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BALLET DANCERS

Swan Song

May 3, 2016 By Respiro E Movimento · Follow us: Facebook · Twitter · Instagram · YouTube

The Lake of the Swans

In lines and lakes we gather

beating many hearts as one

In rows and flocks we’d rather

spin a tale that’s nary done

Telling stories from the borders

strength in numbers never fails

Until the roles we hope to realize

doth a time and place avail

We hold the weight of dreams encumbered

by narration’s fateful choice

Which claims the bodies of the corps

to give the higher ranks a voice

As hindsight loves to reason

lives we solely choose to live

Time must past to understand

the value only we could give

Moving onwards to new journeys

rows and lines will start to bend

Corps de Ballet

spells the story of a bond that never ends.

— written on a regional Amtrak; Manhattan bound. 03.27.2016

Photograph by Haroldo Kennedy.

(via)

Filed Under: BALLET, BALLET DANCERS, SONG, SWAN

How To Prepare Yourself For Dancing On An Unfamiliar Stage

May 2, 2016 By Respiro E Movimento · Follow us: Facebook · Twitter · Instagram · YouTube

Ballerina by Mai Jüriado

Chelsea Bradley, a freelance choreographer based in Madison, Wisconsin, where she teaches contemporary at Monona Academy of Dance and serves as resident choreographer for Dance Wisconsin, gives us the following steps.

1. Find your spot

Spotting is easy in the studio. I often tell my dancers to use the mirror to look themselves in the eyes. However, when there is no mirror, we must adjust. The most common item in convention center ballrooms and theaters are “exit” signs. If there are none, look for non-moving lights or visible signs. 

2. Survey the floor

If you are able to look at the stage before you perform, consider the following to visualize the spacing of your choreography:

  1. Are there wings (and if so, how many)?
  2. How many strips of flooring (or tape lines) are there?
  3. Are there markings for center or quarter?

If you will be wearing pointe shoes, always have rosin with you in case the stage appears slippery.

3. Check for distractions

Being aware of these distractions before you dance makes it less likely that they will disrupt your performance.

4. Visualize

Once you have surveyed your external surroundings, it is important to make sure that you are mentally prepared to perform. After you have warmed up, use an mp3 player to listen to your music.

 

Photograph by Mait Jüriado.

(via)

Filed Under: BALLET, BALLET DANCERS, CHOREOGRAPHY, DANCE, DANCERS

How To Improve Flexibility

April 29, 2016 By Respiro E Movimento · Follow us: Facebook · Twitter · Instagram · YouTube

ballet-grand-jete

Improve flexibility by performing a few cardiovascular exercises before stretching, in order to loosen up the muscles in the body and increase circulation. Increase flexibility by stretching the legs, quads and hamstrings with tips from a gymnastics coach in this free video on gymnastics. Watch the video below.

Filed Under: BALLET, BALLET DANCERS, DANCE, DANCERS, EXERCISE, FLEXIBILITY, VIDEO

The Body Is Living Art

April 28, 2016 By Respiro E Movimento · Follow us: Facebook · Twitter · Instagram · YouTube

Anna Halprin

Anna Halprin helped pioneer the experimental art form known as postmodern dance and referred to herself as the breaker of modern dance.

Filed Under: ART, BALLET, BALLET DANCERS, DANCE, DANCERS, INSPIRING, MOVEMENT, QUOTES

Creating A Sculpture

April 27, 2016 By Respiro E Movimento · Follow us: Facebook · Twitter · Instagram · YouTube

w-dayna-marshall-christopher-peddecord

“Dancing is creating a sculpture that is visible only for a moment.”

EROL OZAN

 

Ballerina: Dayna Marshall.

Photograph by Christopher Peddecord.

Filed Under: BALLET, BALLET DANCERS, BREATH, DANCE, DANCERS, MOVEMENT, PHOTOGRAPHY, QUOTES

Using The Phones To Show The Dancers Their Bodies And Their Movement

April 27, 2016 By Respiro E Movimento · Follow us: Facebook · Twitter · Instagram · YouTube

dancers Les Grands Ballets Canadiens-4-1

Peter Quanz has created ballets for some of the world’s leading ballet companies. Here is part of an interesting interview on his work as a choreographer.

KM You make bold choices and continually seek out opportunities to collaborate – how have these different experiences informed your perspective as a choreographer?

PQ I am currently collaborating with Montréal Danse for the creation of a new piece. To spark the creative genesis of the piece, Artistic Director, Kathy Casey proposed a question to me – “How would you make a dance if you didn’t consider the audience?”. That flummoxed me, because for me, one of my hang ups is trying to gauge what an audience is going to relate to. But if you always try to make something an audience will like, soon you will end up only sitting in the audience with them.

We started out with an initial two week rehearsal period. We spent the better part of it figuring out different ways of connecting as a group of people, when I suddenly realized that what was most interesting about this collaboration was the bond that we had as a team. The idea became how to find a way to create a social connection with the audience: essentially, a “social experiment”.

We are now building a durational production where the whole audience is animated the whole time through technology. They will be using their phone and their signals will be turned on. We are playing with people’s connection to their phones. We are seeing the phone as an extension of their bodies, as an extension of themselves. We are playing with the idea of how we can be drawn together through this immediate technology while not getting so disconnected from ourselves physically that it ceases to be dance.

KM An interesting paradox.

PQ Oh it’s been fantastic! We are finding ways of using the phones to show us our bodies and our movement in ways you can’t see in a normal performance. We are using video that is taken live, utilizing different perspectives to see parts of an image; using the settings on the phone to both create light or diminish what you see in an image. This is how we build “community” in this performance; and we risk in being brought close together with an audience in an artistic relationship, which is very exciting.

No one on our team has ever done a project like this. We are learning how to define what is happening without over defining things, because this choreography is not about steps. One of our dancers coined the phrase “aesthetic of the situation”.

I’m interested in revealing how artists think in spontaneous ways, how they make choices based on their knowledge of movement and performance; I’m curious about dancers themselves being the vulnerable material from which our experience emerges.”

The work with dancers I have in Montréal requires a sensitivity to an ever shifting relational dynamic – between the artist, their relationships to technology and the structure we have all defined as a group. In contrast with that process, I’ve gone off to work with very classical ballet companies setting choreography that is highly determinate of the music and relates closely to architectural structures in movement, which of course has to be very precise.

Photograph by John Hall.

(via)

Filed Under: AUDIENCE, BALLET, BALLET DANCERS, CHOREOGRAPHY, DANCE, DANCERS, MOVEMENT, TECHNOLOGY

Edgar Degas: The Supreme Painter Of The Ballet

April 26, 2016 By Respiro E Movimento · Follow us: Facebook · Twitter · Instagram · YouTube

In the late 1800s, the famous impressionist painter went often to the Paris Opéra Ballet to watch dancers and draw them, usually capturing the dancers in repose. Although he painted the female body in many other guises—as bathers, singers and even prostitutes, he returned again and again to the ballet. When you see his tutu clad dancers, now part of an expansive exhibit at the Museum of Modern Art in New York, you realize the fantasy and detail he poured into those paintings.

degas

Dancers preparing for performance.

 

degasFrieze of Dancers, 1895.

 

degas Three ballet dancers, monotype, 1878-90.

(via)

Filed Under: BALLET, BALLET DANCERS, EDGAR DEGAS, MOMA, PAINTER, PAINTING, VIDEO

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