Showing posts with label D is for Dance. Show all posts
Showing posts with label D is for Dance. Show all posts
D is for Dance



I want to dance!
So I am organizing a Danse Club for people who don't want to go to dance clubs! It's tonight, June 30th, 8pm-9:30 pm at the Capoeira Studio on 2827 Isleville.
The objective is for everyone to come out and have a good time (for the low cost of $2) I'm having a great time choreographing the Danse Club tumblr!
Let's Meet, Greet, and Move our Dancing Feet !

D is for Dance




Pina Bausch (1940-2009) was a German choreographer whose esthetic philosophy changed the development (stylistic and psychological) of dance across the world. Bausch would say that her focus was not on movement but instead what moved people, she directed empathy for the stage in its poetic depiction of reality.

D is for Dance


*I recommend turning the volume off for this:


There will always be original
D is for Dance


I just watched Buffalo '66 for the first time....So Good!
Among the many amazing highlights, this clip is the cherry on top!
D is for Dance


Director Maya Deren not only choreographs the characters in her films she also brillantly choreographs the camera in its movements and speed, resulting in fine art films such as the above Ritual in Transfigured Time. She suspends time highlighting the intricate movements of hair, fabric, earth and skin even intensifies them by introducing wind elements, everything is dancing. Her films are familiar as though they were dreamt last night ambiguous to all but the director herself.

D is for Dance


Documentary genius Frederick Wiseman likes Ballet. In 1995 he filmed a documentary about the American Ballet Theater and last year he enjoyed time in Paris filming La Danse, bringing light to the inner-workings of the worlds best ballet company, Le ballet de l'Opera de Paris.



This was Wiseman's first film to have a theatre release, as the previous documentaries were made exclusively for PBS. It didn't show in any Halifax theatres....so until I am able to watch it I will enjoy this interview with Wiseman and good ol' Charlie Rose.
D is for Dance


Mass Ornament is a video installation in which hundreds of clips from YouTube of people dancing alone in their rooms are edited together to create a large formation dance with choreographed waves of synchronized movement. The dance recalls historical representations of synchronized mass movements of bodies in formations, from the Tiller Girls and Busby Berkley, to Leni Riefenstahl, as well as to Siegfried Kracauer’s 1927 essay on the mass ornament.

Kracauer argued that the synchronized movement of chorus line dancers reflected the logic of a Fordist economic system.
Mass Ornament looks at how the YouTube dancer, alone in her room, performing a dance routine that is both extremely private and extraordinarily public, is, in its way, a perfect expression of our age. With its emphasis on the individual, the home, and individuated and internalized production, the dance embodies some key characteristics of post-Fordism, and suggests some of the ways that social and economic rationalization has extended its reach, encroaching on what used to be our private spaces - our homes, our bodies and our social relations. Just as rows of spectators once sat in theaters and stadiums watching rows of bodies moving in formation, today millions of viewers sit alone in front of their computer screens watching individual dancers voluntarily moving in formation, alone in their rooms. At the same time, the dancers seem to make small claims for embodiment and public-ness in the face of their disappearance in the disembodied, isolated, online environment.
text and images from artist Natalie Bookchin who made this amazing video piece