How did the oral presentation go? I'm a bit late doing this last post but I think with time to reflect I'd say I found the oral presentation one of the most difficult elements of the course. Trying to edit down everything you need to explain down to 10 minutes is tricky. I was really down to the bare bones of the inquiry in 10 slides, but still wanted time to talk about the most important literature.
I've have taken out videos in slides 9 and 10 for ethical reasons I don't think they can be shared online, but it was a video of my class and a video of some choreography I've been working on.
I did two artefact projects in the end and can't attach the first as it has videos from my classes, but I will add the second video which was to demonstrate where I am in my journey in choreography. This piece is something I am working on and am improvising more myself to create new movement for the project. It is not an improvised piece, but some of the movement is a product from me improvising with the idea of the 'metamorphosis' project in mind.
Before looking at how dance practitioners use improvisation it was important to me to look at the founders of improvised dance as we know it in our training today. I explored the background of improvisational dance and contact improvisation. Up until the 1960’s the western world was not used to seeing any sort of improvised or pedestrian movement in a dance concert. Thanks to dance makers such as Steve Paxton, Barbara Dilley, Simone Forti, Nancy Topf and Lisa Nelson audiences today are exposed to improvised movement. Between 1959 and 1965 Steve Paxton was a member of Merce Cunningham’s and Jose Limon’s companies, both of them architects of modern contemporary dance. During this time in New York he established and coined the term ‘contact improvisation’ as a method of improvised dance. In the above video I am particularly interested in the section in where he speaks about how modern dance looked in the late 1950's. 'It was about 50 years old and most of the pioneers were still alive' he speaks about how it was politically and socially relevant. It is also interesting to hear about how Merce Cunningham was viewed skeptically by the modern dance world at that time when he was first established (watch from 22minutes).
Steve Paxton here defines contact improvisation as they invented it.
‘Contact improvisations are spontaneous physical dialogues that range from stillness to highly energetic exchanges. Alertness is developed in order to work in an energetic state of physical disorientation, trusting in one's basic survival instincts. It is a free play with balance, self-correcting the wrong moves and reinforcing the right ones, bringing forth a physical/emotional truth about a shared moment of movement that leaves the participants informed, centered, and enlivened.’ (early definition by Steve Paxton and others, CQ Vol. 5:1, Fall 1979).
In Melinda Buckwalter's 'Composing while dancing' (2010) Steve Paxton speaks on improvisation taking a form.
'The relation between form and improvisation is intrinsic. In normal life, plans (envisioned forms of action) are the primary motivator of many tasks, interwoven with moments when unexpected events require intuitive or reflexive responses. Sports, for example, often have rigorous rules defining what is to be done and how it is to be accomplished, yet rely on improvisation to soar beyond definitions into the unforeseen, improbable moments which bring the crowds to their feet and a collective roar to their throats.'(Paxton, S taken from 'Composing while dancing' Buckwalter, M 2010).
Most significant and thought provoking for me was Paxton's experience of improvising to the Goldberg variations by Bach in 1986-1992 (Watch the above video from 58 minutes). In an article which I found in the New York Times, Siobhan Burke reviews Paxton's 'Selected Works' a selection of four works displayed in 2014 at 'Dia:Beacon' in New York. In the article she speaks about the Goldberg variations that 'essentially had no structure, no rules. “Except for the most general one,” he [Paxton] clarified: to do it differently every time."'Below I have found a reworking of this piece. On viewing it I questioned how Paxton's work in improvisation is often for a purpose for performance as opposed to being strictly internal. Although he, or his dancers, are creating in real-time it is affected by the external motive of creating a piece for audience.
This purpose behind improvisation is essentially contrasting to the view of Maxine Sheets-Johnstone (The Primacy of Movement, 2nd Ed. 2011).
'Whatever the framing rules might be that act as a constraint upon movement, the aim of the dancers is to form movement spontaneously. It is to dance this evening’s dance, whatever it might turn out to be. In view of the uniqueness of this evening’s dance — as of all this evening’s dances — the common aesthetical question of ontological identity does not arise. In other words, being the only one of its kind, this evening’s dance is not measured against or viewed with respect to other performances nor is it measured against or viewed with respect to a score.' (Sheets-Johnstone, 2011 pg.420)
Now this is interesting and could be argued to be a conflicting view in regards to the Goldberg variations. Like much of Paxton's work these improvisations to Bach's music were viewed by an audience. They were also ofcourse affected and inspired by the music, which in turn would affect audience perception. Furthermore the dancer uses alot of codified movement - movement which is not pedestrian and is a clear product of past training. This could be thought of contrasting with Sheets Johnstone's view of improvisation as unaffected from the outside and as a mode of thought: 'thinking in movement'. However, as Paxton points out in the video 'the body is a repository and one of great scope', so therefore I believe it is very difficult to not move as a dancer once this has been learnt. So though in this case affected by the music, in my view this dancer and Paxton improvise as a way of thinking in action but also as a way to create choreography and a performance.
Just checking in to see who else is coding their qualitative data and how they are going about it?
I found a useful resource - 'The coding manual for qualitative researchers' by Johnny Saldaña. He explains comprehensively the focus of coding and also the many different methods to go about it. It also made me realise there will be differences of opinion on how to code an interview as it is underlined my personal opinion on what are the most significant themes, phrases etc.
‘A code in qualitative inquiry is most often a word or short phrase that symbolically assigns a summative, salient, essence-capturing, and/or evocative attribute for a portion of language-based or visual data’ (Saldana, 2013).
Another reference which has helped in the process of analysing has been Mason's 'Qualitative researching'. 'The answers to questions about how and what to compare must be driven by your research questions and your intellectual puzzle, but also are likely to be influenced by the ideas and theories you develop in the process of generating and analysing data'. This was helpful as what I have found is that what has come from the research is that I've questioned certain areas I didn't foresee, and now have opinions I would like to explore further that I had never thought of before, So, the coding process as part of analysing can only begin now I have had a chance to really process the findings. It hasn't been until I have listened back a few times to the interview that I notice opinions and ideas I may have ignored the first time. Those nuances have helped me find important themes that have arisen.
In Saldana's guide he speaks about the possibility of having a theme, and a secondary theme, like a sub title that can be used in parallel. I've adopted this method as i had broad themes and more subtle phrases or ideas that lay under the same idea, but were slightly different in opinion, or emotion for example.
This was a first draft to work out my understanding
This is how the coding matrix will look, with themes above and then sub headings
This is a 'structured' improvisation that I filmed in the studio this week. I say structured as I knew and had chosen the music beforehand which inevitably meant that I had imagined how I might dance to it when listening to it beforehand. After I finished improvising I wrote notes on all the factors that came into play while I was improvising. I compared it to the categories that Nakano and Okada named as the areas of attention dancers noted on their reflection in improvisation. I found that 'interaction with oneself' played a massive part. I noted that portraying a mood or feeling was most important to me. Factors such as the light, space and music affected this.
I thought about how developing areas noted in their categories could improve my improvisation. 'Switching'... could I change the texture of the movement more and the rhythm to make it more dynamic rather than getting stuck at a certain pace. 'Continuation', Lisa Nelson speaks about how various choreographers approach time in their improvisation with dancers. Could I push the boundaries of when is a natural start or finish... what happens if I improvise for longer than I would normally feel comfortable with?
For anyone with interest in dance in education or improvisation in any art form!
What is really interesting in this talk by Peter J Lovatt is how he highlights how structured dance and improvised dance differently effects our cognitive problem solving. When practicing structured dance we become quicker at solving problems with one answer. When improvising we become more creative and faster at answering questions with multiple answers.
This video had further convinced me of the importance of the practice of improvisation when teaching dance. When learning structured dance we are only utilising a fraction of our movement potential and testing ourselves physically and mentally to half of our ability.
I am in the process of fine tuning my interview questions. I am currently reviewing Lisa Nelson's 'Composing while dancing' and also looking at Twyla Tharp's 'The creative habit'. Both pieces are adding to the questions that I wish to ask. The hardest part I have found in planning the questions is to allow them to be informed by the literature, but to still be open enough for all my participants to answer. My interviewees are experts in their field but come from different dance backgrounds, and I don't want them to feel as if they are being questioned on their artistic process against something I read. These are the questions I am planning for my interviews next week. Please give them a read... dance background or not this could be for any arts based practitioner (if you change dance or choreography to whichever art medium you work in!) Are the questions clear? I will explain how i got to these through the literature throughout the next blogs and review.
I want to talk to you mostly about improvisation as a dance making method, particularly how you use improvisation to create your own choreography. I'm also interested in your route into choreography today, and how you structure improvisation with dancers in your rehearsals or workshops.
I know that you trained at... and have worked with... and have a background in... can you tell me about your route into choreography and your inspirations and influences to where you are today?
Can you tell me about how you utilise improvisation in the creation of choreography?
What have been the main influences you experienced that changed how you view and practice improvisation?
Do you have any warmup or activities that bring dancers to a state of mind and body preparedness?
When working with dancers in a workshop, or rehearsals, what boundaries or structure do you set in improvisation?
Tell me about your projects working with people who are new to dance. Does your approach to improvisation change when working with novice dancers?
From my own experience teaching, I have found that children are more fearless when I introduce improvisation, despite their background in dance and whether they have danced a lot beforehand. What are the main challenges and benefits you have found when working with non-dancers using improvisation to create dance?
11/03 update!
After looking at Jo Butterworth's interview with Lloyd Nelson one more time and also after reading a few more interviews with choreographers, I am learning from the terminology that is widely used. Instead of focusing on the inspirations and influences as my first questions, I want to get straight to the subject of artistic process. So I will change my first question to:
Can you give me some insights into the artistic motivation for your choreography?
Now that I am planning my interviews with choreographers, I am reading and watching as many interviews as possible with choreographers on their artistic process. Although these questions and themes are not necessarily the same as my planned interview I still found this insightful in how a question can spontaneously lead into the next, creating an open atmosphere.
Akram Khan is a hugely influential choreographer, performer and director. I found his insight into collaboration particularly interesting. Can we learn from the collaboration? Can we teach each other something? Perhaps if we can see what will happen, it may not be the most interesting...
The section on the current financial climate and how it has affected new choreographers was thought provoking. Yes, it may be harder now than before to gain funding, but that shouldn't be a deterrent. People will always create art. The founders of contact improvisation had barely any money behind them but still managed to help shape contemporary choreography and training today.
Is anyone else conducting interviews for their inquiry? Any helpful sample interviews or research is welcome ;)
An interview taken from the DV8 website. I'm posting this not necessarily for the content (although ofcoirse I found it interesting to read), but for anyone who will be carrying out interviews as part of their inquiry. The questions are informed and clear and I will be using some of them as a model for my interviews, although the content is different I can learn from some of the terminology. Lloyd Newson in Conversation with Jo Butterworth Lloyd Newson studied Psychology at the University of Melbourne before starting his performance career. After dancing with companies in Australia and New Zealand, he came to Britain and gained a one-year scholarship to study at the London Contemporary Dance School, before joining Extemporary Dance Theatre. In 1986 he co-founded DV8 Physical Theatre. Can you give some insights into the points of departure for your choreography, about the artistic motivation for your work? Newson ... I only create when I have something to say, and the work is generally about issues that concern or affect my life at a given time. I'm interested in provoking myself, questioning my own and the performers' thoughts, motivations and assumptions. Many of the themes I dealt with in the early works — as in My Sex, Our Dance (1986), My Body, Your Body (1987) and Dead Dreams of Monochrome Men (1988) — have been controversial. At the time I chose to examine these themes through physically challenging movement. However when we made Strange Fish (1992), the risk was not so much about physical danger, but whether dance can deal with complex emotional narrative, and whether tragi-comic theatre can in fact be created through dance alone. You can take risks without always being physical. I have regularly challenged what is traditionally defined as dance, i.e., who can dance in terms of shape, size, age, and what dance can talk about. In order to keep my interest in dance it has to personally resonate with issues I experience directly in my life. I am not interested in making work that does not focus clearly on content. Content, rather than style drives DV8's work, which distinguishes it from a lot of other contemporary dance. Issues, rather than 'prettiness' or aesthetics, are important. Our work delves into how individuals relate to one another, emotionally and intellectually, rather than being about movement or design patterns per se; exploring the individual's actions, and looking at how these in turn reflect political and social issues. And what methods do you utilise to engage dancers in your choreographic process? My process involves making performers question how they engage in making work. I seek movement with intention and purpose. What are they/we trying to communicate? It is not that I am necessarily against using an arabesque, but you must know why you do it. Why is at the heart of DV8's work. It is closer in terms of intention, focus and subtext to the ways in which a theatre director works with a text. DV8 is known as a company that fights hard for funding to engage in research and development processes in order to gain periods of experimentation. Can you give some insights into your approach? Time for research and experimentation is our chance for rejuvenation. The climate has changed radically since the mid-eighties when we were first making work, when there was much more openness about experimentation. Therefore I have come to a point where I feel I can only really take risks and face possible failure in my research periods. Without this I would be fearful to try new ideas and work with new people. I invite new dancers/performers to participate in research periods to try and alter my approach to making work. For example, when I researched Bound To Please (1997) we explored the performers' psychological experiences as professional 'dancers'. This brought up an unexpected issue. What is their perceived value as people in relation to their value as dancers; were they only as good as the height of their leg? Another research project centred on taking the performers into, and working in, a 'greasy spoon' café. The performers were asked to observe normal café users to see what information was conveyed through their body language. When they returned to the studio, I asked them to extrapolate what they had seen so that they could abstract it and use the principles of the movement patterns they had observed to make movement phrases. Most choreography is made in the rehearsal studio, yet this can be a sterile environment. My concern is for dance to connect with and talk about the real world, so it seemed logical to send the performers out of the dance environment, in order to observe and interact with it. The research and development period for Enter Achilles (1995) occurred almost two years prior to the piece being completed. This gap suggests that sometimes there can be quite a significant delay between ideas being initiated and the work that emerges a few years later. During a five-week R&D period in Glasgow in 1994, I found myself struggling creatively while investigating the distinction between subtleties of the spoken word and the equivalent subtleties in movement. The improvisations were quite frustrating and quite tough. Yet suddenly, I found a new direction for the experimentation. One day I went down for a drink with the performers after we had finished rehearsals; we were all sitting around rather tired, and I noticed that everybody was drinking pints of beer. Seeing the potential for both initiating and limiting movement exploration, I suggested bringing pint glasses to the studio the following day. As work progressed the glass became a metaphor for all sorts of things in the piece to do with masculinity and British culture. It is obvious from the examples you have cited that the very different circumstances of the research periods lead to very different types of dance pieces. Is it challenging to make or find an appropriate vocabulary for each work? Yes. Another example from the Glasgow R&D period exemplifies this. A situation was reported in the paper about a policeman who refused to hold the hand of a car accident victim because he feared being perceived as a homosexual. In exploring how I might represent something like that physically, I talked to some of the heterosexual guys from my company, asking them to walk hand in hand down Sauchiehall Street in Glasgow. They said no problem, but only managed to walk three blocks — they couldn't bear the tension and reaction from the locals. So I questioned how this tension might be shown in the piece. When is it acceptable for men to hold hands? In searching for a metaphor to explore these notions of acceptability, I started investigating trapeze work and we engaged a specialist to train our dancers. In the piece two men hold on to a suspended rope and dance a duet where they must hold hands in order not to fall. When they get down on the ground, and are still holding hands, it's extremely uncomfortable for them. One performer becomes very nervous and anxious because of the social stigma attached to men holding hands. Also, with regard to DV8's physical vocabulary, in the company training DV8 bring in different people to develop new skills, if appropriate, for a new piece: in My Body, Your Body we did aerobics and long distance running to build up stamina, and in Strange Fish we brought in yoga teachers. Voice teachers have been employed at times to work on different pieces that use text; specialist trainers are brought in according to the subject matter. When we were looking at football, we questioned why it is considered acceptable for men to do footwork around a football, but not to do footwork around Irish dancing or ballet. So we brought in an Irish dancing teacher because I wanted to explore the difference between those two forms in relation to what is 'acceptable' and 'unacceptable' masculine movement. If I cannot find appropriate movement, I will also use words. I am not a purist, and don't wish to limit my breadth of expression or to trade complex scenarios for purism. The fundamental principle in the work is to make it clear, to be specific and detailed. Throughout, my interest is in conveying stories or ideas through movement. The research and development periods are all videoed, and documented, so that I can go back and refer to them in preparation for the actual piece. Much will be rejected and not used at all. What form does the actual rehearsal process take? The form of the preparation for the rehearsal period rarely follows one set approach. For example, for Enter Achilles (1995), I made five or six particular choices from the five-week workshop and took these ideas into the rehearsal period. Another exploratory idea was that we should start experimenting with the idea of the men using one another as furniture; another, that we should look at fluids, play with the idea of men sharing fluids together and of intoxication, and the connotations of that. Or how a pint glass can represent beauty or danger, community or isolation. We looked at videos of documentary programmes about binge drinking in Wales on Friday and Saturday nights and the ensuing violence that occurs after drinking 8 or 9 pints in one evening. Essentially, we attempted to look out at the world and our experiences of men amongst men, and to reflect this back on our work. It must be added that by the time we came to rehearsals after the workshop, I had written a storyline, and we'd already designed and built a complicated set. Since DV8 is not a permanent company you have the opportunity to choose new cast for each work. What do you look for in a performer? I choose people who are appropriate to the needs of the subject matter being explored, and with whom I can collaborate; people who can bring an openness of attitude and thoughtfulness to the process. They have to be interested in the subject matter. I cast like a film director, according to what the script requires, so for example, in looking at the relationship between an older woman and a younger man the cast choices have to give some authenticity. So we chose Diana Payne-Myers — a woman and dancer who has worked on many different projects with us over the years — who is in her mid-seventies. When making Enter Achilles, I was concerned to find guys who looked like regular guys in the street. When we made MSM (1993) about cottaging, I asked two things of those auditioning; they had to be prepared to be naked on the stage, and to go to places known for cottaging to observe the situation, to know how tense, or frightening, or funny it can be. It is the principle here that is relevant; without that openness of mind and vulnerability, I knew we would experience blocks in other areas during rehearsal. Some of the most interesting people chosen to work with DV8 have generally done something else in their lives before they came to dance. Through working in computers, tiling ceramics, acting, or something as mundane as working in a supermarket, they brought other significant experience of the real world into dance. I find it frustrating that many dancers train from such an early age and lack exposure to other life experiences. Having Diana Payne-Myers naked on stage in Bound To Please for me was infinitely more beautiful than seeing a gorgeous woman doing a perfect arabesque, because it is the context and meaning that makes something beautiful and touching. Do you have particular methods of structuring your work? Since 1990, after DV8 finished Dead Dreams and made the film, I made a deliberate choice to leave behind that very intense, dark and exhausting physicality of the earlier pieces. I decided to try and create more image driven, humorous theatre, the traces of which can be first seen in "if only ..." (1990). I soon discovered that it was too frightening to go into a studio without having a pre-written story and structure. I needed some structure — though you also need to be free to throw that structure out. So from then on, for all the pieces, Strange Fish, Enter Achilles, Bound To Please, I wrote a scenario prior to starting rehearsals, not that I always ended up sticking to it. Having research and development periods, becoming my own dramaturg and writing a loose structure before the rehearsals provides the company with the opportunity to build sets in advance. The performers can then work with the set and ensure it becomes embedded into the performance. The environment needs to be lived in, and the set explored before the production week(s). A script provides a guide in helping me structure the rehearsal period, both day to day and overall. For example, in Enter Achilles we did a whole range of improvisations based on what is acceptable male physical contact, about what is considered an acceptable way for a man to walk and talk. We played with the simple ideas of straight and bent movements, how these affect how we feel and how they were perceived externally. We looked at the pressures on men to play certain roles, particular sports; we talked about relationships with our fathers, our mothers, our best male friends, what we expect from them, and how that differs from our relationships with our female friends. Then we would get to specifics, because we can generalise and make all these theories, but it's the specific individual stories that are interesting. In the end, the interest lies not so much in how we do it, but in how he or she does it. Specifics can often contradict convenient social theories, and are often very conflicting, which is more human, complex and revealing. In order for really interesting, deep material to come up, like in analysis, the performer has to let go of his subconscious. That sometimes poses a problem for dancers. If somebody truly lets go in improvisation it is impossible for him to remember exactly what he did, as that is a conscious process. That is why we use a video camera. Obviously there are endless means of constructing work — task setting, observation and translations, working directly from text, occasionally I even come in with set steps. These methods combined with structured improvisation are my way of discovering new and appropriate dance content and of finding individual voices within the company, thus distinguishing how each performer moves differently, and how interesting and unique their differences are. Generally DV8's works are about seeing particular individuals on stage, therefore it is important to nurture the individual vocabulary, while providing a focus and boundaries for the improvisations and tasks. Do you join in with these tasks and improvisations? In the past when I was performing, yes, but generally I stand out to be the 'eye'. Once we had more than four people in our company I felt it was impossible to be on stage personally, and keep an eye on other people's performances, so I removed myself, and now I sit through almost every performance our company does, give notes and make changes. It continues throughout the tour. Without constant change and development, I feel that a work becomes dead for both performers and audience. This became particularly evident when reworking and touring Enter Achilles. It was the first time that DV8 had remounted a past work, and some dancers had to learn previous roles. This became a particular challenge. Because the work is devised with a particular group of people in the first instance, introducing new cast members can result in quite radical changes to the piece. New performers have not experienced all the intense research, whereas someone who has, and who made movement unique to himself, generated the material. Thus getting somebody else to do exactly the same part does not work — I find myself working with the qualities of the new individuals and having to adapt material to suit them in order to sustain some truth. This process made me more aware of just how exactly every movement is built on an individual, consistent with their thoughts, intention, way of moving, etc. There are thirty different ways to pick up a glass, and each one says something different. Basically, I try to impart that realisation to the people that I work with ... and once they start understanding that, we're half way there. The other thing about dance making is that a lot of people I work with are really committed to new work, therefore they are not interested in being part of a repertory company, and the only reason we remounted Enter Achilles was to pay for the next research period. We want to keep making new work that is intricately linked to personal development. It is important now, for me at least, not to get stuck in remounting and touring old works, and the commercialisation that can go with this. It seems that your role in the company is different to that of a traditional choreographer, in that the work is devised and collectively made. Let me be clear, whatever ends up on stage, the subject matter, each individual step, I decide on. I see my role as stimulator, facilitator, editor and constructor, but equally I want to learn from my performers. I find it dull, boring and reductive bringing in steps for my dancers to learn — which is what I did in my early choreographic days. I have a responsibility to keep finding ways to open up and creatively stimulate performers in the company. Most people are capable of producing incredible performances, however some are reluctant to enter new territory. I can open gates, but at a certain point, unless they are prepared to let go of their psychological blocks, I can't do anything. DV8 have produced some exceptional performers who, prior to joining the company, hadn't fulfilled their potential. Of course, this also means that DV8 might then lose their most capable collaborators, but its great when the people I've worked with go off and create something of their own, empowered through their association with DV8.
Just an update on my thinking on the professional inquiry and advisor feedback.
So, first week back getting into the routine of reading and planning the inquiry. What struck me when reading through the handbook and reader this time is that there is a lot to do in 12 weeks! My mantra will be 'less procrastination'! I have found that although I have read and discovered alot about my craft and work, I don't always blog on it or reflect in my professional journal. This module I will reflect and make notes on all of my ideas, so as to remember and be able to reflect on them later.
I will make some amendments to the aim of my inquiry. In the proposal, I stated that the inquiry will encompass 3 main themes: tools to inspire improvisation, creating the optimal learning environment in rehearsal, and rehearsal structure when conducting rehearsals with novice or inexperienced dancers. Although all of the areas are important to discuss with the choreographers I will interview, I have decided to base my literature review and professional artefact around the theme of improvisation in dance. It is an area I feel I have a lot to learn about and is a massive field unto itself.
Presently I am reading Lisa Nelson's 'Composing while dancing'. She focuses on field studies with dance makers who work with improvisation. Not talking about the way to improvise, but finding your way: finding your methods and following your nose. I am finding it so beneficial to read the the input from dance practitioners who have paved the way to how we approach improvisation in class, rehearsal and as choreographers today.
This is the latest footage of the piece I have been working on with my mixed group of dancers. They are a range of experienced and new dancers, from beginner to professional level dancers. I choreographed the piece for a professional showcase here in Dubai, for the studio I work for. We rehearsed for 10 hours over 8 weeks and managed to create a very physical and quite complex 3 and a half minute piece. This work is the basis for my inquiry project. I will explore rehearsal methods of experienced choreographers who work with new or inexperienced dancers, to better my rehearsal process in future.
All students signed a consent form for the video to be used at the start of the course as we used some promotional material for the studio social media.