Posts tagged with springdance

Arts-professionals in transdisciplinaire kunstprojecten

oktober 25th, 2010

“Ontwikkelingen in de samenleving leiden niet zelden ook tot nieuwe theaterpraktijken; die op hun beurt de betrokken professionals tot verbreding en uitbreiding van hun kennis en kunde noodzaken. Onder de eindverantwoordelijkheid van het Lectoraat Theatrale Maakprocessen van de Hogeschool voor de Kunsten Utrecht onderzoeken diverse Utrechtse en Rotterdamse leden van het consortium de consequenties van hedendaagse theaterpraktijken voor deze professionals. Zij bouwen middels een reeks projecten kennis op en wisselen die met elkaar en andere belanghebbenden uit” (tmp.hku.nl).

De afgelopen twee jaar heb ik op diverse manieren meegewerkt aan het SIA Raak publiek onderzoek naar Arts-professionals in transdisciplinaire kunstprojecten. Ik heb verslag gedaan van Springdance en Festival aan de Werf, meegewerkt aan het onderzoek van Joris Weijdom, de redactie van een digitaal cahier over taal in transdisciplinaire kunstprojecten gedaan en mijn scriptie herschreven tot een cahier. Aanstaande donderdag wordt het traject afgesloten met een studiedag in de kleine zaal van de faculteit theater van de HKU.

Ik heb onder andere gewerkt aan:

weet het (nog) niet. Over relaties in het transdisciplinaire maakproces

“De rand van het programma: als context en in context”

Theorie voor op de Vloer met de Ander

Voor meer informatie: Read more »

Heb je support nodig als je per ongeluk ecstasy hebt geslikt op een begrafenis?

april 26th, 2010

In De Dansvloer vind je een andere kant van Springdance. Choreografen Meg Stuart en Jeremy Wade verzorgen de Workweek voor 45 choreografiestudenten van SNDO (Amsterdam, NL), P.A.R.T.S. (Brussel, B) en Folkwang Universität (Essen, D). Door de IJslandse aswolkvertragingen beginnen ze wat later, maar al snel na aankomst vult de groep elke hoek van de kleine studio in De Dansvloer. Meg Stuart is dinsdagochtend begonnen met een energieopwekkende warming up. Ze zuigen de energie uit de vloer en bouwen op tot een ontploffing van kinetische en auditieve energie. In korte tijd lijkt ze één groep gemaakt te hebben van de drie groepen studenten. Samen schreeuwen en roepen ze, springend, bukkend, met de armen zwaaiend de studio vol. Ik zit tegen een muur van de studio te kijken en voel de nijging opkomen om mee te doen.

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Binnenkort online en/of gedrukt

oktober 20th, 2009

Binnenkort verschijnen drie artikelen over dans van mijn hand. Naar aanleiding van Frame 3: Choreographic bodies: Approaches and Potentials schreef ik The Processing Body. Dit artikel gaat in op de manier waarop het lichaam in dans omgaat met informatie en op de manier waarop dans tot stand komt. “Processing dance is […] the act of processing the knowledge of movement with (through/via) the body [and] it is an infinite dance, perpetually changing; it is dance in process”.

In dit artikel ga ik in op de volgende vragen: “Is a choreographic body a processing body?” en “Is the role of the body in contemporary art process filled, or is the body merely a subject and thus a product?” Het zal in de volgende nieuwsbrief van Danslab verschijnen.

Voor de nieuw te ontwikkelen website van het tijdschrift Volume van theater Frascati heb ik een artikel geschreven naar aanleiding van vier solovoorstellingen die in april dit jaar in Frascati te zien waren. In Een solo voor twee handen en zijn schaduw ga ik in op de machtsverhoudingen tussen performer en publiek tijdens een solo. “Eerst moeten we samen zijn. Vervolgens kan één van ons uit de groep stappen en solist worden. Deze solist kan spelen met de macht die hij verkregen heeft, maar kan zich ook verloren voelen tegenover de groep”.

Springdance legt op dit moment de laatste hand aan een publicatie over Europe in Motion. “Een tweetalig boek met diverse verslagen, artikelen van journalisten Ingrid van Frankenhuyzen en Jochem Naafs, evaluaties en veel foto’s en reacties van deelnemers. In totaal 36 jonge choreografen namen in drie landen (Groot-Brittannië, Roemenië en Nederland) deel aan speciale Dialogue sessies; daarna presenteerden ze hun werk aan het publiek” (www.springdance.nl). In deze publicatie verschijnt mijn column The extra stranger.

An artist and his review

april 23rd, 2009

My press kit inside the artist goodie-bag I got yesterday seems to represent my split personality during Springdance. On the one hand I am being the objective journalist, writing my columns about the programme, atmosphere and side programme. On the other hand I am the dramaturge for Michael Pinchbeck’s End. Considered an artist, at least according to the batch I received with my goodie-bag, I morphed into another person in a split second. And is it not the task of the artist to present a subjective perspective on this world?

Of course two issues come to mind straight away. Can I be objective whilst being commissioned by Springdance to write about Springdance? How can I be critical about my own commissioner? The other issue is the question what it is to be a dramaturge. Does my subjective view matter for the artist I am working with? Or should I be able to objectify my own perspective on the performance. Should I try to represent the audience that will come and see the show?
In the end I prefer to mix up a clear subjective view with some elements, which I think are more objective. I try to use this approach in my writing, my research and my dramaturgical practice. Alternating in describing the subject matter and my own position in relation to that.

I can’t help thinking of Simon Ellis’s Down (working title). Ellis, one of the participants in Europe in Motion, not only presented his solo performance, he also provided the context of this performance. From the introduction, where I imagined myself in his place, having just introduced Beginning Middle, End myself an hour earlier, to the reviews, audience reactions and even the specifications for touring.

As an artist Ellis took the liberty to be lecturer, choreographer, dancer, critic, audience and PR assistant in one. Criticising both dance and the dance community, he shows, as the devil’s advocate, the ‘like knows like’ existence of this dance community. He left his audience powerless. Everything was already said. Interesting enough Ellis manages to represent several of my positions during Springdance & performance festival. And by doing this he got me thinking about my position(s) in this community.

In a way Ellis covers himself against any criticism from others, wrapping his entire performance. I could write a review on Beginning, Middle, End today…

Beginning, Middle, End by Andrea Bozic, Julia Willms, Madalina Dan and Michael Pinchbeck tonight (April 23), 19.00h in Theater Kikker.
More Europe in Motion: April 23 and 24, 20.30h in Theater Kikker.

A look back // Into the future

april 18th, 2009

Written for Springdance

Next year Bettina Masuch will do her speech in Dutch, she promises just before the world première of Jérôme Bel’s Lutz Förster. I’m not sure if that is the best choice if your want to get your message across in such an international festival, I’m writing in English for a reason, but it is a nice gesture.

Enter Lutz Förster. A personality, that’s for sure. The peaceful and gentle way of walking to a chair in the wings, and back with the chair, onto the stage, tells me that already. Bel gave Förster the opportunity to tell his professional life’s story on stage to an audience. And Förster likes to talk. He discovered that early in his professional life when he danced and talked in one of many performances by Pina Bausch. His talking in this biography is only now and then alternated with short dance scenes.

Förster doesn’t get too personal, he doesn’t do too much. He is just there, taking some of the viewers back in time and presenting others a short lesson in dance history. I must admit I belong in the second category. My knowledge of Förster’s work was close to nothing. And I had a good time, I wasn’t bored for a minute, I laughed, admired, enjoyed. But I do wonder, as did others, what Bel’s role was. In Pichet Klunchun and Myself the dialogue between Klunchun and Bel was brilliantly staged. They challenged each other, and the audience, to rethink the history and the aesthetics of dance. The performance <i>Lutz Förster</i> is only about and with Lutz Förster. Where is the other? Where is the mirror to reflect? Reflect both movements and words, both history and present? Let’s leave it at that question.

Springdance’s slogan is ‘A look back into the future’. Lutz Förster gave me ‘a look back’. If I want, I can now go ‘into the future’. This weekend is a weekend for new style; contemporary and modern dance, hip hop, flamenco, butoh and street dance.

Looking is only just allowed

april 18th, 2009

Written for Springdance

The opening day of Springdance &amp; performance festival: It is hot, tight and rather oppressive in the narrow and long hallway of the Centraal Museum. Journalists, dancers, choreographers and others are waiting for the opening of Choreographic Objects by William Forsythe. There’s hardly any space to move so I start to feel like an object myself. I’m being moved by others; someone tells me to remove my bag, and yet someone else pushes me aside gently to get by.

Finally Bettina Masuch takes the microphone and opens with a rather short and brief speech the installation and the 25th edition of Springdance. She urges us to get involved and Forsythe himself stresses to put on the vests which read a short mirrored text. So there we go! To the mirrors, to see how we can manage to rearrange these mirrors in such a way that we can actually read what is written on our back.

But the fun is cruelly interrupted by the voice of Forsythe begging us not to move the mirrors because they were carefully ordered so we could not see ourselves, not even to mention the 14 hours of polishing that went into the work. I felt like a small child whose toys are taken away. I took off the vest and in a sulk I turned my back on the mirrors walking out into the sun. Only to slip back in again seconds later, to take a peek at the other pieces.

The extra stranger

april 16th, 2009

Written for Springdance Stage

Last Tuesday Europe In Motion started as a meeting between “total strangers”, as moderators Igor Dobricic and Nicole Beutler prescribed it. On Wednesday I enter this dialogue as yet another stranger. Simon Ellis, Rui Catalão and Tom Dale present their work today, based on the question “what is central to your work as a choreographer?”.
As mornings go it takes a while to get started. I notice that the atmosphere is comparable to last year’s sessions, with the ‘Romanians’ being late, the ‘British’ ready to get started and the ‘Dutch’ walking up and down between kitchen and the kleine zaal in Theater Kikker.

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Beginning, Middle, End

april 7th, 2009

Currently I am working with Michael Pinchbeck, a Nottingham based writer, live artist and performance artist. Together with Andrea Bozic and Madalina Dan he makes the performance Beginning, Middle, End. The startingpoint is that every artist takes one part. Andrea takes Beginning together with Julia Willms, Madalina takes Middle and Michael takes End. Michael asked me for dramaturgical advise for his part. The performance will première at Springdance on April 22 and will also play on the 23rd.
For more information visit their blog.

Beginning, Middle, End – Andrea Bozic / Madalina Dan / Michael Pinchbeck
Three artists meet for the first time. They make a performance about the beginning, the middle and the end of an encounter. This is the beginning.

Andrea takes the beginning, Madalina takes the middle and Michael takes the end. The beginning is about a beginning, the middle is about a middle and the end is about an end. This is the middle.
They play with threes. Three dances. Three artists. Three countries. Three bears. Three ways to tell a story or to sing a song. Three in One. They make three entrances and three exits. This is the end.

Andrea Bozic (HR/NL), Madalina Dan (ROU) and Michael Pinchbeck (UK) took part in Springdance Dialogue 2008. They proposed Beginning Middle End for Springdance 2009 to enable both a collaboration and an important sense of autonomy. They identified many intersections in their work; shared interests in absence and presence; issues of embodiment and self-referentiality; fictionalising personal life and personalising fictional life. Beginning Middle End has been built around the artists’ presence and absence in each other’s creative processes. Interested in the connections between their practices and the space between their practices, the artists asked how they might inhabit each other’s work and exit their own.

Production credits:
Concept and performance: Andrea Bozic, Madalina Dan, Michael Pinchbeck
Live drawing (Beginning): Julia Willms
Dramaturgical advice (End): Jochem Naafs
Produced by the Springdance Festival (in co-production with Theater Frascati), financially supported by the Europe in Motion project.

Springdance Stage

maart 31st, 2009


For this years dance and performance festival Springdance launched a community website. Please join Springdance Stage and get in contact with dancers, choreographers, makers, journalists, other visitors et cetera. I will keep all visitors of Springdance (Stage) up to date with a number of columns I will write before, during and after the festival. But the website also features videos, pictures and reviews from both makers and visitors. And you are welcome to share your own expectations and experiences too.

Visit http://springdance.ning.com/ and join by hitting the sign up button!

Verslag Springdance Dialogue 2008

mei 24th, 2008

Een poging tot verwoorden en interpreteren van
lichamen, bewegingen, woorden en beelden
(verslag geschreven in opdracht van Springdance, mei 2008)
(For an English version scroll down, no summary available)

Samenvatting
Twaalf deelnemers uit drie landen zijn door curator Gabriel Smeets gevraagd om aan de hand van de thema’s positie en context zichzelf en hun werk te presenteren in een vijfdaagse dialoog. De vragen die Springdance hen stelde daagde hen uit om in te gaan op de vragen en uitgangspunten aan de hand waarvan ze werken, de positie die ze zichzelf toewijzen en de context waarin ze werken.
Dit verslag vat de dialoog samen in vijf thema’s. ‘Het hier en nu van theater’, ‘Materiaal: persoonlijk en samples’, ‘Auteurschap en samenwerken’, ‘Lichaam en beweging’ en uiteraard ‘Context en positie’. Een selectie van citaten binnen deze thema’s verhelderen de onderwerpen en problemen die ter sprake zijn gekomen. De citaten van de ene maker koppel ik aan de ideeën van de ander, deze aanpak kan de relaties tussen de makers verduidelijken en op die manier ingaan op overeenkomsten en verschillen.
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