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Photo credit: Willy Jordan Pardo

Photo credit: Willy Jordan Pardo

On a Dancing*

January 8, 2021

In this episode Thomas Bradley and Felix Sampson, create an experimental soundscape to accompany the reading of Thomas’ essay ON A DANCING*, first published on Delving into Dance in November 2019. You can read the full essay here, with an extract provided below.


The declaration is a precursor to the dancing, akin to preparation rather than a recipe. Ideas must be extradited from consciousness through speech or writing, like a clarification of behaviour, or practice of exorcism. And it is after these literary articulations that his liberation, and Good Dancing, will begin: post-declaration, and its attendant extrapolation. In this space, cliché postures may emerge, like archetypes of meaning and value, yet they remain personal somehow; the politics of the action must not be engaged as a communicative tool.

 

N.B. It’s important the audience see me not knowing, 
so they know when I know, I don’t know.

The distinction he is searching for is that between the personal and political. Though, perhaps there can be some value in flirting with politics just as he flirts with clarity. Generally, that should be encouraged, rather than the rampant fucking of art by ideology and ambition.

Do you prefer clarity to nuance?

Are clarity and dynamism mutually exclusive?

  

N.B. In this context, clarity gains its whole value by the creative digression that frames it.
As a measure of universality, clarity is vital in a dancing scene, where so often the desire to communicate
something directly overrides the expression of the dancing experience.
In this sense, clarity must be understood as a prelude to chaos.

What about the becoming of clarity?


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Dalisa Pigram
Dalisa Pigram

‘We value everyone equally, but you know, of course each person has a role to play in the team that's been created, but no one is, you know, less valuable than another.’

Daniel Riley
Daniel Riley

‘My daughter Billie, she was in rehearsal today. My son Archie grew up the first two or three years of his life, like, on tour with me when I was with Bangarra Dance Theatre and just being in the artistic environment and being surrounded by people is such a beautiful gift, I think, that I can give to them as well.’

Antony Hamilton
Antony Hamilton

‘When I'm making dance and when I think about choreography or art, I often relate my early childhood experiences to the things that I make now as well.’

Alice Topp
Alice Topp

‘I guess for a lot of people, ballet is still very much an evolving, developing language. I think people think it was probably stuck in a time and hasn't progressed. But modern ballet is very challenging and arresting and it's finding new ways of working with an old structure.’

On a Dancing*
On a Dancing*

Do you prefer clarity to nuance?
Are clarity and dynamism mutually exclusive?

Samuel Gaskin speaks with Yvette Lee and Sophia Laryea
Samuel Gaskin speaks with Yvette Lee and Sophia Laryea
Elizabeth Cameron Dalman
Elizabeth Cameron Dalman

‘In my hibernation my creativity turned to writing. I spent hours happily at my computer with my writing, which sometimes feels like choreography. The results of these writing hours are some rough chapters recounting special experiences of my life, and in particular, my life here at Mirramu.’

Lillian Crombie
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‘Now your got this time work on your dreams’

Gregory Vuyani Maqoma
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 Edna Reinhardt
Edna Reinhardt

Edna Reinhardt, a passionate creative dance and yoga educator with decades of experience in the field.

In Season Twelve
← Alice ToppSamuel Gaskin speaks with Yvette Lee and Sophia Laryea →

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