2014 Designing Dance – Bates Dance Festival https://www.batesdancefestival.org Fri, 25 Jul 2014 01:44:42 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.3.2 https://www.batesdancefestival.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/06/cropped-BDF-icon-02-01-32x32.png 2014 Designing Dance – Bates Dance Festival https://www.batesdancefestival.org 32 32 The Wall as Dancer https://www.batesdancefestival.org/the-wall-as-dancer/ Fri, 25 Jul 2014 01:44:42 +0000 http://bdfblog.org/?p=1283 I keep thinking about the wall currently set up on the Schaeffer Theatre stage for the upcoming performances of “Come, and Back Again” by David Dorfman Dance. Filled with curated “pots and pans of civilization” as my thesis mentor Sam Ball used to say, this wall, created by Brooklyn-based sculptor Jonah Emerson-Bell, is our lives. We accumulate and accumulate and accumulate. Things become complex. Relationships become complex. Life becomes complex. We have a choice: Keep everything the way it is, or simplify, “Clean it up” as Dorfman says, “Or not.”

Amazing that this wall, inert as it is, becomes a dancer as well, tied to the choreography and setting a tone for the entire work. Like our own accumulations, the wall, according to Dorfman, is a “bunch of junk that is extremely profound.” It tells a story rich in layered meanings that will ultimately unfold with the dancers, musicians, and other design elements in performance.

Another consideration of the wall as a design element is its personality. Toned white, all the individual elements become a whole. Dorfman talked about each dancer having a unique signature that becomes an important building block in choreographic process. These signatures inform phrases and become strengths in the work, even as all the dancers function collectively to express the larger choreographic idea.

The wall has many individual signatures—everyday signatures. Each item has a story, a role to play. At the same time, the composition and treatment of these elements imbue the wall with a higher purpose. The larger wall becomes animate and expressive as it comments on the evolving dance. When treated with projection and light, and counterpart of shadow, it breathes with the dance. No matter where you sit in the house, the dynamic gestures of the dancers will always be backed by this presence. And like the hidden pictures in a Highlights magazine collage, you will find yourself seeing something you didn’t see before, and work this image back into the meaning of the dance.

I realize Dorfman intentionally held back in the Show & Tell, he said as much. So in performance with complete choreography, music, projection, costume, and light we will fully experience Emerson-Bell’s contribution to Dorfman’s larger vision in “Come, and Back Again.”

This post was written by Jim Thurston. Jim is a professional designer and educator who researches the relationship between choreography and design for the stage. He is the chair of the Department of Theater and Dance at Colby College and is delighted to collaborate with artists and scholars at the Bates Dance Festival.

]]>
The Power of an Image https://www.batesdancefestival.org/the-power-of-an-image/ Sat, 19 Jul 2014 17:14:05 +0000 http://bdfblog.org/?p=1272 How powerful are images? What do we really see in an image? How do these images comment on and inspire choreography? Camille A. Brown challenged us as an audience during the July 15th Show & Tell to consider more deeply the video and still imagery used in “Mr. TOL E. RAncE”. She challenged us because she knows the projection imagery used in this dance might make us uncomfortable as it “examines the ‘mask’ of survival and ‘double-consciousness’ (W.E.B. DuBois) of the black performer throughout history” and explores “the stereotypical roles dominating current Black culture” (http://www.camilleabrown.org/mr-tol-e-rance/).

Brown has a wonderful way of engaging an audience as seen in the audience warm up prior to the Show & Tell. Her energy is palpable. Brown and her company were also very generous answering audience questions about “Mr. TOL E. RAncE” and about their own life experiences. At the same time, Brown expects the audience to be equally sharing of their own insights, understanding and perceptions. She asked the audience what they actually perceived in the still and video imagery used in the dance. When answers seem to dwell on ideas like composition, lack of color, or other elements of art, Brown encouraged the audience to go deeper.

The ensuing discussion, prompted by Brown, probed issues of race, perpetuation of stereotypes, the power of imagery to lock in ideas of society for generations, and how we tolerate ideas we might be offended at in a historical context.

With their vibrant and profound movement in “Mr. TOL E. RAncE,” the Camille A. Brown & Dancers are less interested in a history lesson. Rather, “the goal of this personal work is to engage, provoke, and move the conversation of race forward in a timely dialogue about where we have been, where we are and where we might want to be” (http://www.camilleabrown.org/mr-tol-e-rance/).

The ideas in “Mr. TOL E. RAncE” are importantly universal as is the use of imagery to perpetuate stereotypes. As you experience this dance, consider the relationship between the chosen images and then look to our contemporary world for equal examples. Images are powerful and there is a story behind each one waiting to be fully understood.

This post was written by Jim Thurston. Jim is a professional designer and educator who researches the relationship between choreography and design for the stage. He is the chair of the Department of Theater and Dance at Colby College and is delighted to collaborate with artists and scholars at the Bates Dance Festival.

]]>
Designing "Heart of the Matter" https://www.batesdancefestival.org/designing-heart-of-the-matter/ Thu, 17 Jul 2014 20:42:27 +0000 http://bdfblog.org/?p=1266 At the July 8th Show & Tell with Prometheus Dance, a member of the audience asked how the design elements work to support “Heart of the Matter.” This is an excellent question since without light we wouldn’t see the dance and without sound, projection and costume, meaning might be lost. It’s also a great question for the creative team of Prometheus Dance because collaboration with professional composers and designers is central to the company’s mission.

Recently I was able to interview Diane Arvanites (Co-Artistic Director/Co-Choreographer), Tommy Neblett (Co-Artistic Director/Co-Choreographer), and Linda O’Brien (Light Designer) to discuss design process and final design elements evident in this impressive full-length dance.

“Heart of the Matter” opens with a video projection depicting garden elements accompanied by a constant musical tone interspersed with electronic chirps, static tones, and other composed punctuations. Amidst this engaging visual and aural landscape, bursts of sidelight and toplight reveal a cluster of dancers wearing formal attire. Instantly, this overture gives way to a serene composition of slow motion gestures, a soft instrumental composition, and low intensity sculptural sidelight, all backed by a monochromatic projection of a flower. After a beautiful and controlled movement sequence, the pace quickens with the introduction of new gestures, implying different relationships between dancers. Some new influence grips the ensemble as they twist and turn, shaking their hands and forearms.

Experiencing the beginning of this dance as an audience member, a number of questions arise. What forces are at work and what do they mean? What will the journey be like for the dancers until the final moment when the light snaps out on the ensemble individually working within fitful athletic gestures? Why are the dancers in formal clothing and why is it stripped away as the dance progresses? Given the particular relationship between the choreography and design elements, how did the creative team arrive at these choices and how do they shape the final meaning of the dance for the audience?

In the yearlong choreographic process for “Heart of the Matter” a very particular, layered design process was at work to achieve the final dance. Arvanites and Neblett typically begin the rehearsal process with movement itself and hold off on integration of design elements until the overall dance structure is visible. With the structure in place, designers attend selected rehearsals and begin to learn the dance and explore design expressions. Arvanites and Neblett guide the design process with research and ideas inherent in the phrasing but leave much to the imagination of the design team. Prometheus Dance is fortunate to have several long-time designers on the team, providing an important level of trust and efficiency of process.

An exception to the above stated process is projection design. From the start, Arvanites knew she wanted projected imagery, in a confined way, to be a significant part of the dance. She provided much of the still and video imagery, with some created by Adam Noya, and eventually collaborated with company dancer Callie Chapman Korn to complete the visual score and perfect the editing and timing. This extended design process allowed Arvanites and Neblett an opportunity to be very selective about imagery based on choreographic intent. At the same time, and much like the musical composition by Miguel Noya, Chapman Korn was able to finesse editing and timing to match progress during rehearsals.

Costume designer Penney Pinette worked with Arvanites and Neblett to define the style of the formal wear, then identify and color the period undergarments. Arvanites has a collection of formal wear and the use of these clothes in “Heart of the Matter” fit perfectly with the desire to start the work with dancers covered in formal, rigid layers that would gradually peel away as other aspects of identity emerge. With this thought in mind, a provocative moment in the dance occurs when the women unzip their gowns and slowly allow the formal wear, the “veneer”, to slip away, revealing another layer of the self. In this moment, movement, costume, light, sound, and projection all work together to highlight what Arvanites and Neblett refer to as the “…stripping back layers of a personal history” (BDF Interview with Diane Arvanites and Tommy Neblett).

The final layer of design in “Heart of the Matter” is the one that allows us, as audience, to see the dance literally and figuratively—light. In professional dance this is often a design element added right before a public performance since time working in a professional theater is very costly. Light designer Linda O’Brien had many weeks to come up with more abstract design ideas but had only several days to implement these ideas. This process requires discipline, planning, organization, attention to detail, and a lot of trust between the designer and choreographers. The final light design for “Heart of the Matter” uses light to “help complete the picture” according to O’Brien. Arvanites and Neblett add that with light there is a wonderful sharpening of choreographic images. Using color, angle of light, pattern, specific focus of instruments, and movement of light through the cueing process, O’Brien worked to sculpt the bodies, enhance the ideas within the choreography, and ultimately create a mood on stage that pulls the audience into the work.

The Prometheus Dance creative team relationships are also built around an important visual aesthetic. Neblett mentioned to me how he and Arvanites used to travel to New York City to experience Pina Bausch’s choreography. The “total work” sensation—all elements (choreography, music, design) working together as a seamless whole—left a lasting impact on Arvanites and Neblett. Not that Prometheus Dance aspires to fill the stage with water, rocks, or hundreds of chairs, not at all. However, they emphasize the intention of all design elements as they support the choreography and complete the experience for the audience.

There is a minimal, elemental quality of design at work in “Heart of the Matter” where movement, light, shadow, color, fabric, silhouette, videography, and sound fuse together to create a whole that underscores the choreography and thematic intent. Combine the choreographic aesthetic and design choices with the theme of how humans struggle to find themselves amidst society’s shaping and reshaping of identity and you have “Heart of the Matter.”

“Heart of the Matter” is somewhat of a transitional work for Prometheus Dance. The choreographic process involved more improvisation, that is a willingness to use collective material generated from dancers through experimentation. This desire to open the process and explore alternate modes of working led Arvanites and Neblett to an upcoming collaboration with professional photographers Robert and Shana ParkeHarrison. Likely working with these unique professional photographers at the inception of a work will take Prometheus Dance on a new creative journey—one that will be rewarding to follow.

This post was written by Jim Thurston. Mr. Thurston is a professional designer and educator who researches the relationship between choreography and design for the stage. He is the chair of the Department of Theater and Dance at Colby College and is delighted to collaborate with artists and scholars at the Bates Dance Festival.

]]>