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[dance-tech] Re: london dance film festival / critical debate / postchoreography
- From: Anthony Schultz <dance_plan@xxxxxxxxx>
- To: dance-tech@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
- Date: Sun, 4 Nov 2007 08:10:06 -0800 (PST)
The day-to-day conversations dealing with dance and technology are on blogs
such as Doug's greatdance.com or Matt's quodlibet.tumblr.com/ or on
thewinger.com
I wish Marlon would start writing again.
Kristin Sloan has started the first social network site dedicated to dance.
http://www.the-inter-mission.com/
Though the model is still problematic it is worth noting that this
dance-technology-space is coming from a ballerina.
She has her own iphone ad!
Dance-tech is an open field, fertile, being colonized.
It might become the next big thing and have nothing to do with anything said on
the list serve.
D-tech teachers. Start a class blog. Post patches, video, discussions,
pictures, theory. Get your students to participate and generate their own
ideas. Online my students could learn from your students and as teachers we
could learn from each other.
Are there any d-tech class blogs out there?
Tony Schultz
thewinger.com
dancemachines.blogspot.com
Marlon Barrios Solano <unstablelandscape@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: Hello,I don't have a
lot of time to write more specific response right now.
I think that we need to create our own site as a social network. That will
allow us to feel a more face to face interconnected distributed dialog. That
technology will allow us to create "groups", post performances, embed videos,
and our users will be able to visit their areas or groups and review different
levels of discussion.
I also propose to widen the focus to "new media and performance" or embodied
performance and computation,
I am willing to set it up. ans
What do you think?
More thoughts later.
Marlon
On Nov 3, 2007, at 4:16 PM, Johannes Birringer wrote:
Hi all
couldn't agree more with what Doug and Hélène are saying here.
What i regret, of course, is that there is indeed very little critical and
sustained debate, even here, on new works or on festivals and curatorial
frameworks.... or relations for screen dance or new dance involving
screens/projections or developing mixed reality performances. There are a host
of new issues that have arisen,
perhaps not necessarily for choreography-for-camera- productions (screendance),
but for "choreography" or postchoreography as such, for capture technologies,
for movement as digital (data) processing, for play/performance in virtual
environments or worlds (Second Life has become a screen world too, and I see
performances happen therein), for dance with wearables (wearable screens and
flexible materials, garments, surfaces, media skins, architectures), within the
digital and real-time processing worlds, within networked tele-plateaus.
I don't think there is much debate here on these pages, anymore. Our maillists
have become feeble bulletin boards, occasional news items, announcements, and
the dance-tech list also is in such a strange lull, a silent phase of no
debate or exchange of viewpoints (last summer, Mark Coniglio invited feedback
to his latest video/performance/site specific project, but I think the piece
was shown/displayed on a blog site or YouTube and commentators left their
viewpoints there-else, ; i think Marlon Barrios Solano also mentioned to our
community a few times that he had done intereviews, and that was very
informative and helpful and is to be commended, but I think these interviews
and podcasts then are stored or displayed on blogs , and our attention and our
reading/writing/communicating further dissolved/dissiciated and distributed.
(I seldom read blogs any more as i have simply not time to follow up all the
blig links i get sent),.
so debate and controversy, as we still had it in the summer and fall of 2006
after a series of postings, has now been replaced by acquiescence? and our
globalized standards of promotional etiquette (.."superlative
descriptions"...)? --
i can't quite make sense of the silence either, except that demands on our time
and on production / R&D / and research (and on writing the superlative press
releases and writing the grants to have funds to make something can be released
and superlatived) have increased ..
surely there are planty of issues to discuss, and new workshops, international
labs, festivals and encuentros, as well premieres of new works are happening
all the time -- announcements of interesting gatherings in Portugal and Spain
just reached us.
After the Moves Screen Choreography Conference in Manchester (June 2007), i had
also suggested to Simon and others that it would be good to have a review of
the conference and the festival, so others who were not there, as well as the
participants, could share some critical reflections on what was said and
presented. There were some highlights, and some weak points as well, and the
conference had an academic feel to it that surprised me -- could have been the
environment. Universities lecture rooms tend to have a strange effect on art,
and on dance, Has any review been forthcoming? Could we hear a
counterreview of the festival (review) that sparked Doug's reply?
regards
Johannes Birringer
DAP Lab / Dans Sans Joux
West London
UB8 3PH UK
http://www.brunel.ac.uk/dap
-----Original Message-----
From: Media Arts and Dance on behalf of Helene Lesterlin
Sent: Thu 11/1/2007 3:12 PM
To: MEDIA-ARTS-AND-DANCE@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: Re: london dance film festival link
*** This email has been sent from the MEDIA ARTS AND DANCE email forum. To
respond to all subscribers email MEDIA-ARTS-AND-DANCE@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx ***
Hello MAD,
I have to second that comment! I too read the article and was
disappointed and dismayed with the level of analysis and discourse.
I also looked at the program being shown in the festival and found it
to be uninspiring, full of superlative descriptions (the best ever
seen on the screen) that only diminished the seeming worth of the
works, and with very little attempt to present what is a burgeoning
genre with new works made all the time. There seemed to be little
interest on the part of the curator and in the article in truly
experimental works. I am revealing my bias here of course, but I
think there are many many artists creating work that has nothing to
do with Fred Astaire or Edouard Lock for that matter. And there are
ways to talk about and show that work which open up potential
audiences to new experiences rather than, as Douglas says,
reinforcing stereotypes. Here here!
Helene Lesterlin
EMPAC
On Nov 1, 2007, at 11:02 AM, Douglas Rosenberg wrote:
*** This email has been sent from the MEDIA ARTS AND DANCE email
forum. To respond to all subscribers email MEDIA-ARTS-AND-
DANCE@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx ***
Dear MAD community,
After reading the article and interview with Sandy Strallen at
http://www.channel4.com/4talent/feature.jsp?id=6207 that Simon
forwarded to us, I feel compelled to comment. The article puts
forth a view of dance film that is historically inaccurate, skewed
toward a Hollywood model an one that exhibits a complete lack of
understanding about film and media art culture in general. In
short it furthers an agenda that pits the commerce of art against
the art of experimentation. To state that,
"Part of the "problem" of recent dance on film is that it has often
been a refuge for mediocre choreography using clever angles and
lighting to fool audiences into thinking that we're seeing
"dancefilm" .
is to simply rephrase the similar argument that was directed at the
painting of the abstract expressionists, (for instance) ie, "my
child could do that". Without making any attempt to quantify what
constitutes "good chorography" (is it ballet?) the text reinforces
a modernist ideology about the work of art and genius that we know
to be suspect at best. I could go on, but I urge you all to take
this polemical set of poorly researched non-arguments to task. It
is difficult to tell which are the statements of Sandy Strellen and
which are the words of the interviewer/author, but taken as a
whole, the article irresponsibly reinforces cliched stereotypes and
hackneyed observations. I hope to continue this conversation with
some of you at the upcoming OSVD at Findhorn.
Best to all,
Douglas Rosenberg
On Nov 1, 2007, at 8:32 AM, simon fildes wrote:
*** This email has been sent from the MEDIA ARTS AND DANCE email
forum. To respond to all subscribers email MEDIA-ARTS-AND-
DANCE@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx ***
In case you didn't have a closer look at the programme and some
background.....
http://www.channel4.com/4talent/feature.jsp?id=6207
http://www.riversidestudios.co.uk/cgi-bin/season.pl?f=London%
20International%20Dancefilm%20Festival%202007
Simon Fildes
Lecturer in Media Arts and Dance
School of Media Arts and Imaging
Duncan of Jordanstone
University of Dundee
07813 714951
01382 385250
www.imaging.dundee.ac.uk
www.left-luggage.co.uk
www.videodance.org.uk
www.move-me.com
www.hyperchoreography.org
www.screendance.org
http://videodance.blogspot.com
Marlon Barrios Solano
unstablelandscape@xxxxxxxxx
New Media Designer
http://unstablelandscape.net
http://vj-u.net
SL avatar: mars barragar
Skype: unstablelandscape
IChat: ustableladscap
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