Saturday, May 17, 2014

Thoughts on Improvised Performance

San Diego is known for its beaches, sunshine, and laid back lifestyle, but few know San Diego as a place for cutting edge dance.  And even fewer realize that San Diego is a place where much research is happening in the way of improvised performance.


Contemporary dance artists have long wrestled with the assumption that improvised dance is somehow less rigorous than choreographed work. Even this distinction between improvised and choreographed is an insufficient way of viewing dance.  I tend to view dance on a spectrum that exists between “set” and “open”. I might add that there is no such thing as a completely “set” piece of work in dance, since our humanness/liveness naturally offer variation from one performance to the next.  Also, there is no such thing as a completely “open” dance, since each dancer brings with her the influences of her own physical and emotional history.

This expansive space between these two impossible extremes is what I am deeply interested in. I feel grateful to be surrounded by other artists who are grappling with these distinctions - diving deeply into embodied research on presence, relationship with audience, relationship with space, connection, disconnection, structures of time, structures of space, content of movement, meaning, memory, imagination, listening, seeing, responding, choice, design...this list could go on.  What I find even more exciting is that within each topic exist millions of potential experiments and viewpoints.

This is why I believe improvisation in dance deserves/needs to be both performed and seen. It is not merely a “style” of dance but a way of being in the world.  A way of never allowing life to become “fixed” or “stale”. A reminder to listen to what my intuition is asking of me at every given moment.  A reminder of my own responsibility, giving me ownership of the choices I make. Improvisation requires that I recognize the evolution that inevitably occurs with time passing. It allows a parent to respond to the changing needs of a child, a doctor to see each patient as an individual, a builder to make adjustments that could make a home safer in its specific environment/location.

Improvisation is about listening.  Improvisation is NOT about entering a space completely blank, but rather showing up prepared with tools (used both consciously and unconsciously) such as movement techniques, performance techniques, practice/experience, and maybe even a plan, score, or structure of some kind.  Much like the parent who reads books on parenting, the doctor who goes through years of schooling, or the builder who locks his tools safely in his pickup truck, not one of us comes to our jobs empty handed. The good ones come prepared.  The great ones come prepared AND willing to listen.


***Please come see improvised performance - "this" (the improvised series).