreographies exist in space without us making them. But when we do catch them, and transfer them onto the stage… than we are talking about theatre, or art.

Photo: Jogulabhavi Satyava Temple by Maja Drobac (c)

Beside heavy work, what would you highlight in your experience with Indian tradition in the context of dance?MD: I had a privilege to visit quarters indented only for females in Indian tradition. Nobody else is allowed to enter. This is something I will always keep and bear with me. When I’m wearing Sari I’m wearing something that is deeply related to my experiences in India. Something that is part of me now.

From performance ‘Kanda’ by Veena Basavarajaiah and Mirra Photo by Maja Drobac (c)

You have spent a month in the jungle in Ands, how did that experience change the way you perceive things?MD: I didn’t care about anything but elemental things like keeping the fire up, finding food for today, washing the pots and so. Most of my time was spent while sitting on the ground, underneath the tree, looking at the performance by facing the nature. There is no similar way of seeing things, no similar way of sitting or moving, even if you are picking the same spot over and over again, because every time something else will happen. Heraclites wrote: “You can’t enter the same river twice”. It is rather fascinating when you realise that is so true.

From ‘Escalator Clause’ choreographed by Veena Basavarajaiah Photo by Maja Drobac (c)

You are very talented for photography and writing, do you plan to work more in these directions?MD: I wouldn’t say I am talented in any form, I just love what I do, and I do what I want. It happens very often that I get overstuffed with certain things if I do only them. I need space, and freedom to explore and change, and be different, and just look at life from different corners. So when I get tired of listening to myself, I start writing so I can read myself. If I dance too much I really need to have a break and grab a camera and go somewhere and just freeze the movements that I find moving so fast when I move against it.It might sound very hippy saying my directions are orientated by the wind… but that is honestly how I feel.

From ‘Escalator Clause’ choreographed by Veena Basavarajaiah Photo by Maja Drobac (c)

As a world traveler give us some advices and several tips for trips, for instance in India or South America jungles…MD: Consult with someone more experienced than me before you go.Thanks a lot, Maja!p.s. Srikanth Kolari often travels with Maja… an amazing photographer who is a part of Asian Motion, Cambodia’s first photography agency… don’t miss this link… amazing photos…(This interview was originaly published on blog Personal Cyber Botanica)
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Sadler's Wells Global Dance Contest Finalist

Hi friends,I am currently one of 10 finalists in a choreographic on-line video competition. If I win, I will be invited to London's renown Sadler's Wells to perform. This would be a truly wonderful opportunity.Please VOTE for me by clicking HERE!It only takes 2 seconds.Thank you thank you, domo domo, muchas gracias, and merci beaucoup!Julian
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I am flying today from Sao Paulo, to Salvador de Bahía, where I will be participating in the 8th Encounter of the South American Network of Dance in Salvador de Bahía, Brazil. See information in Spanish and Portuguese here. This encounter is realized in collaboration with the 1st International Platform of Dance from Bahia and offer a space for exchange, reflection, creation and education for dance professionals. It is free of cost and open to all interested people. This year the encounter will have three main axis: -Collaboration between universities in south America -Artistic Exchange -Reflection on political actitutudes following the paradigm of ecology of knowledge. There will be an emphasis on education about networking cultures and new internet technologies.
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Dance New Amsterdam offers Vertiginous Movement, a multimedia workshop with post-theater , a multimedia company based new york/berlin/ tokyo and performing at the Japan Society. This workshop launched the DNA New Media Lab series... and DNA is offering a discount to dance-tech.net members! About the workshop from DNA Website: In this workshop, post theater intends to share some of its methods to work with video cameras, video projectors and simple computing in order to create multi-media performances. The presented approaches are not just technical, but conceptual. All backgrounds in dance / movement arts are welcome, and all kinds of creators can join this interdisciplinary workshop – choreographers, dancers, film-makers - everybody who is interested in creating new types of multi-media performances. post theater’s artistic co-director Max Schumacher (www.posttheater.com) and post theater’s media artist Yoann Trellu (www.keyframed.org) will combine short lectures with video-examples with hands-on exercises leading to a short creation. More information click here Ivan Talijancic interviews Max Schumacher via Skype Contact: Ivan Talijancic, Development Specialist / Interim Manager of New Media Initiatives; italijancic@dnadance.org
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Emio Greco | PC, the mesmerazing and idiosyncratic Amsterdam based company are getting ready for their USA Tour and their New York premiere of [purgatorio] POPOPERA at the Joyce Theater. From the [purgatorio] POPOPERA event post: "After their kaleidoscopic HELL (2006), Emio Greco and Pieter C. Scholten continue their journey through Dante’s Divine Comedy. In [purgatorio] POPOPERA, Bang on a Can composer Michael Gordon enriches the typical EG | PC research on the relationship between dance and music using structural elements from rock music. Six dancers intertwine with gleaming black electric guitars. A cross? A third arm? A lump of suffering? Dancers mutate into instruments. Raging guitars become fragile flesh and blood sound-boards. Chained by strings a crowd of dancers seeks purification in a redeeming rhapsody. [purgatorio] POPOPERA blends raw unpolished musicality with fine physical virtuosity and dissolves the borders of music and dance." See US tour schedule here which includes artist salons, performances and documentary screenings Starting Monday September 14th, dance-techTV is dedicating special spaces to EG | PC with interviews, performance excepts and exclusive broadcast of documentaries Double Skin/Double Mind and Imagined Hell by filmmaker Maite Bermudez (also dance-tech.net member). Stay tuned for new additions to this play-list and broadcast schedule. Watch Skyped interview with Emio Greco and Pieter C Scholten On [purgatorio] POPOPERA Watch excerpt of [purgatorio] POPOPERA This special spaces in dance-techTV are co-presented by MAPP International productions
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