Thursday, September 11, 2008

seeing the messenger



Technique - virtuosity / application / costume

Medium - delivery method / container

Creator - messenger / vessel

Content - the experience

Concept - the thought

Execution - the body


The connection between the artist – the messenger, and the execution of their physical experience, dictates their work, their mind, their thought process, their everything. The work itself, a disembodied object, the artifact, acts as the concentrate from a string of moments expressed through physical action, to become thought/feeling made tangible.

Do we want to understand the object of the art or do we want to understand the person behind the object of art. When does the expression of a creative act, in and of itself, become the topic/subject matter of the work, in and of itself?

More simply put – does the object of artwork, or the deliverer of the work resonate more, and if so in what ways? For me, this question has a torn answer, as somebody who completely loathes the cultural obsession of personality over content; I reject the notion that the artist as personality is remotely relevant. However, I do believe the artist as facilitator of the work – deliverer of the work, is in fact utterly more important. I feel the act of expression is, in and of itself, the work. We/humanity/artists are the work. We are artwork. Our physical effort to capture and give form to our thoughts and our fleeting perceptions is the base level of the creative act.

Seen through the lens of an improviser, one does not execute finality, but one practices how to execute decision. Many choices will inevitably be the wrong choice within the context of a certain flow structure, but it is within the delivery of the choice that holds the subject matter of the choice. I am not looking to appreciate the deliberation of choices but the activation of choices. How one behaves not how one thinks.

I want to see the mark of the person. I want to see emotion. We are emotion. I want to see thought as action. I am not interested in seeing science as art. I am not interested in a logical rational art. I am interested in a messy, convoluted, questing, uneven, uncertain or clear expression. I want to see the act of creation, not the polished idea made manifest by technical virtuosity framed by months of deliberation. I don’t want to dominate the output of the work by my minds will. I want to see the work act as the record, the tablet that the word is written upon. I want to see work that is, in and of itself, the record of the messengers experience.

Tuesday, September 09, 2008

selfmap list


( Mobius Strip, Gilles Jobin)

Selfmap List 2006

Maps as a guide to the self
Maps as a guide to the property of the self
The self as a property object as a location
The self as a location as a landscape
The self as a landscape to be studied and measured
The self as a landscape to be walked and traveled
The self as a landscape of boundaries and markers
The self as boundary’s to be marked for transportation
The self as a road system and curbs to walk
The self as freeway covered in tar
Our selves our freeways we drive on and on and on

Wednesday, September 03, 2008



Marrow and Dancing, 2005

At night I climb into your skin and

Rest

I breath

your bones

marrow and dancing

Saturday, August 23, 2008

performing... in my mind




This is a fantastic group from Wales. Their work is generally sit-specific, collaborative and improvisational. In this particular durational performance, I was struck by their ability to navigate the barrier of the forth wall and engage the audience, it was in a word "sublime".
I have a lot to learn from this group.

Thursday, August 14, 2008

on or off


i have been on a rest finally, after a non-stop year of travel, work and research. while on my break i am starting to feel the absence of my daily practice of dancing. the practice of letting my thinking (skull based) brain to share a communion with the much deeper body based brain.
i have got to get into a groove for myself soon.
below is a posting from another conversation with a couple of friends whom i shared a two month-long daily practice with.
as i currently find myself in a physical limbo, swilling around in my mind wondering how to return to the reality of my body, i thought this entry was an appropriate reflection.



on or off.

i am here in a far off location trying to remember my experience of the daily practice. obviously not the formal framework of it, that has been clearly articulated by j and l. but the rest of it - the physiological dimension. the memory dimension. the body fleshy dimension. the experience of coming clean with the truth of a particular moment or three minutes of moments strung together, our theater and performance.

were we on, within the experience of expressing a period of our lives. at times we succeeded and were real with one another and at times fell short and hid, perhaps just a little behind clever moves. going to the silent place of dance - as known territory, veiled in exploration. and many more times, beautifully articulating the raw state of ‘egg on face’. dont know what to do - AND - am not going to try to pretend i do - BUT - staying with you. the vulnerability can be palpable and then in an instant, complete recognition of the obsurdity of all of it. hysterical laughter. i loved those moments. not knowing and communicating not knowing. but i observed, and experienced, that only by doing that do you really have any control. and then something occures that tickles the soul dimension.

because really, its all over in an instant anyway. like a great photojournalist who can capture that one passing instant on film, we as performers also do the same - we read our environment - and monitor our sensations - and report on our experience, in an instant - many instants in a row until times up. thats it.

having spent years perfecting my acting skills of illustrating being in control (often in white tights or sleek ass shorts as a classical/contemporary dancer), i see i am still a student at living within a certain dimension of my work.

the performer practices saying - I DONT HAVE A CLUE (when they really dont have a clue). but in that admission, is everything. that admission is truth, in most cases, but it is precisely that admission that is culturally denied, especially in presentational dance.

this two month long period of daily practice with j and l, was a form of ‘articulating’ the ‘i dont know’ - and celebrating that.

its weird even to say it that way - “articulating not knowing”.

Thursday, July 31, 2008

vaudeville & stepping


I can’t really explain it any better: all I want is to make dances that have no steps.

I think that there is something fundamental in this inquiry. The presence of steps makes me aware of a creator of steps. I am looking at the origin of the material as though the dance maker where upstage under a spot light – in my mind, always keeping me at arms length from the experience of the event.

I was having dinner last night with a friend, a very accomplished dance maker – one of his reflections this year were that he wanted to feel greater connections with the performers within a dance – a human desire to be connected. This is an internationally recognized choreographer, and he, above all, wanted to FEEL a closeness with the performers, rather than the craft of step-smithing.

My experience as a performer currently is that I must acknowledge the audience when I perform. In some way I must do this. I don’t have to literally look at them and wink, but, I energetically must acknowledge that “here we are together in this room”. You are looking at me and I am up here doing things to try to be appreciated by you. But underlying that is an essential requirement to acknowledge one another. That is really what an audience member wants. This is what I imagine what the pre-cinema vaudeville culture delivered – performers connecting in a very raw direct way with people.

[This line of thought in performance, always begins to get close to contradicting everything I believe in - a desire to deliver authenticity in within the performative environment, but within the right context, I at least imagine, that those early vaudeville shows were hysterical and at moments heart breaking.]

I wonder in those early performances, probably in basic spaces placed in neighborhoods for workers, if there was a focus on an investigation of step making, or on making people laugh, or scream or cry or to simply take a trip within the energy of the performers.

Tuesday, July 29, 2008

SFCD - choice/authorship/illusion


Artistically and philosophically I am uninteresting in being the sole decider of the choreography. I am interested in facilitating to a dancer a developed skill set for which they can learn how to make their own choices for their dancing, to give them the experience of what it feels like to have to take responsibility for their dance, their choices, their actions.

[I also frame this passage with the assumption that the dancer/dance maker is already clear that with this sense of responsibility for make their own choices, that they respond to the responsibility of their audience. I believe there is an underlying assumption, with few exceptions, that a performer is working toward connecting to their audience, to actually have an intention to transmit some kind of information – not to fall prey to egotistical self-indulgence. Part of this exploration is to articulate this space where within the context of communication, in some way, freedom meets responsibility.]

I am not currently interested in giving value to the content of the actions (what one does), but rather, that the action of the choice itself becomes the subject matter. The timing of choices, the placement of choices, the engagement of formal or anarchistic composition, the continuity of the development or subversion an ongoing set of ideas – how the choices moves the ideas along, like in a conversation. This is what I am interested in, in terms of choreographic material. Given that of course, the content of a choice affects an enormous amount onto the dance, but the content is often what is only seen - its context of placement and relating-ness is often deprived of investigation.
We watch the choice making AS choreography. Impulse, judgment, decision and then action - is choreography. And implies much more.

I want to expose my students to the premise that as a dancer (one who creates through the body), they have autonomy and choice. I want this also to be interesting and fun to them. Sometimes this is an issue that comes up late in the dancers development, since when a dancer is younger there is still an emphasis on wanting to be told what to do and to receive affirmation from the one who gave the orders.
This is a huge step from conventional models of dance expression, where the dancers are the ‘fulfiller’ of the choreographic desires of an external source. Choreography by its literal definition is ‘body writing’. The act of dancing suggests this SENSE of self-authorship.
My interest choreographically, is to pass the baton of authorship onto the dancers themselves. It is only when a dancer is given this space to make choices within the dance, that the dance can transcend from the space of the illusion of something real, to something that is real. All choreographers worth a grain of salt are after the same thing – a dance that feels as through its actually happening for the first time, right there in front of you, a human experience occurring.

Why not actually train that way?

My opinion is that the experience of a living dance cannot be duplicated or controlled no matter how skilled at illusion the performer or director may be.

Thursday, July 24, 2008

Thinking Motion - teaching notes from San Francisco Conservatory of Dance, summer program 2008


Energy is real.
Energy is language.

“Asking Motion” “Thinking Motion”

How can we re-illuminate the real –ness of energy in dance? How can we recognize physical intention or physical actions with the same level of clarity that we recognize choreographic steps?

(In Dance)
What we see is not so much the physical steps and sequences of steps, as building blocks that exist separate from the body – instead we see the human being as their true selves, in ‘thought motion’. The bodies movements can be seen as residual effects of choice making and intention. The body becomes a medium to the content – similar to how linseed oil carries the raw pigment for a painting.
Rather than objectify dance as something that is outside the human being which must be mastered, we instead witness the state of a human being living within the moments of the dance context. In this sense, dance becomes the record of the human experience. We become the vessels, to and for, our own expression.

(For Performance)
We practice physical and mental skills that enable us to negotiate the variables of an ever shifting circumstance. We work with an expressed intention of articulating our experience that is only relative to our capacity to perceive through our senses. We work with developing our awareness of inner perception, such as being conscious of our ever shifting impulses to move, and practice exercising free will to either respond or not respond to these impulses. We are also working with perceiving the immediate external environment that we choose to perform within, as well as any conceptual -criteria that we deem to work with.
The performer is applying all that is perceived from their life and history, their desires, prejudices, fears, tastes, intentions, aesthetics and abilities - smacked up against the moment of the now. Also, taking into account the responsibility of the performer toward their audience. With a greater range of freedom of expression, comes greater responsibility to be sensitive to the use of that freedom. Remembering always about being a host to your guests – assuming that there is a conscious desire to communicate and not abuse.
If a performer is interested in connecting to their audience, the audience needs to know what the parameters are and what is expected of them. This is basic psychology, if you want somebody to trust you and follow you, you have to make the feel comfortable. This has nothing to do with content, but everything to do with communication. Otherwise you end up with a passive audience feeling bewildered, objectifying the performers in a state of confusion and distrust. Which unfortunately is an all to common experience in dance today.

How do we continue to further this language of communication within the performance environment – human to human in real time and in real space.

Saturday, June 14, 2008

unintended performers, toronto international airport, may 24, 2008





there is something fun about watching people in the world
and deciding to observe them in the framework of the performance
context. their personal, subtle movements and actions executed in the
framework of their environments. intricate timings occure, unintended, and
no less beautiful than any crafted piece of choreography. they are
the unintended performers. and i realize we are all unintended performers
for somebody else at some point. as professional performers we work
towards showing our work, being conscious about our delivery - striving for
an authenticity. therefore if we are lucky, our performance
presence is not a lot different than being an unexpected performer
beyond the confines of the theatrical environment.

Wednesday, April 23, 2008

watching gravity


watching paint dry on a canvas is literally as satisfying as watching
the most intimate transitioning in a dance. i wait for the moments
when the pull of gravity forces the collecting edge of wet paint to
break and small valleys open up and the paint drips down. it is beautiful
to observe where the drip stops. i can only partially estimate how that
will work out based on degrees of solubility and viscosity. in this form, the
dance is making the mark by pushing the paint across the surface, and
then stepping back and watching. i control where the paint starts, but i
cant contol where the paint stops. THAT is what i love to engage in.
i want to have a conversation with the act, not dominance over it.
this is how i see dance making. i make the dance and the dance makes
itself. i assert my intention in the form of a phrase and then i step aside
and see where this phrase wants to settle into.
i practice being the performer and the audience to this process.

Friday, April 11, 2008

mid painting process




painting again after ten years. been drawing consistently but
painting is a new addition again. curious to see how much more
will come this time around. i have done thirty two paintings so
far this year. all created in ann arbor michigan.