waltz notes
Posted: February 2, 2011 Filed under: creative process, dance notation, laban studies, movement choirs, performance | Tags: albrecht knust, centre national de la danse, dance notation bureau extension, doing things, laban dance notation, Rudolf Laban, score Leave a comment »I’m listening over and over again to the recording I finally received from the record archive, trying to figure out where the dance steps go in the music, and how to find the musical markers the dancers so need to help them find their place in the dance. The template of the notation score meshes nicely with the recording in a way no other track of this ‘Faust Waltz’ has, and solves some problems that I was having with putting this dance together. But it creates new ones. This dance, a movement-choir waltz by Albrecht Knust, seems to have a really simplistic relationship to the music. The dancers move exactly in accordance with rhythmic changes. This generally should make the puzzle of the score easier to solve. However, the dance notation score is riddled with repeats. Repeats within repeats too, and lots of second and third endings for repeated sections; and all in a form of proto-notation which looks just different enough from the modern to make my head spin. But when I put the dance with the music, there is a whole vague middle section that doesn’t mesh as clearly.
Incidentally, it is the section that focuses most on formation changes; the steps the dancers do are way less important than where they do them as they travel through the space, forming spirals, giant spinning pinwheels that expand and contract, squares, little circles, and y-shapes. This section is the most important to me as far as why movement choirs were special, and different from dances for the stage, not only because of their social and cultural position, but at the choreographic level. This will allow me to talk about how it may have felt to be inside the dances.
The dance is bracketed at beginning and end by more complicated dance steps, in place. Apparently these are what I have lots of practice reading in notation; these are the types of things Laban notation adapted to make readable, and that common practice in dance notation focuses on today. But the group movements are foreign. It is the difference between focusing on dance at the level of the individual body and dance at the level of the group.
The real thoughts I wanted to jot down today though, were about my process with this vague section of the score. The process of aligning and realigning movement and music phrases was getting me nowhere. I realized I am right inside of a border space of dance notation and reconstruction practice. This dance is ephemeral, and it is gone. I have this trace, the score, to work with. This is how it has always been. As I approach the dance, I put my finger on something. I figure out a step, or a musical connection and the dance seems present again. Then, one of these holes appears, and the dance has slipped through my fingers again. The original dance has left the building.
The other day, one of the dancers suggested that in the places where there are holes, the throngs we are inviting to do this score with us should do a disco pose, or something like it. She was really on to something. I realized that since I’ve committed to bringing this dance forward with live bodies, they must have some group consensus about what it is that they are doing, at times down to the musical measure. The dance must make some kind of sense for them in space and time.
I could research more, dig into Knust’s multi-volume, three-language Dictionary of Kinetography Laban as well as other things in the archives to try to decode more of the symbols I still don’t get. I could spend my time, geek out, and dig deeper. But I have been digging for several years now. Isn’t that due diligence? Now I have these dancers, standing in front of me, ready for anything. And really, if I continue digging, I will find infinite places where there is no there, there – where the “original” again slips through my fingers.
This is, of course, one of my axes to grind; how lost past performances are is seriously contested territory for many in my field. They are very lost, people. And who tells the story of history affects what is said. Here is such a lovely opening, where I can get between the sure presence offered by the score and the confusion created by the score. What seems to be a finite dance, which can be determined down to the second, now seems to have infinite holes. To get the chance to create infinite spaces inside apparently tiny holes. . . this is what reconstruction feels like to me.
Until rehearsal starts today, I will be standing in some of these holes. I will patch them with disco steps, or something else. Often, reconstructors find the most believable looking patch they can, so that you can’t tell the hole has been patched. All I am thinking is that it would be fun to use very colorful patches. Patches that aren’t put together very well, that might fall off, that look garish, or embarrassing, or that look fun, or are inviting, drawing attention to themselves, and their function as patches. Or perhaps I could do a little of both, so that no one is sure what is going on.
One criticism against this is approach is that I’m short-circuiting the research process out of laziness. Some will argue that I’m smokescreening; they will say that I am using theory to cover my own failure to be thorough. Well, if they want to know the exact repeat structure of this “Walzer”, be my guest. The score is in the online collection of the Centre National de la Danse . Plus we have it here at Ohio State. I will share my research path with you. I am tired from my looking right now, and I want to do some making. I am looking for the answers to my questions, which is really the only thing anyone can do.
Boston Dynamics BIGDOG Robot
Posted: September 22, 2010 Filed under: interesting | Tags: bigdog, boston dynamics, laban dance notation Leave a comment »YouTube – Boston Dynamics BIGDOG Robot.
The Mischief of a Renegade Dance Notator
Posted: December 20, 2009 Filed under: dance notation, pocket dance scores | Tags: brian ferneyhough, dance, laban dance notation, Reconstruction, trevor wishart Leave a comment »Impossible Scores: The Mischief of a Renegade Dance Notator
A process of generating movement with creative Laban dance notation scores repurposes this system of movement description while challenging its traditional use as a tool for documentation and preservation of choreographic works. This paper describes my work with creating, dancing and disseminating scores that convey indeterminate choreographic ideas. I discuss the initial inquiry, sketches, subsequent challenges, final product, and proposed next steps with attention to the conceptual aspects. I draw from firsthand experience; my own thoughts, discussions and studio practice as well as writings from music, dance, and cultural theorists support and situate the work.
This project arose as an idiosyncratic response to several factors. I was inspired by salient facts about the history of dance notation and perceived attitudes among dancers about the system. Experiences reading and writing dance notation and a personal interest in destabilizing the predominant, positivist approach to dance reconstruction found in my field were also factors that led to this particular investigation.
Dance notation has historically had a mysterious polarizing effect in the culture of Western concert dance. Practitioners who feel that notation of dance legitimizes, proliferates, and supports the work of dance argue with those who view notation as a reductive activity that eviscerates dancing of its ephemeral essence. Many students in my dance department resist the required coursework in Laban studies, as they would mathematics classes—only more vehemently. Students are offended by the static appearance and reductive nature of structured notation.
Moreover, dancers in the pro-notation camp have responded to predominant anti-notation sentiment with defensiveness about their practice that seems to deepen the divide. Notators discuss among themselves the benefits of their practice with a sense of being misunderstood and underappreciated. In a discussion of the demise of Feuillet notation, Ann Hutchinson Guest sides with Angiolini in criticizing Noverre, with his strong sentiments of opposition to that system (Dance Notation 66-67).
Dance notation is also the site of conveyance of power within the field of dance. Hutchinson Guest links the fall of Feuillet’s popularity to the ascendancy in dance among the uneducated, here with a tone of lament:
Thus the traditions of dance literacy were broken and dance moved again into the still present oral-visual tradition. Dancers were trained and choreographic works were handed on and dancers were trained merely by being told what to do. Books were no longer connected with the physical activity of dancing, and the advantages of written dance were totally lost.However the benefits of written dance are not to be assumed. Activities of dance preservation and reconstruction spark lively discussions of the location of original dance and issues of ownership and copyright (Cohen, 1-18). The relationship of Feuillet’s work to the increase of nationalistic identity France is an example the use of dance writing to exert political control (Louppe 82).
Dance practice is also characterized by constant, intentional change in methods of making, performing and seeing dancing. Systems of movement notation fit the dance styles they describe (Marion 139 – 147), and thus rapidly adapt or are thrown out for new ones (Hutchinson Guest, Dance Notation 78-116). Laban notation is a highly comprehensive, rational system of movement notation in which the space, time and body aspects of movement are most aptly recorded (Hutchinson Guest Labanotation 11). Imagery and process driven choreographic methods are prominent in contemporary dance as exemplified by William Forsythe and the Gaga technique method of Batsheva. Dances in which the motivations are more determined than their results call for new systems of notation.
Despite the decreasing utility and popularity of Laban dance notation, I am not ready to give up its use. The system is comprehensive and deterministic, but it is also emergent. Rudolf Laban left it open to be developed by other users (Hutchinson Guest Dance Notation 87). In Laban theory classes at the Ohio State University, I have found that working with Laban notation deepens and enriches my understanding of meovement, adding layers of conceptual complexity that I feel, rather than reducing the experience. In particular, I developed a curiosity about my own attempts to literally read mistakes in written Labanotation. In a respectful spirit of repurposing and recoupment I decided to explore the ways I could adapt and undermine Labanotation towards my own interests.
Initial research
Brian Ferneyhough is a composer who writes musical scores so intricate as to be impossible for the performer to accomplish. I wasn’t able to determine what difference this complicated notation made in the sound of his music. I found it important to look for a specific effect Ferneyhough’s use of notation had on the outcome of the music that set it apart from traditionally notated music. I looked for critical writing on him to help me make sense of this work. This led me to contemporary composer and writer Trevor Wishart’s theory of musical gesture (126-129).
To paraphrase this theory, Wishart backgrounds his critical analysis of music and its notation with a short history of the written word in Western thought, beginning with the work of Plato. He also draws on the Marxist theory of praxis to call for a theory of sound based not on the written symbols of what he describes as the “scribal culture”, but on the “musical gesture” (Wishart 45-70). He discusses the dialogue between musical notation, instrument technology and Western music common practice, and uses the term “lattice” to describe music notation – it is a system of recording time and abstracted pitch. Wishart discusses Ferneyhough’s scores with ambiguity as to whether Ferneyhough subverts or enhances the performance of musical gesture.
Parallels can be drawn between dance and music and their respective traditions of practice and notation. Labanotation, though it can describe elements of movement such as relationships between body parts, or anatomical motivation, focuses primarily on directional motivation of movement, omitting information about the inner and outer stimulus for movement and the muscular response to that stimulus (Hutchinson Guest, Labanotation, 12) Overall, the impression is of a critique of ossification in Western music and political control through, and the loss of a purpose for the music itself. While dance has not progressed in service of its notation system, analogies can be drawn between instrument technology and dance style. Style in dance (my own definition) is the result of specific technologies in dance practice, which can place limits on choreographic outcome.
Still unsure of the mechanics of my proposed scores, I began to sketch dance phrases and try to perform them. I used several approaches; I could write movements that were logically or anatomically incorrect. I could include symbols for images in my notation to create physical relationships to images. I could also, like Ferneyhough, write logically sound scores that would be so physically intricate as to create the opportunity for the performer to enter a state of attention that in itself would be a compelling movement expression. As a way of addressing choreography and techniques driven by specific states of attention, such as that of Meg Stuart or Ohad Naharin, I could use relationship signs and symbols creatively to notate these states of attention.
Challenges
My sketches revealed practical and theoretical problems. Some had to do with the intricate and comprehensive quality of Laban notation, and other problems arose out of my own conditioning as a dancer. Conceptual problems arose as to how these dances addressed issues of power and how they would be conveyed to an audience.
The first challenge I came up against was the great amount of detail that can be described using Labanotation. Almost any physically possible movement I could conceive of is describable using structured movement description. In addition, motif description already allows for open-ended scores, which can be solved with consideration of individual process. I was immediately forced to refine my process to focus on highly intricate notation and physically or logically impossible tasks, as well as motif description of poetic images rather than spatial, temporal, and anatomical information.
In the writing of illogical scores I thought of the score as notation poetry – however the comparison to poetry breaks down in that notation symbols do not convey meaning visually as words do, (even when the syntax of the words is illogical). Movement notation must be reassembled into movement to give access to the meaning of the movement. Louppe describes Fuillet’s notation system using Rousseau’s terminology: “. . . we can say that the language of Feuillet is a ‘geometer’s tongue,’ not a ‘poet’s tongue’” (82). And the dances I was creating, once reassembled, were not necessarily things of beauty, as you can see in this silly video:
In addition, my intent to transgress rules of Labanotation was undermined by my own rudimentary understanding of this amazingly complex system.
My attempts to create scores based on visual beauty brought me to similar challenges. Was I creating an object or a dance? I find a well-written, hand-drawn notation score to be a thing of beauty, but even some of the most beautiful notation scores are written on graph paper that shows their utilitarian purpose. I became interested in repurposing dance notation as visual art and considered whether pencil drawings or Labanwriter symbols, refined in Photoshop, would be more appropriate. Here I came up against a conflict between formalism and attention to fuction. The scores I created out of primarily aesthetic concerns left out direction symbols (also the primary unit for describing movement in the Laban system) and were written in motif to give a more spacious, sinewy design. But they seemed without much content. The best feature of these “aesthetic scores” is that they address dancers’ complaints about the ugliness of the blocky, modernist direction symbols.
At this point it seemed the illogical and anatomically impossible scores were potentially the most generative of ideas. Attempts to describe my process led to the question, “aren’t you just writing bad code?” It seemed that writing something illogical with a system based on logic might just cause the system to fade away, and create a piece of nonsense. It became apparent that I would need to be judicious in the scores, attempting to break only one or two rules of the system at a time and keeping the scores as tidy as possible outside of that.
I was challenged by my own dancing, which while keeping me generally safe from accidents and injury, also serve to limit possibilities of movement open to me. I approached the scores with as much determination to accomplish what was written as I could muster, but my body’s self-protective mechanisms took over at times. I was also concerned not to further the rationality and abstraction of the system of notation that I was attempting to repurpose and undermine.
As I worked I could not quite imagine the purpose of these scores. While the project called for bodily application to bring it to its completion, nothing that I generated particularly merited stage performance without further development. I thought the scores had potential to address the story of the power structure in dance, and to further destabilize the idea of notation as a tool for fixing dance, preserving “original” works, and making present the “aura” of individual choreographers through fetishizing of their work through scores (Thomas, Helen 129). I would have to refine my idea of the final product and audience for these scores or the dances they created.
Generative Experiments
In order to address the challenges, I conceived of two separate ways of packaging and conceiving of the scores, and separated the types of scores I was creating by method. I rehearsed in order to develop a sense of play within rigorous compliance to the scores.
I found the scores provided parameters that pushed beyond my own techniques. Fuillet’s notation may have done the same for French dance (loupe 90 – 91). The most appropriate mode for developing movement based on illogical scores would require a development of a technique of honest and rigorous exploration of what was written. In this sense I count these scores as useful compositional tools.
The scores were interesting in that they have reliable and repeatable aspects, therefore they retain the structural support to for solving abstract or multi-level choreographic problems. While improvisation is an extremely useful tool for cultivating awareness and exploring unknown movement, the results can be as unreliable as the situation of the improvisor, which contributes to the exploration. However, since the scores are not performable in an exactly reliable way in space and time as such, there is an aspect to them which must be created with each performance, a usage of dance notation which Jeschke calls for (Jeschke 4).
The issues of purpose and audience for the scores resulted in several different iterations of the actual documents. I solved this problem with one project which will move towards a greater sense of refinement in the object of the score itself, and which is not necessarily designed for utilitarian purposes, and one product that is a cheaply reproduced pamphlet designed to emphasize the use of mechanical reproduction and focus on dissemination of the score.
Helen Thomas considers that scores may be a way of cheaply reproducing dance on a mass scale, with the implications of mass distribution discussed by Benjamin (Thomas 130):
One might generalize by saying: the technique of reproduction detaches the reproduced object from the domain of tradition. By making many reproductions it substitutes a plurality of copies for a unique existence. And in permitting the reproduction to meet the beholder or listener in his own particular situation, it reactivates the object reproduced. These processes lead to a tremendous shattering of tradition, which is the obverse of the contemporary crisis and renewal of mankind (Benjamin 74).One iteration works with the idea of creating an aura for an original handmade art object in the form of a screenprint of handwritten notation on fine paper, presented on the white space of a gallery wall. This brings the visual aspect of the symbols forward, but sets up a double bind in which the dance becomes identified with the score and loses its embodiment, as well as heightening the sense of the artists’ hand, and thus, aura. The other iteration is a pamphlet inexpensively Xeroxed on newsprint. Newsprint uniquely conveys the greytones of the pencil drawing, but the graph paper lines are retained. This method highlights inexpensive mechanical reproduction as inspired by Benjamin. This form of reproduction and dissemination are appropriate for my agenda for dance experience and notation. The irony in this expression is the dearth of actual audience members who could make heads or tails of the scores within.
Next Steps in the Process
The results of the process to this point were rough drafts in terms of both the dance phrases and physical scores. The next step in the process would be refining the scores themselves with a focus on clarity of grammar for the sections that do hold to the rules of labanotation. Further iterations might drop the use of notation of imagery through made-up symbols due to the lack of any real need for notation of these movement motivations (words seem to work fine for the practitioners of Gaga, and Forsythe’s improvisation technologies make use of words, video and animation very clearly.) The aesthetic score could benefit from further development of its visual appeal. I would also like to explore scores designed around aesthetics but that use structured description. These concepts could also be further developed in a course integrating composition and Laban theory. As a whole, the pamphlet of scores would need more detailed notes on performance of the scores, as well as references to direct non-readers of Laban notation to resources for deciphering the scores.
Conclusion
Writing these scores was a cathartic exercise in focused mischief. The scores were interesting in that they have repeatable aspects. Therefore, they retain structural support for a process of solving abstract or multi-level choreographic problems. While improvisation is an extremely useful tool for cultivating awareness and exploring unknown movement, the results can be as unreliable as the situation of the improvisor and extremely fleeting. However, since the scores are not performable in an exactly reliable way in space and time as such, aspects of them must be created anew with each performance, and become “texts of performative knowledge” (Jeschke 1). The project allowed me to take aspects of Laban notation that I consider valuable and (at least for a time) throw away the rest. While the end results were rough, the process of inquiry led to a pragmatic methodology for examining issues of political power in systems of dance notation.
Works Cited
Benjamin, Walter. “The Work of Art in the Age of Mechanical Reproduction.” Visual Culture: The Reader. Ed. Evans, Jessica and Hall, Stuart. London: Stuart Hall, 1936. 72–79.
Cohen, Selma Jeanne. Next Week, Swan Lake. Middletown: Wesleyan, 1982.
Hutchinson Guest, Ann. “Historical Development.” Dance Notation: The Process of Recording Movement on Paper. London: Dance Books, 1984.
—. Labanotation: The System of Analyzing and Recording Movement. 4th ed. New York: Routledge, 2005.
Jeschke, Claudia. “Notation Systems as Texts of Performative Knowledge.” Dance Research Journal 31.1 (1999): 4-7.
Louppe, Laurence. “Feuillet’s Thinking.” Traces of Dance: Drawings and Notations of Choreographers. Paris: Editions Dis Voir 1994: 81–90.
Marion, Sheila. “Toward a New Paradigm for Exploring Dance Notation.” International Council of Kinetography Laban Proceedings of the Twentieth Biennial Conference. Hong Kong: ICKL, 1997.
Thomas, Helen. “Reproducing the Dance: In Search of the Aura?” Preservation Politics: Dance Revived, Reconstructed, Remade. University of Surrey, Roehampton, Nov 8-9, 1997.
Wishart, Trevor. On Sonic Art. New York: Routledge, 1996.
Helvetica
Posted: June 17, 2009 Filed under: interesting | Tags: design, helvetica, laban dance notation, modernism, typeface Leave a comment »This is a clip from Helvetica, a documentary I enjoyed about the typeface by that name, and a fascinating story of modernism. I am growing intrigued by design and its history. I’m both put off and attracted by the link to mass culture and consumerism in design.
Dance, Sustainability, and Counterpoint
Posted: May 26, 2009 Filed under: Uncategorized | Tags: amateurism, Ascona, counterpoint, critical pedagogy, emerson, housewifery, husbandry, john holt, joshua penrose, laban dance notation, maria montessori, mothering, Movement Choirs, physical practice, Rudolf Laban, tap, theater of the oppressed, thoreau, wendell berry 2 Comments »My friend Hannah used the Counterpoint Tool from Synchronous Objects as a way of framing related ideas. This process of examining a web of ideas first in terms of one relationship, then another, then maybe several relationships at once, brings a holistic, open-ended and non-linear knowledge of what those ideas are. The process is useful to me right now as I try to integrate my ideas about my creative research and right livelihood, as well as the political ramifications of Rudolf Laban and his career.
I’m sitting with some plain white paper and a pencil and trying to sketch the contrapuntal play of these ideas on the paper, but having difficulty mapping the ideas out for myself visually. I seem to need my model to move, to be able choreograph them and thereby see how they play with each other. Presently I have a series of triangles with a word, representing a chunk of concepts at the corners of each triangle. From one triangle to another one or two of the words may stay the same. The terms in the triangles are these:
sustainability, ascona, anna halprin, my creative process, rudolf laban, wendell berry, somatics, and dance reconstruction
I’d like for this model to be able to show how the triangles interelate, and how varying relationships between concepts can show different facets of each concept. Despite my training in Labanotation, I can’t think of a visual representation for this inherently relational way of being with ideas.
Now, I will try something like the facebook friend wheel. I’m placing the ideas around a wheel with an open center. Any idea can connect to any other idea along the wheel. The important thing is not to only draw a connection but to use the visual connection between two or more words to better understand the words and their relationship. I’ve added a few words to fill out my wheel now, including the following:
physical training, freedom, emerson, thoreau, amateurism, mothering ballet, tap, labanotation, jazz, theater of the oppressed, mark johnson, maria montessori, john holt, friere, critical pedagogy, movement choirs, gender, husbandry/housewifery, working with joshua
Reconstruction as a Cultural Product
Posted: April 26, 2009 Filed under: Uncategorized | Tags: cultural criticism, cultural materialism, dance, laban dance notation, raymond williams, score Leave a comment »Why reconstruct historic dances? What in the act of reconstruction from the labanotation score is creative and worthwhile? Should dance makers and the field in general embrace the problem of disappearance, and focus on the new? Is the lack of history in dance an asset that serves the form?
I’m thinking about how cultural materialism provides an argument for continued reconstruction of historic dance. As I understand it, Raymond Williams claimed that not only discourse, but also the actions and products of culture serve to demonstrate knowledge. Dance as reconstructed from the score uniquely contributes to this demonstration of knowledge in dance by offering a new, active, ephemeral product that relates the culture that originally produced the dance as well as the one which brought about the reconstruction. This contrasts and enriches the more abstracted, disembodied verbal discourse around dance which also serves to create new knowledge. In other words, dances and the scores produced to communicate them not only contribute to discourse, but parallel and extend the work of discourse. While a new dance demonstrates contemporary culture, reconstructions of historic dance make a dialogic statement through the juxtaposition of cultures, and through their self-conscious posture towards culture. This layered statement enriches and develops consciousness.
Thoughts in this post were inspired by this article.
Serious Play, Curious Investigation
Posted: April 14, 2009 Filed under: Uncategorized | Tags: accad, dance, improvisation technologies, laban dance notation, Laban Movement Analysis, Monster Partitur, physical practice, score, Scott DeLahunta Leave a comment »
The Forsythe workshop at Ohio State constitutes one of the deepest, broadest, and most pleasurable arcs of learning in my life so far. It was unique in its holistic combination of theory and practice. I found that the readings, viewings, discussions, and symposium fed my studio practice, which then informed further thoughts, writings and discussions about this work.
William Forsythe’s ideas and technique left their mark on my body, my conception of the study of dance technique, my approach to creative inquiry, and my perception of time.
At a young age I came to be interested in dismantling the structures that seemed to keep dance separate from the questioning in my heart. I have so identified with deconstruction as a reason and mode for making, and so stripped away at dance while trying to make dances, that it began to seem better not to make anything at all. In part, this pattern is what drew me to step outside of the making process and identify myself as a Labanotator rather than a creator. Something that irks me about the world of Labanotation is the sense notators sometimes convey of having secret knowledge that other dancers don’t, or can’t have. Perhaps I have been irritated by this because it is a strategy I’ve been using to help me hide from my disappointment with dance.
Engaging with the work of William Forsythe, with its beauty in the contrast of extreme complexity and deconstruction has given me a new sense of permission to build and make. Rather than throwing the dance baby out with the bathwater, Forsythe takes what is useful to him and regenerates, fragments, and regenerates again in a beautiful sort of alchemy. Though I admire Forsythe’s choreographic structures, and love the way his technique feels on my skin, I don’t want to make what he has made. Instead I want to imitate his posture of questioning and curiosity. At the heart, this workshop has inspired me to seek earnestly what my questions are starting now. I would like to continue to deconstruct dance when I need to, but also to not be afraid of building new and complex structures. I would like to learn to say, “I don’t know what dance is,” but not to give up on my body and its rich knowledge. I would like to build structures in symbol, movement, new media, or all three at once, and through these structures to continually engage in serious, playful investigation.
Winter 2009
Posted: March 16, 2009 Filed under: Uncategorized | Tags: A-Scale, collaboration, dance, group notation, improvisation technologies, joshua penrose, knust, laban dance notation, Laban Movement Analysis, Max/MSP Jitter, Monster Partitur, Movement Choirs, physical practice, Richard Maxfield, score, Space Harmony, Titan, Vivaldiana, Wii Leave a comment »Working backwards, here’s what I’ve been doing the last few months.
- Meditative tracing of skeleton sculptures for William Forsythe’s Monster Partitur in the Wexner Center Performance space.
- Afferent Data, an eight-channel sound environment responsive to the small movements of respiration, with Joshua (mentioned by Bill Mayr in the Dispatch). And therefore asking. . .
- What is it to be alive? What is it that makes me alive? Is it possible to be still? What is the smallest amount of movement? What is the essence of being alive?
- Studying Vicki Blaine’s 1978 Progression dance score with regard to Rudolf Laban’s theories of space, and thus;
- Committing Laban’s A-Scale to muscle memory
as well as. . .
- Rolling, swinging, rocking and dropping my way through some Bartenieff fundamentals.
- Gathering information on John Rodriguez’ abstract ballet Vivaldiana, reading the Labanotation score, and embodying it. This has felt like a satisfying, complex physical Sudoku. Learning that every personal story is interesting if one spends enough time with it.
- Twenty-one beautiful sessions of playful, intentional improvisation (and four ballet classes) with Nik Haffner and friends in a workshop presenting William Forsythe’s ideas at OSU’s Department of Dance.
- Batsheva, Batsheva, Batsheva at the Wex. That’s watching them, dreaming about them, and talking about them.
- Learning the differences between Labanotation in 1927 and now.
- Attempting without much success to understand the score of a movement choir from Germany in 1927. Staring with fascination at pages of Knust’s Group Notation.
- Attempting, again without success, to map data from movement into Max/MSP through the Wii remote. The idea is to make an instrument which will classify movement according to the space and effort qualities of Laban Movement Analysis.
- Reading the fantastically illuminating responses of elective students in dance to a dance concert, and thus;
- revisiting the question; what do we make things for, our audience, our research, or somewhere in between? Facing that I have not really been asking this question with honesty. Appreciating the ideas of Richard Maxfield in his Composers, Performance and Publication essay in light of all this.
Viewing/Trying On Improvisation Technologies
Posted: February 4, 2009 Filed under: Uncategorized | Tags: breakin, cross of axes, dance, improvisation technologies, laban dance notation, physical practice, rave, space hold Leave a comment »
After an hour trying Forsythe’s improvisation technologies on my body, I felt much better. I had articulated my joints in ways that are not my habit. I’m quite surprised at how therapeutic it felt. With my exposure to Bartenieff Fundamentals and release technique I think of anything that reduces “tension” as therapeutic. This was not loose, floppy, tension-relieving movement; it was actually quite effortful. Maybe I was releasing things I’m used to holding while binding things I’m accustomed to letting flow.
This reminds me of my rave days and of the look of breakdancing – finding lines and volumes in space and articulating them, shape being the priority, and virtuosity being about increasing the rate of shifting between lines, points and shapes while maintaining clarity and rigor, and also in having multiple things happening in different body centers at once. The space that I went to is familiar from those long nights of dance parties in the 90’s. The question arises for me, how does the evolution of breaking and raving movement relate to that of Forsythe’s work? Are they similar by circumstance, or was he inspired by breakdancing? Or, do they look similar because they relate in different ways to the same lineage? If so, what lineage? I would like to know. Some associations that come to mind are German Expressionist dance, the abstract movement, modernist architecture, deconstruction, and techno and electro music and its relationship to breaking.
I get great information from non-dancers. A friend has described improvisational dance he’s seen in performance as having a value for looking disoriented. I agree; sometimes it seems the disorientation has been codified, and is therefore not authentic, but just a mode that people resort to. I don’t see all improvisation in performance this way – maybe just some of the less compelling performances. These technologies seem like a useful tool for avoiding the pat disoriented look. While working with the technologies I experienced having a heightened perception, rather than confusion about what my body was doing each moment. As layers were added I found myself slipping more easily between this acute awareness and disorientation; switching very quickly between the two, or riding a continuum. The ideas are heady, but it seems like a goal is to try to get your brain into your joints and do the computations there, in the moment.
Melanie Bales mentioned in LMA class this week that, in her opinion, Forsythe’s work prioritizes Body (in the LMA sense) as a framework rather than Space or Effort. Several of us who had been doing these readings piped up, “no, Space! It’s about Space!” –because that’s the thing the readings seems to bring up. But Mel claimed that although Forsythe talks a lot about space, but is really working with a Body sensibility. The jury’s still out for me; I don’t know enough about LMA or William Forsythe yet to say what I think. I can say that if I were to prioritize LMA categories with this movement, effort would certainly be last, because the effort seems most to service whatever he has the body doing, or the body doing with the space. At the body level, I am more articulate and intelligent as a whole after spending an hour or so dancing with this. Each joint seems to have been explored fully.
Within the “reorganization” section, I enjoyed the part about reorientation of the room. It reminded me of one of my favorite systems for framing movement, the crosses of axes in the Laban system. I have always loved working with these for the way they parse the movement. The crosses allow you to look at the movement in relationship to the body, to gravity, to the room you’re in, to the spine, to the “stance” which is a more specific idea of front. Then you can change the cross you’re working on as you move, which is what dancers do all the time for themselves.
Symbols for Crosses of Axes from Labanotation
In attempting to accurately record or recover specific movements through notation these crosses are slow and cumbersome and only used when you have to. Here in these technologies I see that Forsythe has come up with a methodology for applying the same concepts to the body and playing with them in the moment. I find it so extremely satisfying and fun. Some other concepts he uses that I’m familiar with from Laban are the space hold and spot hold.

space hold and spot hold
It would be fun to think of symbols for some of his other modes. Perhaps I could create a symbol for the forms of compression and fragmentation? Or one that is like space and spot hold but shows avoiding a spot or sliding along a line?
There’s a clarity to this methodology that reminds me of working with the Laban system. I feel at home with it, in the talk of the forms traced by moving distal body parts, of the difference between folding or contracting a limb, or rotating versus twisting a form. It’s a kind of play that delights me.
Something that spoke to me at a gut level was “dropping points”. It created the appearance of submission to gravity, as if the structure of the body was slowly submitting chunk by chunk. I got the impression of this stunted thing, crippled giant, and the look of it spoke to me at a subconscious level. During these dropping actions I loved sounds of thunking, smacking, and slapping of body parts onto the floor. These sonic accents made clear the line being extruded, or the point or curve that was being dropped.
The dropping of points and curves was all the more compelling when Forsythe demonstrated (and I subsequently tried) emphasizing the back space. I grew up on presentational dance, within a proscenium framework, and learned to dance like a paper doll–colorful on the front, with nothing on the back. To me, what is behind intimidates me, like a dark landscape I’m nervous about exploring. The actions of submitting, softening, receding and descending resonate with me on a deep level. I loved his closing statement of this section: “. . . and I think if you practice that regularly that the coordination will begin to spread itself over the whole kinesphere. And you’ll have more fun.”
That sense of serious play impressed me about the entire set of clips. I got the impression that William Forsythe approaches movement the way a three-year-old plays with a thing he’s curious about. There’s a purity of intent to learn everything possible about the thing, while staying in a mode of lightness that can only be described as play.
Ethics of Dance and Tech “Collaboration”
Posted: December 16, 2008 Filed under: Uncategorized | Tags: animation, collaboration, joshua penrose, laban dance notation, Max/MSP Jitter, physical practice, symbol systems 2 Comments »Dancers seem to be excited about collaboration right now. I have been encouraged several times since last week to “collaborate” with a programmer to complete this Wii movement choir project. Other dancers have encouraged me to come up with the idea, get a small amount of understanding of the software, and then get a programmer to do the work. I would be providing the idea and the movement expertise –basically feedback on the software. I have considered that this type of relationship with a programmer is problematic.
A dancer actually said to me, “Oh, you don’t have to learn any of that tech stuff, just get somebody else to do it. Then you’ll have a collaborator, and then it’s really easy to get grant money. If you can use the word collaboration in your proposal you’re set.” I’m skeptical of taking this route. Dancers are marginalized as artists and have to struggle to be considered legitimate. By the numbers dancers are mostly female. I’ve had the opportunity to closely observe sound installation artist Joshua Penrose and his process of painstakingly learning the skills needed to make his work, coming from a traditional music background. Did he assume he could do it because he’s male, or because there’s a different sense of empowerment in the music community? It seems dancers assume that they can’t learn software or that it’s not worth their time.
Judging by the dialogues here at OSU and in non-profits, dancers are tired of being marginalized and considered unintelligent. Isn’t just being the bodies while other people do the programming going to keep us there? I’m going to assume that if I can master Labanotation, then I can master other systems of symbols, and learn to write code. If I can learn to coordinate the parts of my body, possibly I can manipulate physical objects as I need to to choreograph this interactive environment.
However it is possible that the people encouraging me to find a collaborator already have something figured out that I don’t. Maybe it is impossible to keep the sense of physicality I get from a daily practice and sit at the computer enough to learn the skills myself.
My argument is made weaker by my lack of experience, I know. But I hope to move forward on learning Max/MSP Jitter and animation, and on figuring out what the Wii can do. I also plan to take ballet class this winter and maintain a studio practice. Wii’ll see what happens.





