This issue is OUT OF PRINT.

Letter from the Editors

The assertion that improvisation is dead is meant as a provocation, not a statement of fact. Historically, movements and ideas have been declared dead when they are in fact transforming and taking on new life and vigor. Our aim with this issue is to bring to the surface the dissonance and tension that exist around the ideas of what improvisation is, how it is valued, and the role it plays in the larger arena of dance as an art form.

The recent Movement Research Festival 2004: Improvisation Is Hard (November 29th through December 12th) provides a starting point for this discussion. Many of us perceived a new sense of diversity in the Festival’s choice of events, venues, and artists. Structurally, the curation had shifted to a seven-member committee of artists who represented a larger sector of the community and varying approaches to what the festival could incorporate and address. During the Festival, questions arose. Did the curators have a consolidated agenda or vision? How pluralistic was the Festival? Was it thought provoking? What were the artists’ and audiences’ responses to it? What do we consider improvisation, and how is the term being stretched and contracted by current practices? And adding to those: How is the language of improvisation tangential to other art forms and disciplines outside the arts? How is improvisation activated by these discourses, or vice versa? We only began to address these questions. However, in this issue, current thoughts on improvisation are articulated, recipes offered, more questions raised and connections made.

It is a pervasive topic in formal and informal conversations that viable and extensive forums for discourse on experimental dance are lacking; that the preview/review format does not fill the need for a real discussion of the ideas and directions taken by artists; that mainstream dance criticism is lagging behind in its scope and focus. A variety of attempts and exercises need to be formulated to counter this neglect. The Journal is one such forum. Mirroring the approach taken to curate the Festival, a six-member Editorial Team came together for the production of this issue. We gravitated towards Movement Research with differing needs, interests, and proposals, and eventually coalesced around the project of editing the next Journal. It is our hope that by continually incorporating the ideas of various artists in the publication of the Journal, we create a vehicle of analysis and dialogue that accurately reflects the diversity of our community.

Thank you and enjoy,
Editors: April Biggs, Kimberly Brandt, Levi González, Isabel Lewis, Alejandra Martorell, and Layard Thompson*

P.S. We also invite you to share your thoughts and reactions to this issue by writing letters to the editors. The letters will be read, posted online, and a selection of them will be printed in the next Journal.

 

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Contents

  • 3 LETTER TO THE EDITOR LAURIE UPRICHARD
  • 3 LETTER FROM THE EDITORS APRIL BIGGS, KIMERBLY BRANDT, LEVI GONZALEZ, ISABEL LEWIS, ALEJANDRA MARTCRELL AND LAYARD THOMPSON
  • 3 EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR'S NOTE CARLA PETERSON
  • 4 CONVERSATION BETWEEH ARTURO VIDICH AND YVONNE MEIER
  • 6 IMPROVISATION AND/AS OPEN SOURCE VERSION 1.2 ISABEL LEWIS
  • 7 CURATING IS HARD MIGUEL GUTIERREZ
  • 8 THE MOVEMENT OF ATTENTION: AN INTERVIEW WITH DANIEL LEPKOFF SIMONE FORTI
  • 10 IMPROV #2 (VIDEO STILLS) LARA HANSON
  • 12 REFLECTIONS ON A PANEL DISCUSSION “OUTSIDE IN THE CITY: REFRAMING THE KINETIC EXPERIENCE OF THE URBAN ENVIRONMENT” GILLIAN LIPTON
  • 14 AS WE MOVE AWAY FROM A THEORY OF IMPROVISATION DAVID VELASCO
  • 15 TRAVELOGUE: AN IMPROVISATION ACROSS BORDERS JONAH BOKAER
  • 16 THE ICKEY SHUFFLE AND THE DIRTY BIRD: AFRICAN AMERICAN IMPROVISATIONAL DANCE IN THE ENDZONE MAURA KEEFE, PhD
  • 18 THE IMPROVISATIONAL NATURE OF THE DRAMATURG/CHOREOGRAPHER RELATIONSHIP: A SERIES OF EXTEMPORIZED MANIFESTOS GLENN D. KESSLER
  • 20 FROM EL SOL BRILLANTE COMMUNITY GARDEN TO STUYVESANT COVE YVES MUSARD
  • 22 WEATHERING THE SCORE JENNIFER MONSON
  • 24 TRANSCRIPTION, A STUDY IN US APRIL BIGGS
  • 26 THE SPACE OF DANCING K.J. HOLMES
  • 27 THE IMPROVISATION OF CURATION: ONE CURATOR’S OBSERVATIONS ISHMAEL HOUSTON-JONES
  • 28 NEW NOISE NEW MEAT CHRIS PECK
  • BEER IS AN INTERESTING SUBJECT MATTER OR NOTES ON A COLLABORATIVE PROCESS BETH GILL, CHASE GRANOFF
  • 29 SLEEPOVER INTERVENTION: WAKING PEOPLE UP BY SLEEPING ANDREA LIU
  • 30 COAXING THE UNFAMILIAR: TAKEN FROM A HANDFUL OF INTERVIEWS BETWEEN BEBE MILLER AND APRIL BIGGS
  • 32 REFLEKT FIRST DANCE IMPROVISATIONAL FESTIVAL SOFIA, BULGARIA, 28.IX.2004-01.X.2004 ELISSAVETA IORDANOVA
  • 34 BEING JON KINZEL ALEJANDRA MARTORELL
  • IN IMPROVISATION THE MOMENT IS THE CRUCIBLE FRANCES ALENIKOFF
  • 35 PSYCHIC NETWORK: RAPID RESPONSE JON KINZEL
  • 36 IMPROVISING WRITING ABOUT IMPROVISING CHOSEN IN NYC KEITH HENNESSY
  • RECOLLECTIONS (PAUL BENNEY’S) OF A PERFORMANCE (KEITH HENNESSY’S) SAM KIM, HEATHER KRAVAS
  • 37 MOVEMENT RESEARCH ARTIST-IN-RESIDENCE PROJECT PAGE

Editorial team

April Biggs, Kimberly Brandt, Levi Gonzalez, Isabel Lewis, Alejandra Martorell, Layard Thompson
Editorial Team
Ingrid Bromberg, In-Grid Design, NYC, www.in-griddesign.com
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Jana DeWitt
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