Fiorucci Made Me Hardcore by Mark Leckey

I had forgotten about this piece made in 1999. Really evocative and provocative in many ways.....

"The work, a video, is a compilation of found footage from the 1970s, 1980s and 1990s underground music and party scene in the U.K. It follows on the path of several previous appropriative art video artists and critics have remarked on its similarities with William S. Burroughs' technique of cut-ups, a literary technique whereupon a text’s sentences or words are cut up and later randomly re-hashed into a new text. Through “found and original footage of discos and raves across Britain during the 1970s, 1980s and 1990s” he “chronicle the rites of passage experienced by successive generations of British (sub)urban youth”.

"Fiorucci Made Me Hardcore patches up several videos of young people dancing, singing and partying. It starts with the disco scene of the 1970s, touches upon the Northern soul of the late 1970s and early 1980s and climaxes with the rave scene of the 1990s. One underlying soundtrack plays during the whole video, giving a sense of unity and narrative to the video. At one point an animated element - a bird tattoo image - appears as if released from the hand of a dancer, then carried into the next shot finds its place on the arm of another of the film's nightclubbing subjects. Some dance moves are played on loop for a few seconds, some are played in slow motion. Writing about Leckey’s first few video pieces, which in addition to Fiorucci… include We Are (Untitled) (2000) and Parade (2003), the art critic Catherine Wood said that they “represent the human subject striving to spread itself out into a reduced dimensionality. His subjects dance, take drugs and dress up in their attempts to transcend the obstinate physicality of the body and disappear in abstract identification with the ecstasy of music, or the seamlessness of the image.”

Book Launch - Choreomania: Dance and Disorder: Kélina Gotman

A reminder the launch event for Choreomania: Dance and Disorder (OUP, 2018) will be taking place at the Horse Hospital, Bloomsbury, next Wednesday 20th June 6.30-8.30pm. Featuring film screenings, theory bursts, and good cheer. 

 

On the book:

 

Choreomania: Dance and Disorder

Kélina Gotman

Oxford Studies in Dance Theory, Oxford University Press, 2018, 384pp.

Description
When political protest is read as epidemic madness, religious ecstasy as nervous disease, and angular dance moves as dark and uncouth, the disorder being described is choreomania. At once a catchall term to denote spontaneous gestures and the unruly movements of crowds, choreomania emerged in the nineteenth century at a time of heightened class conflict, nationalist policy, and colonial rule. In this book, author Kélina Gotman examines these choreographies of unrest, rethinking the modern formation of the choreomania concept as it moved across scientific and social scientific disciplines. Reading archives describing dramatic misformations of bodies and body politics, she shows how prejudices against expressivity unravel, in turn revealing widespread anxieties about demonstrative agitation. This history of the fitful body complements stories of nineteenth-century discipline and regimentation. As she notes, constraints on movement imply constraints on political power and agency. In each chapter, Gotman confronts the many ways choreomania works as an extension of discourses shaping colonialist orientalism, which alternately depict riotous bodies as dangerously infected others, and as curious bacchanalian remains. Through her research, Gotman also shows how beneath the radar of this colonial discourse, men and women gathered together to repossess on their terms the gestures of social revolt.

 

CONTENTS

Introduction: Choreomania, Another Orientalism
Part I: Excavating Dance in the Archives
1. Obscuritas Antiquitatis: Institutions, Affiliations, Marginalia
2. Madness after Foucault: Medieval Bacchanals
3. Translatio: St. Vitus's Dance, Demonism and the Early Modern
4. The Convulsionaries: Antics on the French Revolutionary Stage
5. Mobiles, Mobs and Monads: Nineteenth-Century Crowd Forms
6. Médecine Rétrospective: Hysteria's Archival Drag


Part II: Colonial and Postcolonial Stages: Scenes of Ferment in the Field
7. "Sicily Implies Asia and Africa": Tarantellas and Comparative Method
8. Ecstasy-belonging in Madagascar and Brazil
9. Ghost Dancing: Excess, Waste and the American West
10. "The Gift of Seeing Resemblances": Cargo Cults in the Antipodes
11. Monstrous Grace: Blackness and the New Dance "Crazes"
12. Coda: Moving Fields, Modernity and the Bacchic Chorus

https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/choreomania-dance-and-disorder-book-launch-tickets-45482871493 

“A conceptual tour-de-force! Gotman effectively mobilizes Foucault, Said, Foster, Agamben, and Gilroy to assemble a discursive history of choreomania. Progressive, 21st-century thinking that incorporates critical race theory, feminist theory, and the crucial critique of modern scientific approaches to movement. A triumph for dance studies that reflects an always-changing world-in-motion, ever-activated by shifting political circumstances.”—Thomas F. DeFrantz, Professor of Dance, African and African American Studies, and Theatre Studies, Duke University

 “Offering an astute history of ideas about dance that charts both fears and desires about bodies in movement, Gotman crafts a truly insightful way of thinking, which is to say moving, across and among the archives and the fields in which ‘dance’ is practiced and given to remain, deployed and never quite contained. Throughout Gotman’s keen analyses, 19th-century choreomania is read not only in relationship to but also as the best and the worst of modern biopolitics.”—Rebecca Schneider, Professor of Theatre Arts and Performance Studies, Brown University

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Residency Workshop with Butoh artist Minako Seki: 18 -23 April

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OPEN CALL!

 

Dear all,

Roehampton Dance is pleased to announce an unique opportunity to participate in a residency workshop with the Berlin-based choreographer and Butoh artist Minako Seki, who will be visiting us from 18 to 23 of April. The application process is simple and the deadline is 4th April (see information attached here).

Residency Workshop: 10am - 4pm, Weds 18th - Sun 22nd April

Screening of works: 5pm, Thurs 19th April 

 

In addition to the workshop, the following activities are free and open to the public in general. Mark your calendars!

Workshop sharing: 5pm, Mon 23rd April

Presentation of works-in-progress developed during the workshop.

 

Lecture-demonstration: 12:45-2:00pm, Mon 23rd April

In this lecture-demonstration, the Japanese choreographer Minako Seki will give an overview of her creative method, followed by a practical demonstration. The evening will conclude with a Q&A guided by Dr. Cristina Rosa, whose current research on dance and sustainability has drawn her to Seki’s methodology and artworks. Briefly, the Minako Seki Method weaves Japanese concepts (e.g. Tan-Den or ‘life force’; Ke-Hei or ‘what is behind us’) and Eastern bodily practices (e.g. Butoh, meditation, traditional Japanese medicine) with movement exercises/approaches that enhance one’s perception, imagination and consciousness of being-in-the-world. At the heart of her choreographic process is a unique way of improvising movement, which Seki calls “dancing in between”.

 

All activities will take place at:

Dance department

University of Roehampton | London | SW15 5PJ

 

Workshop Fees: Standard: £60

Student concession: £45

Roehampton staff/students: £20

How to Apply: Send a brief biography and a statement of interest, no more than one A4 page, by 4th April, 12:00, to Katja Nyqvist: k.nyqvist@roehampton.ac.uk 

 

ABOUT MINAKO SEKI: Dancer, choreographer and teacher, founder of the Minako Seki Company. Her artistic approach cannot be separated from her personal philosophy of living, which in a holistic way combines vipassana meditation, macrobiotic cooking and Japanese traditional body healing techniques. Born in Japan, Minako Seki lives and works in Berlin since 1986. Her first source of influence was the Japanese dancers Tetsuro Tamura and Anzu Furukawa. Both have in common a crucial consideration of human and emotional levels and the fusion of contemporary dance and physical theatre with the classic Butohdance technique. In her pieces Seki investigates the communication between the conscious and the subconscious, the description of emotional states and the boundaries between reality and illusion.

Minako Seki: Short portrait of Minako Seki by Nicolas Clément & Kathy Contreras Manzanilla (2014)

https://vimeo.com/83171572

 

I hope that many of you will take part! 

 

Dr. Cristina F. Rosa
Senior Lecturer in Dance
University of Roehampton | London | SW15 5PJ

www.roehampton.ac.uk

office hours: Tuesdays, 12-2 pm [room:LA116a]
Tel: +44 (0) 20 8392 5787

email: cristina.rosa@roehampton.ac.uk

Elisabeth Murdoch's appointment to ACE signals Corporate takeover of the Arts in UK: Sign Petition

Elisabeth Murdoch's appointment to Arts Council England National Council is a corporate takeover of the arts - a takeover facilitated by Sir Nicholas Serota and his wife Teresa Gleadowe

"The appointment of Rupert Murdoch’s daughter Elisabeth Murdoch to Arts Council England’s National Council is not only deeply troubling, given her close ties to the Murdoch corporate empire, but is also a glaring example of how nefarious the UK arts establishment has become. The appointment of ex-Tate boss Sir Nicholas Serota as Chair of Arts Council England has clearly ushered in a new era of favouritism and nepotism in which a tiny select elite grease the palms of each other and their friends and family. Just look at the biographies of the other members of the National Council."

FULL ARTICLE HERE:

http://colouringinculture.org/blog/murdochserotacorporatetakeover?format=amp&__twitter_impression=true

The Receptionist wins Best Film at Sochi International Film Festival

Director Jenny Lu winning the Best Film award at Sochi 2017.

I very much enjoyed working as acting coach with the talented cast of this hard hitting movie.

Radio Show: Guest with Annie Turner on The Outer Limits

The Outer Limits with Annie Turner

Absolutely thrilled to be able to let you know that joining us in the Radio Newark studio on Monday 18th December is Paul Sadot. Dancer, choreographer, director and actor.

He plays "Tuff" in one of my top five films of all time - Shane Meadows' Dead Man's Shoes, set in the heart of the Midlands alongside Paddy Considine, Gary Stretch and Newark's own Toby Kebbell and unfortunately for him he meets a very nasty end indeed.

He'll be choosing some of his favourite tracks and chatting about all sorts. Please join us at 8pm on 107.8FM or online atwww.radionewark.co.uk

KISMIF (keep it simple make it fast) Conference - call for proposals

IT’S NOT ONLY ABOUT MUSIC, IT’S A FANTASTIC ACADEMIC EXPERIENCE. IT’S A LIFE EXPERIENCE.
You don’t have to research punk to get involved in KISMIF Conference, it’s about sociology, popular music, youth and arts cultures and on and on. It’s a huge event in social sciences, humanities and arts. It’s not only about music, it’s a fantastic academic experience. It’s a life experience. Make your proposal today here
 

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PoP turns 10: Celebrating the Popular, Practising the Urban Saturday, 18th November 2017

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PoP turns 10: Celebrating the Popular, Practising the Urban
Saturday, 18th November 2017, 9.45am-6.30pm

University of East London, Stratford, London, U.K

As part of their ten-year anniversary celebrations, The PoP [Performances of the Popular] Moves committee, in partnership with the CPAD research group at the University of East London, invites you to celebrate our annual conference. 

The conference engages with intersections between popular practices and the Urban: the city as a space where culture is created, represented and disputed. 

Keynote: Professor Gabriele Klein, University of Hamburg
‘Urban Choreographies. The Power of the Aesthetic’ 

Questions considered include: 

• What are the risks and opportunities that Urban environments provide for the emergence, spread and survival of popular practices? 

• How do notions of hybridity and cultural exchange operate between the Urban and the popular? 

• How does cultural memory intersect with popular practice in city environments? 

• What are the representations of city and bodies on screen? 

14:20-15:50 ‘Urban Politics’ 

Studio 4, Chair – Dr. Jo Hall 

  • Danced dialogues: spaces of exchange in a northern barrio of Quito, Ecuador

Dr. Sofie Narbed, Royal Holloway, University of London 

  • Moving Politically: Urban gentrification and Hip Hop Dance Theatre

Paul Sadot, University of Chichester 

  • Urbanising body in Japan: Popular dancehall culture in the early twentieth century

Dr. Yuiko Asaba, Royal Holloway, University of London 

 

 

 PoP turns 10: Celebrating the Popular, Practising the Urban - London Conference

Less than three weeks to go until PoP turns 10: Celebrating the Popular, Practising the Urban. 

Registration closes on Sunday 12th November.

As part of their ten-year anniversary celebrations, The PoP [Performances of the Popular] Moves committee, in partnership with the CPAD research group at the University of East London, invites you to our annual conference.

PoP turns 10: Celebrating the Popular, Practising the Urban
Saturday, 18th November 2017, 09:45-18:00
University of East London, Stratford, London, U.K

The conference engages with intersections between popular practices and the Urban: the city as a space where culture is created, represented and disputed.

 

Keynote: ‘Urban Choreographies. The Power of the Aesthetic’
Professor Gabriele Klein, University of Hamburg

 

Speakers include:

“MAKE MY SKIN: Intimate Regeneration of the City”
Oriana Haddad, Embodimenta

Somaesthetics, Rhythm Tap and Populism – Urban Jungle
Dr. Christina Lovey, The Women's Rhythm Tap Collective

"Mazurka in the Atlantic region - from rural Polish folk dance to trans-continental urban popular phenomenon?" Stephanie Alisch, Humboldt University Berlin

The Uploading Movement(s): Understanding the Relevance of Black Lives Matter through Viral Dance
Angelica-Rose Gonzales, University of Roehampton

Flash mobs, Remixed:‘nationalising the global’ in Indian popular performance
Becca Savory Fuller, University of Exeter, with the National Institute of Advanced Studies (NIAS), Bangalore.

From Globeleza to Karol Conka: Retracing Black Dancing Bodies in Brazil’s Mainstream Media since the Country’s Redemocratization
Dr. Cristina F. Rosa, University of Roehampton        

Urbanising body in Japan: Popular dancehall culture in the early twentieth century
Dr. Yuiko Asaba, Royal Holloway, University of London

Danced dialogues: spaces of exchange in a northern barrio of Quito, Ecuador
Dr. Sofie Narbed, Royal Holloway, University of London

Moving Politically: Urban gentrification and Hip Hop Dance Theatre
Paul Sadot, University of Chichester

From the Popular to the Avant-Garde: Jerome Robbins’ Ballets: USA ‘Keepin’ it Cool’
Dr. Stacey Prickett, University of Roehampton

Collegiality and the Crew: Fixing ‘Broken Britain’ through Ashley Banjo’s Big Town Dance (2014)
Dr. Laura Robinson, University of East London

“Welcome to Las Vegas”: Architexture of Urban Liminality in So You Think You Can Dance and Step Up: All In
Dr. Elena Benthaus, University of Melbourne

Toyi-Toying: South Africa’s Popular Dance of Protest in Townships, Suburbs, and Shopping Malls
Dr. Sarahleigh Castelyn, University of East London               

Queer Tango London: Does Integrating Queer Urban Dance Spaces mean Disintegration?
Dr. Ray Batchelor

“Titos of Manila: Queering Hip Hop Spaces in Manila”
Dr. J. Lorenzo Perillo, University of Illinois at Chicago

The conference will also host the Society of Dance Research AGM.

 

Registration is essential for the conference. Please register at link below

https://www.eventbrite.com/e/pop-turns-10-celebrating-the-popular-practising-the-urban-tickets-37639307181

Prices

Society of Dance Research members: Free*    Students/Unwaged: £20      Full ticket price: £40

*Please note that if choosing the Society of Dance Research (SDR) ticket option that all ticket holders will need to be signed up members to the society. 

 

 

The Receptionist by Jenny Lu @ Raindance Film Festival

http://calendar.raindancefestival.org/films/the-receptionist

I was the ensemble acting coach on this film and they were a great ensemble indeed.

The current economic situation in the UK forces many people to seek work in businesses operating beyond the boundaries of law. Tina, a recent university graduate, starts working as a receptionist in a brothel run by the ruthless Lily. The escorts working for her, Sasa and Mei, need money for very different reasons but are equally committed to their jobs and, even more, their wages. Soon the Tina understands how money makes the world go round, but is it worth all the pain it creates, will it fill the void?
The Receptionist is a grim and all-too-real tale of disadvantaged immigrants trying to make a living by any means necessary. The escorts work and live in a dark, claustrophobic house on the outskirts of London, a city known to them only by name, an outside world that exists only beyond the brothel walls, unreachable to them. The Receptionist is a marvelous example of modern social realism cinema where the audience cares and fears for the protagonists from the first shot till the credits roll, and everyone is left with questions which only they themselves can answer.
Adam Samuel Court

Artists 4 Artists presents HumanKind

September 29  / September 30 at 7.30pm

HumanKind

Presented in partnership with Redbridge Drama Centre

A visceral and eruptive triple bill from hip hop theatre network Artists 4 Artists featuring three commissions from four cutting-edge hip hop theatre artists Botis Seva, Caramel Soldier and a collaboration from Joshua Nash and Lee Halls. HumanKind explores the deepest shades of society, what connects our mind, our selves and our nation.

Artists 4 Artists in residence at Redbridge Drama Centre have provided Botis, Caramel, Joshua & Lee with mentoring from hip hop theatre innovators Curtis James, Kwesi Johnson & Robert Hylton. HumanKind is currently a work in progress show and will be available to tour from 2018.

Ticket Information

http://redbridgedramacentre.co.uk/RedbridgeDramaCentre.dll/WhatsOn?ProgrammeType=171989

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PoP Moves Turns 10: Celebrating the Popular, Practicing the Urban Conference

PoP Moves Turns 10: Celebrating the Popular, Practicing the Urban

A conference to be held on Saturday 18th November 2017 at the University of East London.

I will be presenting a paper entitled: 

Moving Politically: Urban gentrification and Hip Hop Dance Theatre

The paper examines the state-led commodification of arts and culture, and the interconnected elements such as mentorships and funding strategies that impact on hip hop dance/theatre artists’ freedom of movement in the UK. It illustrates the nexus between arts initiatives such as Sadler’s Wells Breakin’ Convention project and Arts Council England National Portfolio Organisations and political power. Furthermore, it links these supervisory structures to wider notions of urban gentrification, cultural gatekeeping in UK arts and a globalised corporate initiative: as demonstrated by ‘Olympicopolis’ in South East London. In doing so it proposes a clear link to popular performance practices and the legitimization of gentrification.
Drawing on artist interviews alongside the work of cultural and performance theorists Lorey (2015), Gotman (2015) and Lepecki (2013), ideas of choreopolicing, precarity and dialectics are used to define a spatial narrative through which the HHDT model can be articulated and analysed. The paper proposes a space for the exploration of future counter-narratives that might consider another way of doing and thinking divergent from conventional HHDT choreographic practices.

Humankind - Artists 4 Artists coming soon!

Artists 4 Artists presents

HumanKind

Friday 29th & Saturday 30th September 7.30pm

Presented in partnership with Redbridge Drama Centre

A visceral and eruptive triple bill from hip hop theatre network Artists 4 Artists featuring three commissions from four cutting-edge hip hop theatre artists Botis Seva, Caramel Soldier and a collaboration from Joshua Nash and Lee Halls. HumanKind explores the deepest shades of society, what connects our mind, our selves and our nation.

Artists 4 Artists in residence at Redbridge Drama Centre have provided Botis, Caramel, Joshua & Lee with mentoring from hip hop theatre innovators Curtis James, Kwesi Johnson & Robert Hylton. HumanKind is currently a work in progress show and will be available to tour from 2018.

Supported by Arts Council England & Greenwich Dance

Artists for Growth: Summer develpoment Intensive.

Artists 4 Artists held their first artist development week in February and now we are back for round 2!

We have a few spaces available for the 2nd Artists 4 Growth intensive Monday 24th July - Friday 28th July 10-5pm.

5 days / 5 subjects / 5 teachers and a whole lot of knowledge:

• The impact of music on choreography
• Self producing your work: USP, building partners & marketing
• Spoken word: ways to combine text & movement
• Dramaturgical skills: developing character & narrative
• How to refine your movement palette & language

Deadline to apply is Monday 10th July by emailing an expression of interest to artists4artists@outlook.com. We will inform the successful artists by Friday 14th July.

Grenfell Towers: Red Cross and government corruption and neglect

I am sharing this information and message on my research pages because of its utmost importance. Research and academia cannot and should not dislocate itself from politics and humanity:

"I know this video share is late but it must be said again. The £millions raised by the nation is not reaching Grenfell Fire survivors and relatives. I have heard this too often - survivors with no shoes, not being fed, they are evicted from spaces of respite in the early hours of the morning, the Red Cross is intercepting Grenfell bound survivor donation vans to sell off YOUR donations else where... I do not have time for good intentions for conscience appeasing feel good factor. We must be fully awake to what is happening with Grenfell else we will never comprehend the full extent of the neglect and deception this government is capable of. We must check where we are being conned.

That aside, an outcry about this injustice will hasten Justice, and set precedent in the annuls of UK history documenting moments of community organisation, care and mobilisation.

We must find out what is really going on on the ground and share information like this repeatedly. Repeatedly. Repeatedly, because the misinformation the mainstream media keeps feeding us transmutes into devastating and treacherous politics, not simple manufactured untruths. It is deadly.

Please Share.

Peace.

#JusticeForGrenfell

Pops Mohamed

PoP turns 10: Celebrating the Popular, Practicing the Urban: Call for Papers

A reminder about the Call for Papers for the annual PoP MOVES conference on Saturday 18th November 2017. This year is a special one as it is also our 10 year birthday! The deadline is Friday 7th July.

PoP turns 10: Celebrating the Popular, Practicing the Urban

Saturday, 18th November 2017

University of East London, Stratford, London, U.K

 The PoP [Performances of the Popular] Moves committee, in partnership with the CPAD research group at the University of East London, is now inviting submissions for the 2017 conference

Call for Papers

Ten years after the UK’s first popular performance conference, PoP MOVES, the international research group for performances of the popular, continues to advance the field through cross-institution sharing whilst creating space for rich discussions between scholars, students, performers and practitioners.

Also celebrating its 10th year, the University of East London’s BA (Hons) Dance: Urban Practice degree continues to break the mould of traditional dance degrees. Inspired by the cultural vibrancy and diversity of East London, the programme offers students the opportunity to practice, perform, and theorise hip-hop, club, social and popular styles, contemporary techniques from across Europe and the African and Asian diasporas, and classical and martial movement traditions.

To celebrate these decennial milestones, this conference asks scholars, practitioners and artists to engage with the intersections between popular practices and the Urban: the city as a space where culture is created, represented and disputed.

 

Some key areas and questions to consider include:

The Urban Landscape

·         What are the risks and opportunities that Urban environments provide for the emergence, spread and survival of popular practices?

·         How do the designs of city spaces converge or diverge with popular performance? How do practices gain currency through this relationship?

 

The Urban Jungle

·         How do different migrations and communities who have helped shape urban identity engage with popular practices?

·         What are the ways in which the urban intersects with race and class, and how does this shape and evolve popular practices?

·         How do notions of hybridity and cultural exchange operate between the Urban and the popular?

·         How might popular practices operate with the political in occasions of mass protest and Urban activism?

 

Urban Regeneration

·         How do popular practices operate historically within Urban environments?

·         How might Urban environments create opportunities for the revival of popular practices?

·         How does cultural memory intersect with popular practice in city environments?

Urban Gentrification

·         How do popular performance practices legitimize and negate Urban gentrification?

·         Who is priced out of popular dance and music practices, and to what effect?

·         What are the cultural effects of digital technologies upon popular performance in Urban contexts?

·         What are the representations of city and bodies on screen?

 

Urban Decay

·         How do notions of deprivation and decline impact upon popular practices?

·         To what extent does the vibrancy of moving bodies rupture ideas of deprivation and degeneration?  

·         What are the risks and possibilities of clubbing in the wake of nightclub closures?

More Information: https://popmoves.com/archive/november-2017-conference/

UK Hip hop dance artists making dance/theatre: It's time to debate.

Where is the debate? Well here is an idea, why don't all those hip hop dance/theatre platforms, where artists say they are politically engaged and not engrossed and subjugated by 'the industry', invite activists like Ishmahil Blagrove to speak about working outside of the UK media, and government formulated creative industries? Or just to share undocumented experiences of real UK history. Just a thought...........the debate is long overdue! Jumping through funding hoops or subjugating agency and voice under NPO prerogatives has made many artists lazy and apolitical: scared to bite the hand that feeds them, or that doesn't but might.