This issue is OUT OF PRINT.

From the Editors

As we begin a new season at Movement Research, we want to update readers on the resolution of our battle with the NEA, which began two years ago with the publication of Performance Journal #3: Gender Performance.

     After being debarred from receiving any federal funding because of our refusal to return grant money used for PJ3, Movement Research was about to file a lawsuit in federal court seeking reinstatement at the NEA when a new administration seemed to look more favorably on forgetting the whole thing. From MR’s perspective, litigation would have been costly and most likely undertaken with very little support; from the NEA’s perspective, we can only assume that the less publicity over a publication such as Gender Performance, the better. We settled with payment of a token $225 to the NEA; consequently, MR was reinstated as eligible to receive federal funding. No one made any admission of wrongdoing, and MR as an organization and decided to move on.

     This issue of the Performance Journal, States of the Body, is both a legacy of Gender Performance, and a way in which to continue a dialogue. As the issue took shape we thought about the fact that after Gender Performance was published in 1991, MR was classified by many (artists and funders as well as conservatives and politicos) as a fringe group that was pushing buttons without thinking of what the ramifications might be. We disagree, and unlike the NEA, we don’t want to forget that Gender Performance ever happened. We continue to feel that bodies come in many forms, and our willingness to play with them, experiment with ideas of gender, and stretch the boundaries of performance, are fundamental to dance and performance in the ’90s. We asked Holly Hughes and Bill T. Jones to contribute pieces to States of the Body because we wanted to reflect on the Gender Performance legacy and the debate that ensued.

     Other contributors have written about specific dance techniques, about the metaphorical body politic, about differing cultural attitudes towards the body, about human body cycles (i.e. death, age, and fitness), and about the relationship of dance as a body-dependent art to a technological and mediatized society. By organizing the issue around the title States of the Body we cast a wide net. Ranging from Hanya Holmes’ spine to the intersection of body and technology in Trisha Brown’s work; from Scott Heron’s experience handcuffed to a table to Elizabeth Streb’s performance zone; from Jerri Allyn’s stories about her grandmother and disability to Wendell Beavers’ questions about the place of dance technique, we have assembled an eclectic group of perspectives on the body, art, and society. We hope you enjoy them all, and many thanks to all of our contributors.

– Cathy Edwards and Guy Yarden

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Contents

  • 2 FROM THE EDITORS CATHY EDWARDS, GUY YARDEN
  • 2 ARTS: POWER TO THE PEOPLE
  • 2 ONE WOMAN’S SPINE CHRISTOPHER CAINES
  • 2 DOWNTOWN SEX PANIC AND MISSED CONNECTIONS HOLLY HUGHES
  • 3 INTERVIEW WITH BILL T. JONES PEGGY GILLESPIE
  • 5 THE PERSON AT THE TABLE SCOTT HERON
  • 6 ANGELS HAVE BEEN SENT TO ME JERRI ALLYN
  • 7 EMBODIED MEMORIES EVELYN VELEZ
  • 8 THROUGH YOURS TO MINE AND BACK AGAIN: REFLECTIONS ON BODIES IN MOTION ANN COOPER ALBRIGHT
  • 9 LAPD: PROCESS TO PERFORMANCE JOHN MALPEDE
  • 10 KLEIN TECHNIQUE SUSAN T. KLEIN
  • 10 MY CULTURE COLONIZES MY BODY SARAH EAST JOHNSON
  • 11 MOVEMENT RESEARCH PROGRAMS: FALL/WINTER 1993/1994
  • 15 ACCUMULATION WITH LOOP: TRISHA BROWN COMES HOME JIM EIGO
  • 16 SMALL LAURIE WEEKS
  • 16 TO THE BEAT OF IMPOSSIBLE CAUSES JUDITH REN-LAY
  • 17 POLITICAL FUNERAL ESTHER KAPLAN
  • 18 KINESTHETICALLY BLESSED AND MEDIA CHALLENGED LANCE GRIES
  • 18 LOCATING TECHNIQUE WENDELL BEAVERS
  • 19 JENNIFER MONSON INTERVIEWS ELIZABETH STREB
  • 21 DANCING IN CYBERSPACE JACK WATERS

Editorial team

Cathy Edwards, Guy Yarden
Editors
Audrey Kindred
Advertising
Nehara Kalev
Administrative Intern
Jim Eigo, Vivian Selbo & Acme Art, David Thorne, Esther Kaplan, Sarah Kaplan, McKinsey & Co., Jamie Lawrence, Tal Yarden, Jessica Kindred, Arlene Carmen, Leslie Dennis, Julie Carr, Sondra Loring, Hannah Smotrich, and Dona Ann McAdams
Special Thanks
Kate Ramsey, Esther Kaplan, Patrica Hoffbauer, Tere O'Connor, Janine Williams, Fred Ho, and Richard Elovic
Performance Journal Advisory Board