Saturday, November 27, 2010
Updates and looking back
Thursday, November 25, 2010
Re-staging "In a Small Space"
Sunday, November 21, 2010
after "after the fall"
falling leaves...
after the fall: Steps in the Process... Inspiration, visualization, and movement
Monday, November 15, 2010
Trenches - phase 1 of after the fall
I'm terrible at saying good bye...
after the fall... entry 1
Wednesday, November 10, 2010
West Chester University Dance Concert Press Release
West Chester University Dance Company
Presents
Reception/ Perception
Madeleine Wing Adler Theatre
Swope Music Building and The Performing Arts Center
817 South High Street
West Chester, PA
Friday, November 19th, 8pm
Saturday, November 20th, 2pm & 8pm
Reservations:
Department of Theatre & Dance Box Office (610) 436-2533
Tickets:
$15 Gen Adm, $12 Std w/ID & Srs
West Chester, PA-West Chester University Dance Company, in cooperation with The College of Visual and Performing Arts and the Department of Theatre and Dance, is proud to present Reception/Perception, the annual fall faculty and guest artist dance concert. Faculty works by Gretchen Studlien-Webb, Liz Staruch, and adjunct faculty Lisa Lovelace will be presented, in addition to guest artists’ works by Megan Bridge and Jessica Warchal-King of Philadelphia. Three select student pieces will also be showcased.
Studlien-Webb, the director of the West Chester University Dance Company, will present two works. The first is a premiere, as yet untitled, that represents a look into the inner self with each dancer developing their own character though dynamic quality shifts and individual movement invention. Dance Into The Light, v.3 is a reconstruction of an energetic dance in which the interplay with lighting is fundamental and strategically imperative. Lighting for this concert is by Philadelphia-based designer Mark O’Maley.
West Chester faculty member Liz Staruch will present the start of a year-long project incorporating film and dance performance entitled The Camera Betrays You. The project, funded in part by a grant from the West Chester University Provost’s Office, is an artistic collaboration between Staruch, three professional dancers from Philadelphia and New York City, photographer Victoria Zolnoski from Johnson State College in Vermont, and O’Maley. Raw footage from the first site specific shoot at the High Line in New York City will be presented during this concert.
Interruption is the new piece from adjunct faculty Lisa Lovelace. This dance is a playful look at how we try to be hospitable to the constant interruption of our lives. Using cell phones, the dancers receive calls, text friends, and have conversations. As an independent choreographer, Lovelace has performed throughout Philadelphia and surrounding counties. She has also been a recent guest artist at Eastern University and St. Josephs’ University.
Megan Bridge is a dancer and dance maker based in Philadelphia. She currently co-directs
Jessica C. Warchal-King, a member of the Nora Gibson Performance Project and apprentice with Kun-Yang Lin/Dancers in Philadelphia, will present after the fall. The work questions the way we compartmentalize the human experience and delves into ways that our bodies provide our narrative. Warchal-King recently received her MFA in Dance from Temple University. The work includes original composition by Christopher Farrell.
The student pieces by Angela Frezzo, Lauren Quattrone, and Dominic Caton and Alisa Silverman set on fellow WCU dance students were selected through an audition process.
Music for "after the fall"
Saturday, September 4, 2010
Study of Euterpe, music and the muse
Wednesday, August 25, 2010
Upcoming events
Global Music and Dance at Temple University
http://www.temple.edu/boyer/enp/schedule_of_events.htm
Premiering a new solo:
Study of Euterpe
September 14th and 16th:
Esther's Cavalcade of Stars
Part of the Philly Fringe/ Live Arts Festival at the CEC Meeting House Theater.
http://www.livearts-fringe.org/details.cfm?id=14017
BHPhotos Presents... Choreography Showcase II
at the CEC Meeting House Theater in West Philly.
Tuesday, April 20, 2010
Monday, March 22, 2010
Definitions
Micro -
1: very small, especially
2: involving minute quantities or variations
Cosmic -
1a: of or relating to the cosmos, the extraterrestrial vastness, or the universe in contrast to the earth alone
1b: of, relating to, or concerned with abstract spiritual or metaphysical ideas
2: characterized by greatness especially in extent intensity, or comprehensiveness
Current -
1a: running, flowing
1b(1): presently elapsing (the current year)
1b(2): occurring in or existing at the present time (the current crisis)
1b(3): most recent (the magazine's current issue)
2: used as a medium of exchange
3: generally accepted, used, or practiced, or prevalent at the moment
More stories from the collaborative studio
He and I have spent the past month exchanging e-mails, files, and ideas for clarification. After our session, Chris created more layers for the final section and identified each dancer with a melody, chords, or series of tones! He based these musical identifications off of the choreographed movements, the quality of their individual movements, and the things they said in his interviews with them about the process. I'm so impressed with his attention to them, as individual performers and I deeply appreciate his involvement in this exploration.
At our final rehearsal on Friday, Chris detailed the music for the dancers, explaining each musical identification. It was interesting for me to hear 1) how he interpreted the dancers as individuals and 2) how he interpreted the movement as a whole with its swells and dips.
I've been listening to the music almost non-stop for the past week and a half and am so intrigued that in listening, I feel the same vibrations that I felt when first investigating the work. In essence, Chris took what I said about my physical experiences and put that into the music. It should make sense that sound vibrations resonate in my body, but I was and continue to be surprised that the resonations occur simultaneously with the movement descriptions of the felt experience.
Thursday, March 11, 2010
questions
I was surprised by the question. Usually, choreographers are asked, "what do you hope your audience will take away from the work?"
But there has been a great deal of work on the part of my dancers... more than just what the audience will see in twenty-five minutes.
My present (and I believe this will continue far into the future) research goal addresses understanding the body as a form of empowerment. An idea can't be destroyed as long as the body in which that idea inhabits exists. Throughout history, violence is enacted when one body takes control over another body. Our society is heavy with dis-empowering messages, especially regarding the body. The media is laden with images of how the body should look and move. Corporate America decides what we put into our bodies and how our bodies are taken care of - or not taken care of, as evidenced in the current health care crisis. I believe that if a person is empowered through a knowledge of his/her body, that person is more likely to take responsibility to for the care of his/her body. In taking responsibility for one's self, the individual also takes responsibility for his/her surrounding environment. There is more to this that I'm still working out, but I believe there is a strong (if only potential) relationship between dance, individual empowerment, and positive social change.
Dance is an empowering force. Dance involves, requires, demands a holistic understanding of the working, moving body. Dance requires knowledge of the anatomy. Dance requires knowledge of the psyche. Dance requires knowledge of space and time - environmental awareness. I believe (and have seen evidence in the classes that I've taught) that dance empowers individuals by allowing them to have a multi-dimensional relationship with their bodies.
Back to Chris's question... My hope for my dancers is that, through this process, they've developed a deeper awareness of their bodies and the stories that their bodies tell. I hope they learn to notice the habits of their bodies - both positive and negative. I hope they've gained a new knowledge about their bodies and will continue this process after the performance ends. I hope that they will use this knowledge about their bodies to make positive changes within themselves, and therefore, make positive changes to influence their environment. I hope that they've learned and grown from this process as much as I have from them.
A friend posted this on her Facebook page, and I find it relevant to my hopes for this process and for my dancers:
www.youtube.com/watch?v=PZ5Ss0ayF-Q&feature=channel
details
I'm paying closer attention to the little things like the detail on the costumes. I realize that these details may not be grossly noticeable from the audience's perspective, but I believe that attention to these small details clarifies and enhances the process of the performers and of the experience of the audience. In these moments of clarifying, I'm beginning to really enjoy this process more deeply...
Saturday, March 6, 2010
Updates...
I've finalized the set.
The posters are printed.
The costumes are almost complete.
Chris is completing the music next week.
I hope to pick up the postcards on Monday or Tuesday.
The program is almost finalized.
It's coming together!
Less than three weeks to showtime!
In performance, I do expect everything to go right. After months of preparation, that one moment should be perfect. But, of course, the human experience is not perfect and technicalities happen.
This too is part of the excitement. The excitement of the unknown. The excitement of taking a risk...
These last few weeks are filled with tension. Last minute details that can only happen at the last minute - things like program order and printing. Things like costume fittings and final performance notes. The excitement and the risk is building. Likewise, the tension and stress is building, too.
I'm trying to enjoy this process. I'm trying to take a few minutes to smile at the tightness of my chest as I realize my work has been an exploration of what I am experiencing.
And although this work has been about communicating the felt sensations of energetic pathways, I realize that on March 26th and 27th the process both continues and ends. Because of this realization, there are times when I take the role of participant-observer, step back, and enjoy being in the moment. The frantic excitement of the moment.
This is what I love. This is why I dance. This immediacy. This vulnerability. This risk.
I look forward to meeting you in the moment.
Saturday, February 20, 2010
Internal Reflections - Camille's thoughts on our set
Camille is one of the dancers in Microcosmic Current.
Friday, February 19, 2010
Four weeks to go!
I believe in education through the choreographic experience. Part of my research begs the questions: How do you teach performance? How do you teach that moment of pure vulnerability on stage while being completely in control. How do you teach a dancer to be comfortable in that moment? How do you teach them to be ready to "drop into" performance mode?
It's more than a feeling state. It's more than remembering an experience that you repeat on stage. It's real and alive and needs to be present in that moment. All of the time.
How do you describe a strong performance? Presence? ....But how do you teach that?
I worry that many talented technicians do not learn how to perform and are therefore looked over in auditions and castings. I worry that many students interested in pursuing this life of a dancer will not have the opportunity to PRACTICE performance if they are not in an environment where practicing performance and teaching performance are valued. It's hard to teach these things that cannot be quantified. I've seen instances where choreographers expect the dancer to come to the rehearsal process with a strong performative skill. But, performance is a skill.... and it can be taught... and it can be learned and acquired with the right attention, dedication, and practice. It is important for us, as educators of dance, to remember the importance of performance practice.
A practice of performing. A practice of teaching. A practice of researching. A practice of dancing.
Side note: As I write, I've been referring to the psychological/energetic narrative of the dancer. In modern dance performances, there may not be a linear narrative - one that tells a clear story like a play or a musical. Here is where I/dance/artists delve into a different realm, one that I'm classifying as that of an energetic nature.
I believe that every body innately has the ability to move. Based upon our energetic makeup, our organic movements will be different. Some bodies create movement that other bodies cannot or will not. All bodies are capable of training that movement, which manifests in codified dance techniques, sport training techniques, and even ways that we sit at the computer and type or read. So, when I refer to the psychological/energetic narrative of the work, it does not have to make logical sense. Rather, the psychological/ energetic narrative is comparable to that of the narrative sense that our dreams make during sleep, but not necessarily once we have woken.
If I could offer some advise for watching many concert dance works of the late 90's and early 21st Century: remember that dream state; feel and see what your body is experiencing as an audience member and experience the work instead of trying to figure out what you're "supposed to" be getting. When you lift a glass of wine, do you experience the smell or do you try and figure out what ingredients were used? When you taste chocolate, do you quantify the ratio of coco to sugar or do you just experience the chocolate? I request that you just experience the dance and if something strikes you, then pursue why you were effected and what happened both on stage an internally....
Tuesday, February 16, 2010
on distractions
There will always be things to distract me... and some rightly deserve my attention. But, I must return to my work and return to my work with an undisturbed rigor.
And so... leaving this for now, I return to do my work...
Sunday, February 14, 2010
Pictures!
Saturday, February 13, 2010
Collaboration - a little history
Check out more of Chris's work at www.myspace.com/ritmocollective
I was working with five dancers with whom I had never before worked and was investigating new territory; I was beginning to delve into new places with my choreographic intention and exploring what it meant to educate through the choreographic process. During the first few weeks of rehearsal, it became apparent to me that I needed an additional voice. I asked Chris to provide some musical expertise. What followed amazed and still surprises me.
It seems that the younger generations are more technologically savvy than I. My dancers introduced me to Facebook and we used the social networking site as a rehearsal tool. We only had the opportunity to meet once a week, so I would privately post our rehearsals for them to review. Chris was able to access these videos and was simultaneously working on his own projects. A thread from one of his themes fit beautifully into the work.
In addition to the Facebook posts, our separate work, and our conversations, Chris came to several rehearsals with the dancers. I deeply appreciate(d) his interest in what the dancers were experiencing during the work; the dance is as much theirs as it is mine and I believe they are also collaborators to the process. I thank Chris for valuing them with the same regard.
In talking about our process, Chris stacks his hands on top of one another, as if he's building a ladder. "You have this idea, I have this idea, you build on this, I build on this..." In one of our conversations, he described the way the David is displayed in Italy. Michelangelo said that he reveals/ed what's already in the stone. In viewing the David, the viewer must pass through a gateway of partially finished works by Michelangelo, each revealing more than the previous. A hand begins to take shape, a face... until the final manifest is unfolded. In this way, the viewer is allowed a peak into the process...
Each time we come together, pass in the hall with a quick thought, or e-mail a slew of mental vomit, we are unveiling a little bit more of this creation. I'm very grateful and excited for the adventure. Thanks, Chris!
Here's a link to the piece we created in the Spring of 2009 - "at the edge of the turning tide..."
www.youtube.com/watch?v=KQg8tfDTfSE
Music!
The music is haunting and breathes a new energy into my dancers and into the movement. It's helping to clarify my intentions - internally and externally. It cradles the dance; the music is helping the dancers find new things. I'm so very excited about this part of the investigation. We're entering into a place of deeper research. We've done a lot of physical research, but the introduction of sound allows us the opportunity to leave our headspace and drop into the mind-body.
Thank you, Chris!!
Monday, February 8, 2010
Physical Research
Could I observe what other people claimed in their writings in my own body without superimposing their theories?
One evening, my thoughts drifted to the loss of a family member. I felt a rush that I can still only describe as a waterfall pouring in from above my rib cages. The "water" poured into the space of my sternum and carved out a space above the back of my rib cage. I was surprised at the intensity of the feeling and am still surprised at my inability to put words to the sensation. Although I can describe the feeling according to my anatomy, the sensation moved beyond my bones - as if my structure was formless and completely pliable. Even as a I write, I have a hard time recreating the memory without cupping my fingertips into an arch about six inches in front of my sternum. My elbows extend outward and my chest contracts, bringing my clavicles slightly above my shoulder joints. I can feel my breath shorten and my intercostal muscles (the muscles in between our ribs) tighten. In describing this, I am creating a shape. I am moving in order to recreate a memory that had no physcialized shape. But the sensation was very real.
In one of our first rehearsals, I asked my dancers to pay attention to their bodies. How did their bodies feel throughout the day? Did a certain part of their body always hurt? Could they identify why that part of their body always hurt or was there an emotion or event that accompanied the physical sensation?
There are words for these sensations: butterflies in the stomach; a lump in my throat; a brick dropped in my stomach.
Each of my dancers returned to rehearsal with stories that their bodies revealed:
"My sacrum always gets tight when I'm nervous."
"I was overwhelmed - I felt like I had a blowfish with all of its spikes inflated in my rib cage - where my heart was supposed to be."
"Every time... I got a knot under my left clavicle."
"I would get nauseous."
As they spoke, their bodies told more than just their words. Seated on the floor, her hands went to either side of her body to stabilize herself. Another stroked the tops of her quads with a meditative, rhythmic quality. Another rocked her palm against her sternum, as if to soften some tension. I asked my dancers and my composer, Chris Farrell, to continue to pay attention to their bodies and to continue to share these sensations. I believe our bodies can reveal truths to us, if we only pay attention. In paying attention, we better learn how to take care of ourselves.
These gestures became part of our movement vocabulary and therefore, part of the language we use to share our stories through the dance.
How does this relate to my original research on the chakras? I'm not drawing any definite conclusions, but many of the sensations my dancers described centered around the mid-line of the body. It seems that many people feel similar sensations in similar places. I need to do more research to come to any conclusive data, but it seems that there is a pattern of felt experiences within the body that correspond to emotions.
Saturday, January 30, 2010
Preliminary Research - Wheels of Light
or go to youtube.com and type in Wheels of Lights Jessica Warchalking. You should be able to find it.
What do you see? What do you feel?
In the Spring of 2009, I had the opportunity to take a course titled "Yoga and the Tantric Mystic". I have been practicing Western Yoga for about a decade; at this point in my practice, I began to develop an interest in enrolling in a Yoga certification program. I want(ed) to know more about my body, about the subtle energies that I (was) feel(ing), and the ways that my mental processes, my synaptic impulses, my chemical properties, my bony and muscular structure, my living fluids interacted and responded through this process of meditation and postural exploration.
I knew how I felt after practicing. I had a basic understanding of what my guides spoke during a practice. Before embarking on a deeper journey of my own, through a certification, I wanted to learn about Yoga from an academic perspective.
What followed has been transformative!
My first meeting with Dr. Allen, a scholar in religions of Southeast Asia, is forever burned in my memory. He simply smiled and nodded when I told him I was a dancer and interested in how the body and mind are connected through yoga; he suggested that my (pre)conceptions of yoga might be challenged during the course.
Three early mornings a week (with the exception of a few mournful snowy Wednesdays) I sat enthralled. We dove into the Yoga Sutras of Patanjali and "The Origins of Yoga and Tantra: Indic Religions to the Thirteenth Century" by Geoffrey Samuel. Some notes from my limited understandings:
- Yoga means to yoke. Dr. Allen suggests that it refers to the yoke used in an agricultural environment to train a young bull to till the fields. The farmer yokes the older bull to the younger bull and the younger bull learns the path of the field by being dragged along by the older bull. Similarly, yoga involves the yoking of a teacher to a student. Yoga is a practice that is taught and not something that can be endeavored alone.
- "Yoga" the word also can refer to a discipline or training.
- Contrary to (my previous and many) popular belief, yoga is not a yoking of the mind and body. It's not a self-help technique. The basic idea of yoga is a separation of purusha and prakriti. Purusha can be translated as pure consciousness. Prakriti can be translated as material stuff. (This includes thoughts and constructs of the mind). Yoga is atheistic dualism, which means that "god" is not anthropomorphic and that two realities exist: purusha (pure consciousness) and prakriti (materialism).
- There are eight limbs of yoga - asanas the postures popular in Western culture are only one of these eight. Yama - self restraint from actions (violence, lying, stealing, greed). Niyama - fixed observance (ritual cleanliness, simple living, fasting, studying the sacred texts). Asana - postures. Pranayama - breath control. Pratyahara - controlling the mind and withdrawing the senses. Dharana - concentration. Dhyana - meditation. Samadhi - realization. The Yoga Sutras explain these in great detail, which I am not. The Sutras are written in a specific meter, so it is vital to have a teacher guide you through them.
Jump to another classroom, spring 2009 - my students and I were exploring imagery to find the center line of the body. The chakras were suggested. At this point in time, I don't know much about the chakras except for their placement along the mid-line of the body. I e-mailed Dr. Allen for help. He suggested that I investigate these as a research project. Okay.
My research begins. I poured over old books and new websites. The search led me to Tantra, which we were reading about for class. I'm still trying to understand Tantra as a religion, but it's basic (is anything basic about religion?) philosophy is that the body is a microcosm of the universe. BAM! If the body is a microcosm of the universe and all of the power of the universe is contained in the body, then the body must - it MUST - be deemed sacred. If the power of the universe is sacred, then, the body is sacred.
At this point, I invite you, dear reader, to insert any and all ideas of the body that have been presented to you, up until this point. How the body is to be treated. How the body is supposed to look. How the body is separate from the person/soul that inhibits it.
I'll wait...
Our world is thwart with violence to the body: our current health care system; domestic violence; street violence; sexual violence; political violence... Violence occurs when power is enacted over a living body. It's hard to harm an idea - violence harms a body. To me, this philosophy clearly speaks against violence because the body is sacred.
It makes sense. I am a dancer. I use my body. I teach others how to understand and use their bodies. I believe in the power of education to empower. When someone has knowledge of their body, they are empowered. When someone is empowered, they have responsibility and ownership. They are less likely to give that ownership to someone else. Knowledge is power. Knowledge about the body provides the learner with ownership, responsibility, and power! Like anything researched for the greater good, this power can be manipulated. I believe that empowering an individual through knowledge about that individual's body gives him/her an opportunity to prevent someone else from taking that power away. Perhaps power will be another post... I'm getting off track...
The body is sacred.
As I read the academic literature, my body began to move. Could I locate the root chakra? Was my heart chakra open? I decided that if my research was about the body, I needed a project to reflect that research. This was a dance.
Wheels of Light is an academic investigation of the chakras. Through it, I do not seek to activate my own or the audience's chakras. I am not intending to provide the audience with a religious or physical experience. The piece is a pure reflection of what I have read and researched in the dance studio.
The piece begins with a minute of introductions. I introduce a motif that begins at the crown of my head and travels down the mid-line of my body. It "touches" each of the seven chakras, beginning at the seventh: crown. third eye. throat. heart. naval. sacral. base. ripple through like the kundalini. introduction of the wheel, the image of the chakras, energy centers, that have been described through time and distance. wheels of light, energy... circling...
The specific exploration begins downstage right. the root chakra. four spokes. located in the pelvis. emotional connection: physical strength, courage. in performance: four rocks of the pelvis. the movement is initiated by the pelvis. the hands form the shape of the kidneys. A shoulder stand - strength.
the sacral chakra. related organs: the digestive system, the sex organs. six spokes. emotional connection: desires, emotions, creativity, sexuality. my body stretches and breaks. how do you perform the birthing process? how do you show sexuality without being sexual? i fall into a plank. my body rocks.
the naval chakra. related organs: stomach, liver, gallbladder... emotional connection: personal power, ambition. ten spokes. what does ambition look like? in a negative sense, i imagine it is paralyzing. tension. i shake for ten counts. i release but recover and drop. controlled yet with a clear destination, my body contracts in the air.
the heart chakra. emotional connection: love. twelve spokes. gestures surrounding the area flow as reflections of things felt in the area and repetitions divided into 12.
the throat chakra. color: blue, silver, green - like water rippling. association: sound (waves). emotional connection: communication. sixteen spokes. initially, i tried to ripple sixteen times, but for artistic purposes, that was paired down. questions in performance: how does sound move? what happens when it's strangled?
the third eye chakra. intuition. indigo. seemingly 2 spokes, but really 92. what do i feel when this is activated?
the crown chakra. last and most difficult to activate. headed toward the path of enlightenment. when you're out of your body, what does/can the body look like? the movement is extending out of my head , my crown, into the greater space. how does that manifest in physical time and space? i release my body. my energy leaves and returns to familiar motifs. is it really possible for me to release into the seventh chakra when i'm in physical performance?
my mind races too much when i'm performing, but i realize it's because of my research... initially, Microcosmic Currents was a larger manifestation of this first research, but it's become so much more....
Ms. Deva Premal graciously granted me permission to use her music for Wheels of Light. I encourage you to seek out her music.
Dear Reader, I invite you to view Wheels of Light, again, in light of this information. I welcome your thoughts.