Contact improvisation
Contact improvisation is a dance technique in which points of physical contact provide the starting point for exploration through movement improvisation.[1] Contact Improvisation is a form of dance improvisation and is one of the best-known and most characteristic forms of postmodern dance.[2]
History
The development of Contact Improvisation was inspired by a dance performance created by Steve Paxton in January 1972. Called Magnesium, it was performed with 11 students at Oberlin College and combined inner-focused movement and athleticism including wrestling and falling, jumping and rolling.[3] Over the following summer, Paxton explored this movement vocabulary further, rehearsing with a group of dancers, including Nancy Stark Smith, at the John Weber Gallery in New York City and gave the first Contact Improvisation performances which reportedly had 'a powerful emotional and kinesthetic effect on audiences.'[3]
The dance form subsequently saw a development of movement qualities from the risky rawness and danger of the initial experiments, to a period of smooth, continuous controlled flow in the late 70s and early 80s, followed by an interest in conflict and unexpected responses including previously avoided eye contact and directive hand contact.[4]
In 1975, the dancers working with Steve Paxton considered trademarking the term Contact Improvisation in order to control the teaching and practice of the dance form, largely for reasons of safety. This idea was rejected in favor of establishing a forum for communication, and the newsletter consequently created became the journal Contact Quarterly.[5] The journal reached volume 38 in 2013, and continues to be published by the nonprofit organisation Contact Collaborations, incorporated in 1978.[6]
Practice and theory
Contact Improvisation (also referred to as "Contact" or "Contact Improv") is practiced as both a social dance form and as a concert. It is an improvised dance form practiced by two or more people who attempt to keep a physical point of contact between their bodies while moving freely without music. The dancing may be slow or fast and often involves rolling and weight-sharing; it is practiced barefoot with loose fitting clothing.[7] It has been described as 'a hydra-headed, worldwide phenomenon: "art sport," theatrical form, educational tool, "urban folk dance," therapeutic bodywork, even awareness practice.'[3]
The central characteristic of Contact Improvisation is a focus on bodily awareness and physical reflexes rather than consciously controlled movements.[8] One of Paxton's original collaborators, Daniel Lepkoff, comments that the “precedence of body experience first, and mindful cognition second, is an essential distinction between Contact Improvisation and other approaches to dance.”[9] Another source affirms that the essence of Contact Improvisation is “mindfulness, sensing and collecting information.”[10]
In the performance context, Contact Improvisation is used either as a dance practice end-to-itself or as a dance research method for identifying new set choreography. As a social dance, the regular meetings (often weekly) of practitioners are called "jams," in which participants dance and watch as they choose over the course of several hours. Dancers practice both known technique and conduct new dance research with different partners or groupings over the course of a jam session. The name "jam" is used in keeping with its use by contemporary musicians, who come together to spontaneously explore musical forms and ideas, with some group agreement about structure and duration of the exploration. While there is now an established Fundamentals technique, all who practice the form contribute to the constant expansion and greater understanding of the dance form, which is exchanged and taught among practitioners world-wide via regional jams, classes, week-long festivals, both print and online publications and, since its inception, via video in a process of dancing/watching/refining. While dancers usually stay touching or in physical contact for much of a dance, a dance can occur in which partners never touch yet there is a clear "listening" and energetic connection/intention that creates the "contact" of their shared dance.
Practitioners may also draw on other Somatics-related approaches such as:
- 5Rhythms
- Action Theatre
- Alexander Technique
- Acrobatics
- Acroyoga
- Adagio
- Cognitive science
- Emergence
- Feldenkrais method
- Eutony
- Gymnastics
- Ideokinesis
- Kinetic Awareness
- Laban Movement Analysis
- martial arts, especially Aikido, T'ai chi ch'uan and capoeira
- Newton's laws of motion
- Parkour
- Skinner Releasing Technique
- Tango
- Yoga
When used as a choreographic technique, movement sequences that emerge during Jam research or rehearsals may be adapted and set to form a part of set choreography, or a score (a set of rules or limiting factors and transitions) may be employed to give dancers a structure to navigate through a performance. Scores can have few or many rules (less rules are referred to as more "open" scores, more rules or closer to set choreography are more "closed" scores).
See also
- Steve Paxton
- Nancy Stark Smith
- Lisa Nelson
- Nita Little
- Grand Union
- dance improvisation
- Judson Dance Theater
- Choreographic technique
- List of dance style categories
- choreographers
- List of contact improvisation festivals
References
- ↑ Novack, Cynthia J. (1990). Sharing the Dance: Contact Improvisation and American Culture. University of Wisconsin Press. ISBN 0-299-12444-4.
- ↑ Banes, Sally (1987). Terpischore in sneakers: postmodern dance. Middleton, CT: Wesleyan University Press.
- 1 2 3 Kamenetz, Anya (3 December 2002). "On balance". The Village Voice. Retrieved 5 November 2013.
- ↑ Novack, 1990 op cit p. 156-8.
- ↑ Smith, Nancy (1998). "A question of copyright - some history". Contact Quarterly: a vehicle for moving ideas 23 (1): 35.
- ↑ "About Us". Contact Collaborations. Retrieved 2 November 2013.
- ↑ Ugincius, Leila. "Contact improvisation is unlike any other dance form you have seen before". Style Weekly. Retrieved 5 November 2013.
- ↑ Novack, 1990 op cit p. 152
- ↑ Lepkoff, Daniel (Winter–Spring 2000). "Contact Improvisation". Contact Quarterly: 62.
- ↑ Kaltenbrunner, Thomas (1998). Contact Improvisation:Moving, Dancing, Interaction. Aachen (Germany): Meyer & Meyer. p. 93.
Further reading
- Novack, C, J. (1990) Sharing the Dance: Contact Improvisation and American Culture. University of Wisconsin Press. ISBN 0-299-12444-4
- Pallant, C. (2006) Contact Improvisation: An Introduction to a Vitalizing Dance Form. McFarland & Company, Inc. ISBN 0-7864-2647-0
- Tufnell, M. and Crickmay C. (1999) Body Space Image : Notes Toward Improvisation and Performance. Princeton Book Co. ISBN 1-85273-041-2
- Encounters with Contact; Dancing Contact in College (2010); Edited by Ann Cooper Albright, with Katie Barkley Kai Evans, Jan Trumbauer, David Brown and Rachel Wortman. Oberlin College Theater and Dance. ISBN 0-937645-13-3
- Barrios Solano, M. (2004) Posthuman Performance: Dancing within Cognitive Systems. http://dancelab1.dance.ohio-state.edu/~barrios/cord.html
- Paxton, S. (1997) in Fall After Newton. Videoda / Contact Collaborations, Inc. (video)
- Stark Smith, N. (1987) in Fall After Newton. Videoda / Contact Collaborations, Inc. (video)