dance-tech.net

Interdisciplinary explorations on the performance of motion

Julie N. Cruse

"dance and tech" is a field of theft and non-authentic invention continued...

On the "genre" of dance and technology, a comment was made that the people who use the tools in dance and tech are just feeding off of the creativity of the person who invented the tool.

Comments?


I orginally posted the above statement in a blog which I shared with some friends on this network. The statement ilicited many provocative responses and a heated discussion began to take place within a few hours. So we moved the discussion to the forum where there would be more room for the vast responses on this topic. The first 3 posts below are the statements made in the blog, copied and pasted here so that the discussion may continue in the forum - which turned out to be a more appropriate home for such reflective responses and debates.

Tags: creativity, embodiment, movement_experience, software, tools

Share

Reply to This

Replies to This Discussion

Hi Johannes,

I agree, what's considered a tool at this time is relevant, and also I agree with your question to Raphael about the success of recent works, and whether or not data, or some other media, is raw material. That's where I was going. Not to overload you Raphael, but additionally, what constitutes rawness.. is it a form that comes to you before you manipulate it or integrate it? Is it deconstructing that media, or form, to find the raw idea within it?

I think the person who I originally quoted in this discussion topic was referring to softwares, because they had no problem using video or stage lights. So probably software...

What about robotics? Telematics? Are these technologies as creatively deterministic as software?

The person was saying that some software predetermines or invents what options there are, and the artist who uses them doesn't go far enough to get credit. Chunky Moves is a good example of not doing that. They extended the dialog of the software, not just restated it. But we need to make a place for that - the restating, the exploration in subtle ways, and how that may be a subtle phenomenological excursion into simply experience. Johannes, I disagree that theft and inauthenticity are irrelevant concepts, on your premise that how we map or perceive our tools and our interaction with tools makes for a phenomenological field of inquiry that supercedes the question of origin - which is heavily tied to questions of literacy and power.

Phenomenology and Origin are inextricably linked. One must not be sacrificed for the other. An intriguing choreographic process, or the beauty of the outcome may be captivating, but should not render questions of power and origin irrelevant - which is ultimately what the questions of theft, authorship, ownership, and authenticity boil down to. It is wonderful to discuss the discoveries of eye-catching work and research, but we must never forget to investigate and remember the origins.

I see genesis of tools and ways of using tools as collaborative. If there is anything that this conversation accomplishes, perhaps it is the fact that we could all spend some time clarifying what we see now, when we look at art or dance, when we are truly entering a new paradigm of hybrid, collaborative genesis, and a growing field of mixed realities, in which perception and certainty are relative. We will need to retrain eyes and rethink methods.

Reply to This

The first page of the discussion (and all those initial postings) was quite formidable, and maybe we haven't added anything at this point, probably because we had forgotten who said what and why and in what context.... I suppose i was wondering, perhaps too casually, why anyone in the arena of retroengineering and repurposing and open source file sharing was worried about "theft" in the manner, say, in which one talks about authorship or control of intellectual property (or rights, as in the music industry trying to prevent folks from downloading too much); i was not sure that you wanted to address ownership of tools (?), and i am not sure what is meant by "inauthentic" in the context of dance and technology or performance in computational environments. I guess notions of "origin" had been questioned, yes? and co -authorship is taken almost for granted in interactive art and in collaborative work that involves fusions of different techniques. As far as software and dance and cameras are concerned, each tends to be of a different category, no? and how would (which) notion of authenticity apply to each of the categories? Again, nothing can be quite generalized, there may be plenty of choreographers and composers out there who might argue their work is not co-generative, but scored by them and by them only (thus the persistence of signatures).
There was a dance form, wasn't there, that called itself authentic movement. I thought calling a movement authentic is actually as much an ideological gesture as calling Photoshop art. But now I have lost any train, about the origins of this thought. Following Kubrick, one might think tools are a myth.

Reply to This

Thanks for clarifying. These are tough questions. No quick answer. Let's just pick up with the conversation right here. It's as good a point as any.

I'll speak for myself. I don't prioritize open source because I have access to a lot in the university. I am highly engaged in the debates regarding economy, piracy, and freeware: I'm not sure I'd rather pay for a coke than a program, or work of art.

I think this is a very important discussion, and perhaps belongs in a new thread. about open sourcing - the culture of sharing - does it economically weaken the arts domain? strengthen? balance out? in relation to other fields?


The context of the original conversation, from my vantage point, was the way that technology determins options. I wanted to interrogate that relationship a bit. Who's creating what? If we are collaborating, do we attend to the relationship between software and choreography as we do in classical theory to that of music and choreography? We found out a lot of us have not considered it. There are many angles to examine.

I wasn't really meaning ownership in that legal sense in this conversation. You did bring up a good point though.

Reply to This

RSS

Partnerships and connections!

Premium Partners

Go to Connections page!

Help dance-tech.net!

Make a donation on-line using PayPal! Any amount would help!


Set up a monthly $ 5.00 donation to dance-tech.net
for a year!

Idanca.net (Brazil)

Mostra exibe trabalhos selecionados em edital

Acontecem neste sábado e domingo (14 e 15/11) as apresentações dos projetos selecionados na 1ª edição do edital Novos Coreógrafos – Novas Criações: Site Specific, lançado pelo Centro Cultural São Paulo (CCSP). O edital contemplou seis trabalhos inéditos, criados especificamente…

O que passou e o que ainda virá no Panorama 2009

Se você não pode estar presente ao Festival Panorama 2009, assista aqui a alguns dos vídeos produzidos nessa primeira semana de atividades. E programe-se para o que ainda está por vir!

II Seminário Economia da Dança: informalidade é tema polêmico

A questão da informalidade do fazer artístico foi uma das polêmicas do II Seminário Economia da Dança. Os debates sobre esse e outros assuntos seguem a partir de agora no blog. Saiba como participar.

Obra de Hélio Oiticica inspira trabalho

Inspirado no trabalho Núcleos, de Hélio Oiticica, o espetáculo Nucleares será apresentado de quinta-feira a domingo (12 a 15/11) no Teatro de Dança, em São Paulo. A peça é encenada pela Cia. Mariana Muniz de Teatro e Dança.

Depois da minitemporada no…

Conheça os selecionados para o Rumos Dança na área de Videodança

O Instituto Itaú Cultural divulgou os selecionados na área de Videodança para o programa Rumos 2009/2010. Foram escolhidos cinco projetos dentre os 14 que haviam sido pré-selecionados em agosto (clique aqui para saber mais). Esse grupo foi escolhido após master class com…

We Make Money not Art

Links for 2009-11-13 [del.icio.us]

  • McDonald's advertises for staff to work at Guantánamo Bay - Telegraph
    McDonald's is advertising for staff to work at Guantánamo Bay, in what might be the perfect opportunity for anyone looking to see out the recession in warmer climes.
  • Jerusalem Dispossessed | Activestills
    If Jerusalem is to remain the symbol of peace and tole-rance it cannot be a ghetto for anyone or owned by any particular group. In the same year that Israel celebrates 40 years of the so-called “unity” of Jerusalem, the city has been divided by force, discrimination and injustice. In the “holy city” of 2007, it seems that the only god is “security” and real estate. Israeli policy is drawing a twisting path of a wall that more than anything ensures more conflict, suffering and despair. The future of Israel cannot be built by blocking the potential of the other. Any negotiation taking place while facts and borders are aggressively being determined according to one side’s interests, is just an illusion. Without real freedom and respect of the other’s right to live in dignity, there is no basis for political negotiation. October 2007
  • Resisting the Capitalist Production of Space.
    “Ten Days for Oppositional Architecture” takes up the task of exploring possibilities and conditions of a socially committed architectural practice. Therefore the narrow boundaries of the profession have to be left behind. We hence invite activists, geographers, architects, planners, and economists representing different critical approaches to discuss and develop concepts and practices that not only try to oppose and challenge the capitalist mode of production of space, but also try to go beyond it – strategies of de-commodification, re-appropriation and alternative production of space.
  • FCForum
    We, a broad coalition from over 20 countries, of hundreds of thousands of citizens, users, consumers, organizations, artists, hackers, members of the free culture movement, economists, lawyers, teachers, students, researchers, scientists, activists, workers, unemployed, entrepreneurs, creators… We invite all citizens to make this Charter theirs, share it and put it into practice. We invite all governments, multinationals and institutions urgently to listen to it, understand it and enforce it.
  • Provisions Library » Blog Archive » Activist Listening
    Raqs Media Collective reaches well beyond the confines of the art world to appeal to communities both on and off line. “Raqs” translates into “dance” in Farsi, Arabic, and Urdu. But founding members Jeebesh Bagchi, Monica Narula, and Shuddhabrata Sengupta once jokingly stated, however, that raqs stands for “rarely asked questions.”
  • 'Vomit on the table' and speak like a 1950s hipster | Culture | The Guardian
    The Guidelines: Random notes from pop culture
  • Israel 'personally attacking human rights group' after Gaza war criticism | World news | guardian.co.uk
    Human Rights Watch denies having political agenda or seeking funds from Saudi Arabia
  • L'arte formato reportage Milano celebra McCurry - Recensioni - Arte - Repubblica.it
    Grande mostra sul maestro, pluripremiato dal World Press Photo Award. Oltre 200 scatti da Beirut alla Cambogia, dall'11 settembre alla ragazza di Peshawar
Continue

Mark Amerika retrospective at the National Museum of Contemporary Art in Athens

70k
Developing projects on the net, filming with mobile phones, remixing common moments and figures of today`s culture in an VJ-like audiovisual rhythm, Amerika redifines the characteristics of today's culture and opens up the possibilities for new interpretations and thoughts from the audience itself continue


Continue

Art Review Videos

ArtReview Close Encounters: Frieze Projects 2009

Artists Stephanie Syjuco, Kim Coleman, Per-Oskar Leu and Ryan Gander speak with ArtReview about their projects for Frieze Art Fair. Interviews by Oliver Basciano and J.J. Charlesworth.

ArtReview Close Encounters: Martin Creed

Oliver Basciano meets Martin Creed during rehearsals for his Ballet (Work No. 1020), at Sadler's Wells, London, 16–18 October

ArtReview Close Encounters: LMCC LentSpace

ArtReview's Tyler Coburn tours the Lower Manhattan Cultural Council's temporary park/art installation, LentSpace, and interviews curator Adam Kleinman and artist Olivier Babin

ArtReview Close Encounters: Athanasios Argianas

Oliver Basciano speaks with artist Athanasios Argianas on the occasion of his exhibition Until Full Stops Look Like Stars, From Where You Stand, at Max Wigram Gallery, London, through 31 October.

ArtReview Close Encounters: The Jarman Award

ArtReview's Laura Allsop attends the Jarman Award ceremony, held at London's Whitechapel Gallery on 22 September, and interviews artist Lindsay Seers, who won for her film installations Extramission 6 and It Has to Be This Way (both 2009)

IETM International Network for the Performing Arts

invitation to Culture|Futures from 7 to 9 December in Copenhagen

Culture|Futures is an international collaboration of organisations and individuals who are concerned with shaping and delivering a proactive cultural agenda to support the necessary transition towards an Ecological Age.

Engendering Change: Strategies to Combat Gender Stereotypes and Promote Equal Opportunities for Performers in Europe

The new project led by EuroFIA will build on the foundations laid by the first one and will seek to identify clear strategic actions to engender change across the EU.

Call for applications / Nomad Dance Academy / Education programme 2010

Nomad Dance Academy invites emerging creators from the field of contemporary dance and related professions, from around the world, to the nomadic dance-research-exchange-creative process.

Recreating the Berlin wall with 33.000 people

British performance-artist und curator Martin Butler wants to rebuild the Berlin Wall – not out of steel, concrete and barbed wire, but with people.

16è Rencontres du réseau Banlieues d'Europe

Banlieues d’Europe poursuit son travail de repérage de projets artistiques et de réflexion sur les alternatives culturelles, sociales, économiques… A l'heure de la crise économique, il est urgent de mettre en perspective des projets alternatifs dans les quartiers des villes, à l'aide de regards croisés d'artistes, d'habitants, de chercheurs, d'élus, d'urbanistes, d'économistes de différents horizons, repérés en France, en Belgique, en Allemagne, en Roumanie, en Grande-Bretagne, en Italie …

© 2009   Created by marlon barrios solano/producer

Badges  |  Report an Issue  |  Privacy  |  Terms of Service