Ballet Teaching Aid: Words Of The Week

One of the advertisers on 4dancers is selling a new product that I thought I would share with readers today…”Words of the Week”.

This calendar-style visual aid can help ballet teachers reinforce terminology and help visual learners absorb more easily. Hang in the studio and use to refer to when teaching a new step, or use to theme out the week. There are many different ways to incorporate this neat resource into the classroom. The pages are high gloss card stock, so they should hold up for a long time.

Perfect for the dance studio owner, and good for teaching children of all ages.

Disclosure

 

Perfect for dance studios, teacher gifts, or any dancer.

This visual aid hangs like a spiral bound calendar and displays over
50 ballet terms or phrases. 18 displays with 2 to 4 phrases per display.

Hang the perpetual display prominently in your studio and
turn the page every week or two. Use the “Words of the Week” as a
reminder to discuss, define and illustrate ballet vocabulary.

Students absorb their terminology much faster when they have a
chance to “see” the term. Having the “Words of the Week” system
helps insure you cover essential terms throughout the year.

8.5 x 11 folded. Full display is 11 X 17.
Printed on high quality gloss stock to last for years.

               Words of the Week    $22.95

 

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Margi Cole — On Choreography

This month on 4dancers you’ll notice posts on choreography. Today we have Margi Cole, Artistic Director and Founder of The Dance COLEctive, a Chicago-based company that has been around for over 16 years…

Margi Cole

When did you first take an interest in choreography and what drew you to it?

Believe it or not my interest in choreography started young.  I organized neighborhood kids and actually produced performances in the garage at a neighbors house. Funny to think about now.  I think I really enjoyed gathering and organizing groups of people.

How do you see the role of the choreographer in the dance world?

This is a hard question.  I guess the privilege of being a choreographer is creating the opportunity for others to see something new.  The power to create an image or explore an idea that resonates with someone long after the live performance.

What is your own choreographic process?

I work very collaboratively.  Usually I come in with an idea and some plans around how I want to explore that idea whether it be through the development of movement vocabulary, research, personal writing exercises and conversations about our own experiences.  I share this with the group and then we go on from there.  The process is informed by everyone’s participation and my role inevitably as the editor.

“COLEctive Notions 2012” is coming up in May, and it’s a showcase for choreography from members of your company. Can you talk a bit about how you helped mentor the choreographers through the process of creating works for this program?

First, they had to submit a proposal where they put forward their ideas in writing.  While this seems simple, it is often a great challenge to clarify ones ideas in writing.  It is an important and necessary tool.  From there they work on their own for an extended period of time.  When they are ready they invite me in for feedback, ask me questions, look to me for direction and confirmation that their ideas are working.  I encourage them through the process and help them see it to the final stages for performance.

What are the greatest challenges for new choreographers in terms of creating a work?

Having the resources they need to create work whether it be space or the knowledge of how to assemble a group and produce a performance or access to a “mentor” to help them explore their ideas and ask them questions throughout the process.

Is the relationship a reciprocal one? Do you learn anything from the choreographers?

Absolutely!  It is so interesting to see what they value in terms of craft.  Watching them helps me to further define my own aesthetic and watch them deepen their own.  It is pretty awesome!

What is the most surprising thing you have learned since you have been choreographing dances?

The power of a strong visual image.  How important it is to be honest in the process with yourself, your collaborators and your audience.  That the options for creativity are endless and that fills me with fear and wonder!

BIO:

Margi Cole graduated from the Alabama School of Fine Arts, received a Bachelor of Arts in Dance from Columbia College Chicago and a Masters of Fine Arts in Dance from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. As a teacher and guest lecturer, she has taught for numerous educational and professional organizations such as the Alabama Ballet, the American College Dance Festival, Ballet Tennessee, Northwestern University, Columbia College Chicago, and various other institutions throughout Illinois, the Midwest, and the Southeast. As a choreographer, Margi has been commissioned by The Alabama Ballet, Springfield Ballet Company, Sanspointe DanceCompany, the Birmingham Museum of Art, Girl’s Preparatory School of Tennessee, Beloit College and Columbia College Chicago.

As a performer, Margi has danced with well-known choreographers and companies, including Ralph Lemon, Joe Goode Performance Group, Liz Burritt, Stephen Koplowitz, Ann Boyd, David Rousseve, Bill Young, Douglas Nielsen, Timothy O’Slynne, Paula Frasz, Colleen Halloran, Molly Shanahan/Mad Shak, Mordine & Company Dance Theatre, Renee Wadleigh, and Ellie Klopp.  In August 2011, Cole traveled to Finhorn Scotland to join 19 international performers to participate in the Deborah Hay Solo Commissioning Project.

Awards and acknowledgements of Margi’s accomplishments include making the list of “Teachers Rated Excellent by their Students”  four consecutive semesters while on faculty at the University of Illinois, receiving two Dance Center of Columbia College Choreographic Mentoring Scholarships, two Illinois Arts Council Individual Artist Fellowships, a 2005 Chicago Dancemakers Forum grant, a American Marshall Memorial Fellowship, and winning a Panoply Festival Choreography Award for Contemporary Dance in Huntsville, AL.

Margi is active in the Chicago dance community, serving on grant panels and in public forums as an arts administrator, dancer and choreographer.  In 2011, she was integral in organizing both the Dance/USA and Marshall Forum annual conferences in Chicago.  Cole is currently a Chicago Dancemakers Forum Consortium Member and is part of the Marshall Memorial Fellowship Selection Committee.  She is currently on faculty at Columbia College Chicago, where she has served as a Lecturer and Associate Chair. Most recently she was name on of The Players in New City’s “Fifty People Who Really Perform in Chicago” List.

 

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Dancers: Exploring Identity, Passion & Injury

by Emily Kate Long

Emily Kate Long, Photo by Avory Pierce

This installment of “Finding Balance” is an exploration of the psychology of dancers’ passion and how that passion affects the way we cope with time off—balancing the dancing self and the non-dancing self.

I view my life as having two parts: the time I spend dancing, and the time I spend doing everything else. I am always a happier and more confident person when I feel I’m being artistically productive, and I know I’m not alone in this: any dancer who has had to take time away from the studio due to injury, a scheduled layoff, or the loss of a job knows the frustration and uncertainty that can accompany the interruption.

My schedule (maybe yours too!) dictates four- to nine-week stretches of rehearsal alternating with two- to fifteen-week periods of layoff. The emotional high of performance always lasts a few days into the layoff, but then I get slammed by this intense fear of how out of shape I’ll feel when rehearsals for the next ballet start. I experience feelings of inadequacy because I’m not busy enough. I become paranoid about weight gain and loss of skills, and insecure because I attach a lot of my self-esteem to how well or poorly I dance on any given day. Even with the best intentions to make good use of my time off, it’s definitely a struggle to stay positive and productive when I don’t have a structured rehearsal day.

Why the anxiety? Undoubtedly, dancers are passionate about what we do, and to varying degrees we define and identify ourselves by our work in the studio. In a paper I read recently (Clint Galloway, resource 1, below), athlete identity is characterized by three aspects, present in an individual in different proportions depending on the person. If we substitute “dance” for “sport,” the following list can very aptly apply to dancers as a measure of  “dancer identity:”

Read more

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Musings: Every Body Dances

by Kimberly Peterson

When I first began college at Texas Woman’s University, there was a slogan – a motto of sorts for the department: Every Body Dances.

Not everybody dances, but Every Body Dances. The distinction is important – because it necessarily includes every body: type, shape, size, age, and ability. This belief is so integral to TWU’s Department of Dance, that it radically changed how I approached movement, creativity, my body and my journey as a dance artist.

Ability is something most dancers pride themselves on: the ability to execute movement well, the ability to perform, the ability to manipulate their bodies to do as they desire. However, ability is a spectrum – and the loss of an ability need not negate the ability of an entire body. And it certainly does not consume the identity of the person.

Adaptive dance seeks to allow for differences in ability while creating high caliber performances. In essence, it treats all dancers, regardless of ability, as dancers and works within whatever levels of technique, skills, performance they bring with them. It is a deceptively simple concept – and marvelous to behold!

Two fascinating examples of great work come from DV8 Physical Theater and AXIS Dance Company.

DV8 Physical Theater is a UK based movement troupe. The clips below are from their Film The Cost of Living and feature David Toole, who is a remarkable mover and actor.

What I find most engaging is that David Toole makes full use of his abilities. He’s not attempting to look like he has legs, he simply moves without them – furthering the creative development of movement within the pieces he dances in. I find the perspective shot from David’s level to be highly interesting, and find the movement his body attains extremely engaging. The perspective of these shots highlight the relationship between the dancers’ bodies and space which, in some instances, is much more interesting to me than the actual movement. (Video 2) David displays a level of physicality and commitment to his movement that is equally impressive!

AXIS Dance Company, who you may remember as a guest performance from So You Think You Can Dance, has stunning work involving a wheelchair.

The fantastic movement made with the bodies they have, highlights their ability rather than the differences between them. The movement varies in tempo and intensity, dynamically pushing the limits of what is “safe” into realms that are both interesting and captivating. I was especially excited to see that they utilized the full range of possibilities with the chair: using the chair off balance (1:27, 1:31, 2:16), utilizing weight sharing (:45-:51) from both partners (3:15), both physically initiating (1:14) and receiving partnering (1:20), and was especially excited to witness the chair in use for counter-balance (1:00) and the initiation of bodily momentum (3:00). The choreographer, Alex Ketley, really utilized Rodney Bell and engaged his whole body, which includes the use of a wheelchair.

However, there is no condescension, no “inspirational” tone. There are just artists, doing what they cannot help but do – dance beautifully. However, this lack of “inspiration” is important. While it is always enlightening and exhilarating to see amazing work, we do the dancers a disservice if we only focus on what ails them – or what makes them different. What is most important in a dance work, has to be what the work is saying to you, the communication and dialogue happening between you, the dancers and the choreographer. We take away the beauty and magic of that moment by reducing the whole to the sum of their parts.

Accepting that no body is the same, that no mind thinks alike, that no one interpretation of movement can encompass the whole of the experience – this is what makes our medium a lived art, an experience rather than a stagnant piece.

Every Body Dances.

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Keeping Dancers Dancing – Conditioning

by Jan Dunn, MS

Jan Dunn, MS

You’re a dancer.  You spend hours every day taking class / rehearsing / performing – so you must be in great physical shape, perfectly conditioned to withstand the demands of your chosen profession – right ???  Don’t be too sure  – that may not be the case! Dancers are not always as “fit” as they think they are, in regard to this important aspect of their training.

“Conditioning” means to be physically fit, in certain defined ways (read on!), so that your body can safely perform the physical demands you ask of it, with the least risk of possible injury.  Dance is one of the most physically demanding activities a person can do.  A famous study at Lenox Hill Hospital in New York (1975) compared all forms of sports, including dance, in terms of the athletes’ physical fitness capacities.  Ballet, boxing, and hockey were ranked at the top, in terms of requiring high levels of strength, endurance, flexibility, cardiovascular fitness, and other measures of fitness.  Understanding what this means for you personally is crucial to your well being and LONGEVITY as a dancer !

There have been a number of books written especially for dancers (listed at the end of the article) specifically about fitness for dance, so clearly there is a lot of researched information out there.  Today we’ll just touch on the basics, and if you’re interested, I encourage you to find out more on your own.

What ARE the aspects of conditioning that we need to understand?  The list below tells us, and it’s important to know that ALL are equally important for a well-trained body (these are not listed in any order of importance):

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10 Questions With…Bulareyaung Pagarlava

Today we have 10 Questions With… choreographer Bulareyaung Pagarlava…

Choreographer Bulareyaung Pagarlava

1. How did you become involved in dance?

When I was 12, I saw a performance by Cloud Gate Dance Theatre of Taiwan, though I didn’t know it was Cloud Gate until some years later. It was so inspiring that I made up my mind to become a dancer.

2. What are you currently doing in dance?

Mainly choreographing.

3. Can you explain your approach to choreography?

I don’t create work for the sake of creation. I am not a movement-oriented choreographer interested in analyzing physical moment.

All my choreography reflects my thoughts and emotion. Choreography is a medium of expression. It is my way of connecting to the world.

4. What role does the music play in your choreography?

In my work, music plays a vital role. It offers a room for imagination. In my earlier works, choreography began after I found my music. So the works were often built upon the structure of the music.

In recent years, new choreographic ideas come first, followed by the body moments, then I match them with music. When music comes into place, it’s like there’s a spark.

For the audience who does not enjoy my choreography, they can at least enjoy good music with their eyes closed.

5. Do you have other choreographers that you admire? If so, who and why?

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Experiencing Ballet Hispanico

by Catherine L. Tully

Ballet Hispanico Performing Asuka, Photo by Paula Lobo

I recently had the chance to see Ballet Hispanico for the first time at The Dance Center of Columbia College Chicago, and it was an interesting experience. The program for the evening included four pieces: Naci, Locked Up Laura, Espiritu Vivo and Asuka.

Unless something strikes me in a particularly strong way, I find I usually don’t say too much the first time I watch a company on stage–especially if they are performing works I have not seen before. Instead I prefer to let the evening wash over me a bit so I can get a feel for the style, the dances being presented and the overall dynamic that the company puts forth. What I was left with after walking out of the theatre here can be summed up in one word–honesty.

There is an earnestness and ease that the dancers had–and it felt very genuine. This was especially so during the more upbeat portions of the choreography; as if expressing joy came a bit more naturally than anything else. Indeed, the choreography took a back seat to the personalities of the dancers here. This is especially true of Jessica Alejandra Wyatt, who dazzled the audience with more than her sequined dress in Eduardo Vilaro’s Asuka - a tribute to salsa legend Celia Cruz.

Other images that stand out from the offerings here include Min-Tzu Li’s gorgeous extension during Locked Up Laura and company member Jamal Rashann Callender–who simply commands attention every time he steps onto the stage. The dancers in Ballet Hispanico are strong technicians with beautiful, athletic bodies–which adds another layer of visual appeal.

I’ll look forward to seeing them again the next time they come to Chicago.

Learn more about the company and the dances in their repertory.

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Paul Taylor Dance Company — Up Close

by Christopher Duggan

When Paul Taylor Dance Company invited me photograph their dress rehearsals, I was really excited to make photographs in the amazing (and enormous!) David H. Koch Theater at Lincoln Center. I had never photographed in that theater before and have always wanted to. It’s a symbol of great performance art, the highest standards, the home of New York City Ballet and synonymous with “uptown” dance. To have the chance to photograph the incredibly talented dancers of Paul Taylor Dance Company on this stage made me smile from ear to ear.

The company’s PR representative welcomed me into the theater and pointed to where I was to photograph from: the back of the house. The New York Times and two other photographers were already set up–but it was FAR from the stage, behind the tech table, center orchestra; seemingly a football field’s distance from the dancers. This just wasn’t going to work for me.

I asked if I could sit any closer. Mr. Taylor would be sitting center orchestra just in front of the tech table, and I was instructed not to sit anywhere in front of him so as not to distract him or disturb his sight-lines.

But front row orchestra left was fair game and I took my position. This made me much happier. I was as close to the dancers as I could be and I was now envisioning my angle for the shoot. My intention was to cut off limbs and to really get intimate. The Paul Taylor dancers are superb technicians, gorgeous at every turn. I wanted to see their sweat. Something like: “Paul Taylor: Up Close.”

I was happy with my results, finding toil and drama and personality in the dancers, even in that enormous theater.

 

Contributor Christopher Duggan is the founder and principal photographer of Christopher Duggan Photography, a New York City-based wedding and dance photography studio. Duggan has been the Festival Photographer for Jacob’s Pillow Dance since 2006. In this capacity, and as a respected New York-based dance photographer, he has worked with renowned choreographers and performers of international acclaim as well as upstarts in the city’s diverse performance scene.

Christopher Duggan

He has created studio shots of Gallim Dance, Skybetter +  Associates and Zvidance, among others, and in 2011 alone, he has photographed WestFest at Cunningham Studios, Dance From the Heart for Dancers Responding to Aids, The Gotham Dance Festival at The Joyce Theater, and assisted Nel Shelby Productions in filming Vail International Dance Festival.

Duggan often teams up with his talented wife and Pillow videographer Nel Shelby (http://nelshelby.com). A New York City-based husband and wife dance documentation team, they are equipped to document performances, create and edit marketing videos and choreography reels, and much more.

Christopher Duggan Photography also covers Manhattan’s finest wedding venues, the Metropolitan and Tri-State areas, and frequently travels to destination weddings.  The company’s mission is straightforward and heartfelt – create timeless, memorable images of brides, grooms, their families and friends, and capture special moments of shared love, laughter and joy.

His photographs appear in The New York Times, Destination I Do, Photo District News, Boston Globe, Financial Times, Dance Magazine, Munaluchi Bridal, and Bride & Bloom, among other esteemed publications and popular wedding blogs. One of his images of Bruce Springsteen was added to the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame’s celebrated photography collection in 2010. His company has been selected for inclusion in “The Listings” in New York Weddings magazine.

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Adult Ballet Student: Steve Ha

As we continue with our focus on Adult Ballet this month, please welcome Steve Ha…

Steve Ha

1.      How did you first get involved with ballet and what attracted you to it as an adult?

I started dancing in my twenties—ancient by dancer standards—as a senior in college, just to pursue new creative outlets. Though various performing arts have played crucial roles throughout my life, dance was the final frontier, and I really just wanted to try it. I started with beginner’s jazz and modern classes and had fun with both, but my teachers often stressed the importance of ballet training so the subsequent quarter I enrolled in ballet. Everything about it made sense because not only did it touch upon my roots as a classically trained musician, it also gave me the opportunity to act and express myself without having to speak (or worse, sing) a single word. Ballet also elicited a strong desire to be disciplined about the practice and an eagerness to learn that I had never experienced as a student before.

2.      How many classes are you currently taking per week?

I try to get in the studio two to three times a week. Although, when I was still attending university I took class almost every day and those were some of the happiest times of my life!

3.      What do you see as your biggest challenge as an adult ballet student?

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Choreography and Music: Alexandra Beller and Robert Poss

by Johnny Nevin

Photo by Peter Crane

If a really prestigious university could get a big enough research grant, they could do an epic study of artistic collaboration, and probably prove that it’s impossible. Any collaboration involving choreography and music should be especially improbable; the individual creative challenges of each are far too complex by themselves to start trying to share them, prioritize them, or somehow translate them into a single coherent process.

Despite all of the potential difficulties, choreographers and composers often work together, and few have been able to do so as consistently and convincingly as choreographer Alexandra Beller and composer Robert Poss. Each is a proficient contributor to their separately complex worlds. Beller has brought her company Alexandra Beller / Dances through ten acclaimed years of dance making and dance performance (creating what the New York Times has called “strong, deft, emotionally resonant theatre); Poss continues to make widely admired music with the originality and intensity of someone exploring brand new worlds, even though he has enough history and discography to choke a search engine. Their successful collaboration as choreographer and composer quietly defies the challenges of all such endeavors, and this April, audiences at New York’s Joyce Soho will have the chance to see their latest work together, Beller’s “Other Stories”.

“Other Stories” is the most recent project in Beller and Poss’ multi-year collaboration, but beyond the noteworthy news of an important work from an intriguing choreographer, set to an original score by an inspired composer, there lies another narrative. Rich and complex like a good mystery, it’s the surprising story of how a choreographer and a composer share their indefinable creativity.

Artists who work together have to move through a series of difficult creative decisions, advancing separate inspirations toward a single result. They have to somehow find a process that can accomplish this, but process can be the most dangerous part of collaboration. It has to be shared, understood, and agreed upon, whether explicitly or not, and neither individual can possibly be as comfortable as they would be with their own individual approach. Beller and Poss share an ability to not only accept this, but to welcome it. “I try to be out of my comfort zone more often than not,” Beller says, “I try to be lost for a large part of my process.” Poss is equally ready to welcome the unknown. “Out of the comfort zone is a fun place for me to be. I’m aware of my strengths and limitations. It’s nice to get push-pulled into a new area where you find new strengths.” Each of them seems to be able to suspend their own creative direction long enough to be sure they understand the other’s.

Both artists have an unusual awareness of process; Beller’s, paradoxically, is both carefully thought out and rigorously intuitive. “Other Stories” is the complex product of her imaginative approach to a fundamental artistic challenge, how to make a fully-realized work from moments and pieces of inspiration. At alexandrabellerdances.org she writes, “The fallout from our lives, like flakes of snow in a snowglobe, is suspended inside of us. I am working to find a way to describe our lives physically and emotionally, through unconscious storytelling. The process will include copious amounts of writing and improvising, and eventually will reveal a set of vivid, interconnected stories from each performer.”

Poss is not as explicit in his definition of process, but in a different way just as emphatic. His success as a composer followed his accomplishments as a guitarist; Tape Op Magazine described him as a “guitar genius … the master of treated and manipulated guitars”, and this mastery is rooted in his intuitive ability to use process as a creative method. At robertposs.com you find this description of the beginnings of his unique sound: “Eventually Poss realized that the sound of feedback, distortion and ringing overtones was “the cake, not the frosting” and began trying new ways of writing songs by layering simple chord patterns over drones and looped riffs.” Like Beller, his approach to the challenge of successfully expressing an abstract idea is rooted in an understanding that how you make art can in many ways determine what art you can make.

Beller and Poss’ work together on “Other Stories” represents a progressive development in their collaboration. Beller’s emphasis on inclusion is strong, but she doesn’t usually begin her process with music. “Music always comes in later, because I’m very easily swayed by music,” she explains. In “Other Stories”, though, Poss’ involvement was more integral, and Beller’s description of the change is illuminating. “I’ve never allowed myself to be led by the music at this level. In the past, movement has come first, then Robert would put music on top of the material and we’d knead them together for some time. In this project, Robert and I were simultaneously making parallel choices, working on two parallel tracks, which we would then draw together until they converged. We would see what kind of friction was created, what kind of magic was created.” Like Poss, Beller is comfortable in a broad landscape of possibilities, open to a wide spectrum of possible expression.

Writing about the individual experiences and story lines that together are the subject of “Other Stories”, Beller defines the articulate elegance of her vision for the work. “These stories collectively make us who we are as individuals. As a group, these stories create a series of woven patterns that function as relationships. Those relationships create a community.” The audiences that see Alexandra Beller / Dances perform “Other Stories” at Joyce Soho this April will see a series of richly researched individual narratives that Carrie Stern, writing in the Brooklyn Eagle, describes as “evocative and moving”, set to an imaginative original score by a multi-gifted composer.

They will also hear and see the silent and invisible traces of another unique story, the story of how individual vision can evolve, change and grow in ways too intricate to remember, too abstract to identify, in the artistic collaboration between a choreographer and a composer.

Performance Schedule & Ticket Purchase – Apr 4, 8, 13, 19 & 21 at 7:30pm, Apr 7 & 15 at 2pm

Kickstarter Fundraising Campaign until 4/1

Johnny Nevin

Johnny is an independent music producer, and the Resident Composer and Sound Designer for Thodos Dance Chicago. He is a member of the musical group ‘ohana Dreamdance, whose releases imaginatively interweave original scores for choreography with beat-driven dance tracks. Johnny’s original compositions and sound designs have been featured in the repertories of a wide range of professional Dance Companies, and have been performed all around the world.

Johnny Nevin writes extensively about choreography and music at 4dancers.org and at aotpr.com. His writing expresses the unique creative approach that has made him successful both as producer and sound designer, by seeking always to better understand what other artists are trying to make.

Johnny is the Music and Dance writer at 4dancers.

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