Showing posts with label improvisation. Show all posts
Showing posts with label improvisation. Show all posts

Friday, October 1, 2010

Bill T. Jones: "labor, work and action"



"Ghostcatching is a digital art installation that fuses dance, drawing, and computer composition. Paul Kaiser and Shelley Eshkar created the visual and sound composition; Bill T. Jones created and performed the dance and vocal phrases. Seven minutes long, the piece is a meditation on the act of being captured and of breaking free. 

Ghostcatching finds its place in the unexpected intersection of dance, drawing, and computer composition. The work is made possible by advances in motion capture, a technology that tracks sensors attached to a moving body. The resulting data files reflect the position and rotation of the body in motion, without preserving the performer's mass or musculature. Thus, movement is extracted from the performer’s body. 

"Captured phrases become the building blocks for the virtual composition. As data, the phrases can be edited, re-choreographed, and staged for a digital performance in the 3D space of the computer. 
"Here, the body of Bill T. Jones is multiplied into many dancers, who perform as three-dimensional drawings. Their anatomies are intertwinings of drawn strokes, which are in fact painstakingly modeled as geometry on the computer — never drawn on paper. 

"So, we may ask: What is human movement in the absence of the body? Can the drawn line carry the rhythm, weight, and intent of physical movement? What kind of dance do we conceive in this ghostly place, where enclosures, entanglements, and reflections vie with the will to break free"

from the Artists’ Statement by Bill T. Jones, Paul Kaiser, and Shelley Eshkar
For a more detailed account of Ghostcatching, see the catalogue essay Steps



fragment from 'Breathing Show' 

"Don't be afraid to fall off balance." Bill T Jones, vocal fragment from 'Breathing Show' [ video below]







"After Ghostcatching began as an updating of Ghostcatching, the 1999 installation piece created with Bill T. Jones, but the work took on a new existence as the possibilities of 3D projection led deeper into the original terrain.





A re-envisioning of Ghostcatching (1999), After Ghostcatching is built up from the same motions and vocalizations of Bill T. Jones used in the earlier work, but explores the themes of disembodiment and identity with the new possibilities opened up by 3D projection and a custom 3D renderer built up in Field

OpenEnded Group





 

Yvonne Rainer: The Mind is a Muscle




 









MoMA: "Trio A is a well-known dance sequence by Yvonne Rainer. Since its first presentation in 1966 as part of the larger performance The Mind is a Muscle, Part 1 at Judson Memorial Church in New York, it has been performed repeatedly in various forms and contexts by dancers and non dancers alike. The piece comprises a sequence of unpredictable movements that unfold in a continuous motion, deliberately opposing familiar dance patterns of development and climax. Trio A is performed at MoMA by Pat Catterson, a professional dancer, and Jimmy Robert and Ian White, two visual artists and nondancers, in front of a projection of a historical recording of Rainer's own 1978 performance of the piece."



"Rainer's work has been linked strongly with minimalist sculpture: she compared the neutral, specific qualities of those objects to her own "work-like" or "task-like," "ordinary" dance, and she collaborated early on with Robert Morris. But The Mind is a Muscle manifests an agitated and contradictory relationship to the idea of "work" in the context of an affluent, postwar America. Wood describes the way the choreography of The Mind is a Muscle proposed a new lexicon of movement that stripped away the gestural conventions of dance or theater narrative in an attempt to present the human subject on her own terms while at the same time manipulating the seductiveness of the image, increasingly being harnessed by capitalism. Rainer's legacy persists through her decision to allow the Trio A from The Mind is a Muscle as a "multiple," distributed by being taught to many dancers and non-dancers, proposing, Wood argues, for the art object as code."
Catherine Wood,
MIT Press



Yvonne Rainer and 'Martha Graham' (Richard Move) in 'Trio A'



Trisha Brown: moves, measures

Trisha Brown

If you couldn't see me (1994)
 The Joyce Theater, NYC, 2008


If you couldn't see me (1994) 02:01
The Joyce Theater, NYC, 2008
CREDITS
Choreography by Trisha Brown
Music and Costume: Robert Rauschenberg
Lighting: Spencer Brown with Robert Rauschenberg
Performer: Leah Morrison
Video: The Joyce Theater, NYC
February 10, 2008



Like Sculptures Constantly in Flux 

By CLAUDIA LA ROCCO

Flux and solidity vie in "Opal Loop/Cloud Installation #72503" (1980), in which four performers slip and tangle through the shimmering, decentralized space created by Fujiko Nakaya’s “cloud sculpture,” a roiling bank of machine-generated fog backlighted by Beverly Emmons’s warm lighting design.

Seen in Dia:Beacon's cavernous basement, the work’s spooky, otherworldly qualities came to the fore. Ms. Brown is adept at subverting traditional notions of how choreography develops; much like the misty cloud, the dancers momentarily cohered into larger, shared themes, only to melt away along individual trajectories"


Accumulation with Talking plus Water Motor- Trisha Brown


"With 1978's Accumulation with Talking plus Water Motor, a complex solo combining elements of three other pieces, she demonstrated a mental and physical virtuosity seldom seen in the dance world, then or now. Brown's rigorous structures, combined with pedestrian or simple movement styles and tongue-in-cheek humor brought an intellectual sensibility that challenged the mainstream "modern dance" mindset of this period." Wikipedia








Trisha Brown


ARTseenSOHO: Free Measures: drawings

"Trisha Brown has played a vital role in contemporary American choreography for over thirty-five years. Begun as private notations, many of her drawings contribute to her choreographic process. As she puts it, drawing "sits in the air between me and my dancers..." In turn, she has come to see choreography as a kind of drawing. "Whether they are in air or on paper, it's a whole other vista of possibility, another way of thinking about the body moving in space that frees me up to do things I would never think of doing in dance." - paraphrased from an essay by Hendel Teicher, who organized the exhibition.




Karin Davie with Joan Waltemath


"On the occasion of her traveling mini-survey featuring 41 paintings, drawings, and sculptures, which began last month on February 23rd at the Albright-Knox Museum in Buffalo, Rail contributing editor Joan Waltemath visited Karin Davie’s Lower East Side studio to discuss her life and work.

Rail: When I first saw your paintings I understood that you were painting stripes as a genre though you had made a great deal of references to Trisha Brown. Could you elaborate more on that?
Karin Davie, “Between My Eye and Heart No. 18”
84" by 108", oil/canvas, 2005. 
Courtesy: Mary Boones Gallery, New York.

Davie: Well, I‘ve always been interested in her work because of the way she dealt with the mechanics of the body, the edges and where they lie, the sense of natural gravity that she uses and defies at the same time, and how she was able to extend all of that beyond the boundary of the stage, out of the concert hall into other alternative spaces like rooftops and walls as well as gallery spaces."