August 9, 2009 at 8:09 pm · Filed under Uncategorized
So much to consider right now. I’ve been rehearsing and programming like crazy as I prepare for my show at the milkbar THIS Friday August 14. I’ve been spending the last several weeks dancing with Nina Haft at Shawl Anderson Dance Center, beginning a Feldenkrais workshop with Mary Armentrout at Shawl and entering a fieldwork with several other bay area artists. As I condition myself I’ve been gearing up to condition my own thoughts and thinking on dance within the academy and my choreographic practice. I had a lovely conversation with Petra Kuppers about her forthcoming manuscript last week. While writing rhizomatically on process, movement, poetry, documentation, practice, theory, experience, embodied memory and more through history, theory, practice, experience, theorizing history, historicizing practice, questioning history and the archive and more… Petra has created a manuscript of folds. As Tim Murray’s new book, The Digital Baroque looks toward the Deleuzian fold and Petra’s book seems to move toward exemplifying it I wonder how my practice, theory and experience are folds in themselves as they fold together. The Feldenkrais and work with Nina have pushed me to realize that within my own process I experience each installation of my work through micro-movements and attentions.
This is how I’ve been approaching my choreography and how I’ve been literally folding my tech into my practice. My movements are inspired directly from experiences dancing with sensors. I wear sensors on my wrists. What happens when I move? The three axis accelerometers that I’m working with respond with sound output…sound interactions that I have programmed. This time programming is my immobile creative process. Sitting at a computer much like I’m doing now I connect object to object with things called “patchcords” in Max. I make things talk and I map virtual movement through a program of physical movement and sound. Different sounds and interactions push my momentum in different directions. Programming I feel sometimes like I’m connecting random points to other random points…on the contrary, these points are not random, but represent specific functions that when connected correctly in the appropriate map produce a specific product. This map makes something happen. Perhaps this process pushes me to choreograph in a similar way as I experience the programmed product through my own movement. Lately I’ve been feeling like my movement process produces a boring product. What does it mean? Is there an overarching theme? How are my dancers relating to each other? How am I relating to my dancers? My movement is random. My movement is spastic or frantic. What I am trying to convey through this display of somatic intention? As I move myself it feels as though I represent a technical process…a technical process grounded in a theoretical exploration that is inspired by artists including Deleuze, Merleau-Ponty and most lately Anthea Kraut and Petra’s work. Also, as I read of Erin Manning’s philosophical explorations through technology and movement I implicitly move and respond to her ideas. My movements, therefor are not random. They are not spastic or frantic. Rather, each movement serves a particular function. This function when connected appropriately in the choreographic map produces a product based on my technical and theoretical process. My product is process and represents or repeats process.
Recently I received some feedback. My intention in my look may not be clear. How am I as the performer relating to the movements? It looks as though my body is moving me while myself is waiting to see what my body does next. Often this is my relationship to technology and to theory. I am programming and learning to program. I am reading and theorizing the theory that I read and I am writing my own theory. As I do both of these things I am often swimming in the darkness waiting for my next inspiration to pop. This is a guided swimming. My objects are pushing my swim in a very particular direction with a specific function. I am trusting them and experiencing them until I am inspired by my experience and produce the next step, which will also undoubtedly serve a very specific function. My artistic process too is representative of this experience as it performs the very process.
Perhaps my movement is boring. Is it artistically “responcible” to make my audience watch my process? Why is this interesting? Where is the humor? Where is the entertainment? Is there humor or entertainment in my own map of folds over folds in folds and as folds?
May 25, 2009 at 2:33 pm · Filed under Artworks

In this short clip I perform a movement study with four accelerometers. With more movement in my body you will notice more movement in the video projection and sound output. I will continue exploring interactions with sensors as I develop them alongside my choreography without sensor technologies. All of these choreographic explorations will be developed over the next year as I work toward my next evening length performance.
Click to watch clip!
May 25, 2009 at 2:17 pm · Filed under Artworks, Events, Link
I’m beginning to think in choreographic experiences again. Journaling and allowing my experiences to materializes in creative impulse. I’m currently trying to decide whether or not I want to use interactive technologies like wearable sensors in my composition, which I will show at Oakland’s The Milk Bar this August 14th. I am thinking of using this composition to explore interaction that is virtual in the physical sense of the word. Friends recently made a video that deals with analogue/digital conversion, the physical choreography that comes with drawing, and mechanical construction as performance. I think I am going to “interact” with these different artistic processes. I have gained so much inspiration from learning how to program. I am interested in how much of this has to do with the technical aspects of live interaction, and how much with having the opportunity to exercise my intellectual/creative abilities in new and interdisciplinary ways. Nonetheless, I will also continue learning more about microcontrollers this summer. I’ll be learning how to use the Arduino Lilypad, a textile based microcontroller and will continue exploring Jitter!