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A Choreographer's Score: Fase, Rosas Danst Rosas, Elena's Aria, Bartók

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  27 July 2015

Efrosini Protopapa*
Affiliation:
University of Roehampton

Extract

In the past decade, a growing discourse has developed among choreographers, dance artists, and their collaborators, who are eager to articulate their processes, practices, and working methods through different types of writing and publication. Artists’ books, objects, and online platforms—from Thomas Lehmen's Schreibstück (2002) and FUNKTIONEN tool box (2004), to BADco's Whatever Dance Toolbox (2011) in collaboration with Daniel Turing, and the Forsythe Company's project Motionbank (2010–2013)—have contributed to what we may describe today as the “publishing of choreographic ideas,” as proposed by Scott deLahunta (2015). Jeroen Peeters, editor of Are We Here Yet? (2010), which focuses on the work of Meg Stuart, emphasizes the discourse intrinsic to dance making, while Mårten Spångberg invites artists to “write their own history,” with projects such as The Swedish Dance History (2009–today), to give but one example. Alongside these developments, practice-as-research, which involves dance making and writing, is becoming more established within university settings; and presentations of/on artistic research are now common in conferences, symposia, and other sites of knowledge exchange. We could argue then that the development of an artist's theory of knowledge, which scholars such as Susan Melrose (2007) have been encouraging since the early 2000s, is now well under way both within and without the academy.

Type
Review Essay
Copyright
Copyright © Congress on Research in Dance 2015 

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References

Works Cited

BADco. 2011. Whatever Dance Toolbox. In collaboration with Turing, Daniel. Zagreb, Croatia: BADco.Google Scholar
deLahunta, Scott. 2015. “Publishing Choreographic Ideas: Discourse from Practice.” Research Seminar, University of Roehampton, Centre for Dance Research, January 14, 2015. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=x9o8nY8mMyU. Accessed April 10, 2015.Google Scholar
Lehmen, Thomas. 2002. Schreibstück. Berlin: Thomas Lehmen.Google Scholar
Lehmen, Thomas. 2004. FUNKTIONEN Tool Slip Box. Berlin: Thomas Lehmen.Google Scholar
Melrose, Susan F. 2007. “Still Harping On (About Expert Practitioner-Centred Modes of Knowledge and Models of Intelligibility).” Keynote Presentation, AHDS Summer School: Digital Representations of Performing Arts. National e-Science Centre, Edinburgh, July 2007. http://www.sfmelrose.org.uk/MELROSEAHDSperfarts.pdf. Accessed April 10, 2015.Google Scholar
Peeters, Jeroen, ed. 2010. Are We Here Yet? Meg Stuart. Dijon, France: Les presses du reel.Google Scholar
The Forsythe Company. 2010–2013. Motion Bank. http://motionbank.org/en. Accessed March 28, 2015.Google Scholar
Van Imschoot, Myriam, and Burel, Ludovic. 2005. “What's the Score Now?Multitudes (21).Google Scholar