http://blogs.birminghampost.net/lifestyle/

Be Not Afraid of Dance

By Fiona Handscomb on Apr 15, 09 06:38 PM in Culture

Obsessed with all things dance as I am; I've been recently intrigued by the sheer amount of people that say that although they like dance, they don't really 'get' it - particularly contemporary dance.

Eternal Light 1 (c) Hugo Glendinning.jpg
Eternal Light by Rambert Dance Company. Photo by Hugo Glendinning

I wanted to explore this for two reasons:

1) As a regular dance reviewer and writer I'm a little worried that maybe I don't 'get' it then either; besides a fair amount of dance classes and watching performances, I've never had any formal technical background in dance. Perhaps to really 'get' dance you need this? It's non-verbal communication - and like any other language, in order to understand it you need to be familiar with all its vocabulary.

2) I'm a bit confused about what there is to 'get' - or what 'getting it' really means. One of my favourite dance quotes comes from the amazingly talented US choreographer Alvin Ailey (I'm massively paraphrasing here, because I can't find the quote anywhere): "People are always saying they don't 'get' dance. What is there to get? Some people come on stage and leap around for a bit. That's dance." This comes from one of the current greatest choreographers in the world.


I recently came across this feature in article 19 on William Forsythe's latest dance project; Synchronous Objects, in which he represents his latest work 'One Flat Thing' with a time lines, graphics and commentary, in order to make dance 'more accessible'. Hmmm ... Not sure that it makes dance any more 'accessible' but it's certainly a pretty awesome way of re-interpreting dance digitally.

The problem is, or, perhaps, the joy is that dance is its own language; essentially it's non-verbal communication; so to try and explain it in words, or even time-lines and graphics is inherently flawed. Maybe the crux of the matter is that we're trying to 'understand' dance in the way that we understand other things; superimposing onto it a frame of reference (language, graphics etc) that it doesn't refer to. Perhaps it doesn't need to be 'understood' in this way, but simply experienced.

It could be said that e.g. a classically trained ballet dancer could 'understand' a work in that they could pick it apart and describe its constituent parts and explain the nuances and significances of the technique involved, but I don't really think that's the point. Dance is more than just the sum of its technically detailed parts.

This isn't to say that any of the talented and experienced practitioners, choreographers, directors or critics in the world of dance have no more insight than any audience member, because that would be unfairly dismissing their years of knowledge and expertise in this field. The point is that dance, like all other art forms, can be deeply appreciated without necessarily being understood in all its technical detail - and I think that this is what counts.

I recently went to see the utterly fabulous Rambert Dance Company (pictured above) at the Hippodrome with Abby Corfan, who wrote up the occasion in her blog. What she wrote, to me, typifies this whole matter. Starting off with: "I have ... always enjoyed the spectacle and the sheer physical effort [of dance]. But until I saw the Rambert I wasn't entirely convinced I 'got' dance", she then ends with: "Seeing the Rambert was a fantastic experience - I was completely blown away. ... it was an arts experience that has stayed with me...you never know when and how art can take you someplace else."

That, to me, is 'getting' dance.

(This article first appeared here: http://www.audiencescentral.co.uk/blog/?to=97,131

0 TrackBacks

Listed below are links to blogs that reference this entry: Be Not Afraid of Dance. TrackBack URL for this entry: http://blogs.birminghampost.net/cgi-bin/mt421/mt-tb.cgi/118519

Leave a comment


Type the characters you see in the picture above.

This is to help prevent spamming and confirm you are a human

 

Lifestyle authors

Richard McComb

Richard McComb - Restaurant critic and columnist for The Birmingham Post
My postings | Richard McComb's RSS feed My feed

Fiona Handscomb

Fiona Handscomb - Freelance arts/cultural writer and editor of What's On Stage/Midlands
My postings | Fiona Handscomb's RSS feed My feed

Jon Bounds

Jon Bounds - Digital consultant and creator of Birmingham: It's Not Shit
My postings | Jon Bounds's RSS feed My feed

Selina Jervis

Selina Jervis - Student and creator of fashion blog, "Flying Saucer"
My postings | Selina Jervis's RSS feed My feed

Pete Ashton

Pete Ashton - Pro-Blogger and creator of the “Created in Birmingham�? blog
My postings | Pete Ashton's RSS feed My feed

Nikki Aaron

Nikki Aaron - English language teacher uncovering life in Beijing
My postings | Nikki Aaron's RSS feed My feed

brumcast

Brumcast Lite - A taste of the best of Birmingham's music scene by Brumcast creator Little Chris
My postings |Brumcast Lite's RSS feed My feed

Sarah Gee

Sarah Gee - Young professional and founder of Indigo PR
My postings | Sarah Gee's RSS feed My feed

Jo Ind

Jo Ind - Features writer and columnist for The Birmingham Post
My postings | TJo Ind's RSS feed My feed

Sid Langley

Sid Langley - Freelance writer and cultural commentator
My postings | Sid Langley's RSS feed My feed

Charlotte Beeching

Charlotte Beeching - Former External Affairs Manager at Marketing Birmingham and currently taking a career break to embark on a round-the-world trip
My postings | Sid Langley's RSS feed My feed

Keep up to date

Sponsored Links