skellis @ posterous http://skellis.posterous.com ... on dance, art & things posterous.com Wed, 02 Dec 2009 01:07:00 -0800 Moves2010 "Framing Motion" http://skellis.posterous.com/moves2010-framing-motion http://skellis.posterous.com/moves2010-framing-motion

http://www.movementonscreen.org.uk/

Deadline 13 December 2009.

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Wed, 25 Nov 2009 13:30:08 -0800 hitherto http://skellis.posterous.com/hitherto http://skellis.posterous.com/hitherto Here's F.M. Alexander on welcoming the unknown:

"... that the attempt to bring about change involving growth, development and progressive improvement in the use and functioning of the human organism, calls necessarily for the acceptance, yes, the welcoming of the unknown in sensory experience, and this 'unknown' cannot be associated with the sensory experiences that have hitherto 'felt right'."

From p.19 of The Use of the Self.

I just love that Mr A is simply saying that it must feel wrong. It is as if dance training has it all back to front with its reliance on the desire to have movement actions make sense.

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Fri, 20 Nov 2009 02:17:00 -0800 double-take http://skellis.posterous.com/double-take-4 http://skellis.posterous.com/double-take-4

"... will have guests doing a double-take as they admire your creative home or garden style!"

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Wed, 11 Nov 2009 02:06:00 -0800 unlike other marshmallow blasters! http://skellis.posterous.com/marshmallow-shooter http://skellis.posterous.com/marshmallow-shooter

Every household needs one.

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Mon, 09 Nov 2009 02:24:39 -0800 Improve your hearing and enhance your image! http://skellis.posterous.com/improve-your-hearing-and-enhance-your-image http://skellis.posterous.com/improve-your-hearing-and-enhance-your-image

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Sun, 08 Nov 2009 12:56:45 -0800 A Dead Statesman (1924) http://skellis.posterous.com/a-dead-statesman-1924 http://skellis.posterous.com/a-dead-statesman-1924 I could not dig, I dared not rob,
And so I lied to please the mob.
Now all my lies are proved untrue,
And I must face the men I slew.
What tale will serve me here among
Mine angry and defrauded young?

From Epitaphs of the War, 1914-1918

Rudyard Kipling (1865-1936)

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Thu, 05 Nov 2009 02:33:00 -0800 Yoga for cyclists http://skellis.posterous.com/yoga-for-cyclists http://skellis.posterous.com/yoga-for-cyclists

Subject: yoga for cyclists starting this thursday 5th November

Greetings cyclists, yoga enthusiasts and friends,

Hope this finds you all generally healthy and content!

Just a reminder that the next 7 week yfc course will be starting this Thursday (5th Nov - 17th Dec).

As ever, the class shall be taking place every Thursday at bodywise yoga and natural health centre - 119 Roman rd E2 0QN
(nearest tube Bethnal Green) 8.15-9.30pm.

Prices are as follows:

£59.50/ 42
£10/ 7 drop-in

It can be booked as a 7 week course or attended as
drop-in classes. As ever, it works out cheaper if
booked as a course (that is if you can make at least 6 of the classes) and even cheaper if you are a
concession of any kind - student/ unemployed/ oap.

This class will of course benefit anyone who is
engaged in other physical activities (climbers,
swimmers etc.) or not - so welcome all.

There is bicycle parking available outside bodywise.
Don't be tempted to bring them indoors, believe it or
not, they are probably safer outside!

Any questions, please don't hesitate to contact me at
gizzardbogue@yahoo.co.uk.

Lastly, for further info. on bodywise and course
booking, please contact them directly on
www.bodywisehealth.org - ta.

Hope to see you there!

Rebecca Bogue

FURTHER INFO:

This class specifically addresses a cyclists typical
physical tendencies as a result of the imbalance
created by repeated overexertion of some muscle groups
and underutilisation of others. The class will
concentrate specifically on:

Increasing full mobility in the joints that suffer
from reduced mobility during cycling, in particular
the hips, shoulders and knees

Strengthening postural muscles to encourage correct
seated alignment and ease overuse of the upper body
and back strain.

Lengthening the commonly overdeveloped quadriceps, hip
flexors and tight hamstrings.

Counteracting postures to balance out the cyclists
position when astride a bike (eg. backbends etc).

Controlled breathing for increased exertion, endurance
and efficiency.

The main aim being that students learn how to
strengthen and stretch mindfully in class and apply
these at any point pre or post ride and keep commonly
developed cycle related injuries at bay.

Rebecca has trained in various forms of Dance, Anatomy
& Physiology and most recently Yoga Teacher Training
with Edward Clark and Elizabeth Connolly. She has
taught and continues to teach these subjects since
2002.

Having cycled regularly for 14 years, practiced yoga
for 11 and taught anatomy & physiology for 5, it made
sense whilst doing my yoga teacher training to bring
all disciplines together. What started off as simply a
written assignment, gradually developed into a
programme specifically designed to help cyclists (for
more info, see below).

For those wondering why I have opted for
studios (which I understand are not the cheapest
option), 'tis because they are fully equipped with
props (many a foam block, straps, bricks etc.) which
will specifically address a cyclists typical physical
shortcomings and will make for safer, swifter and more
satisfying progress. And then if all goes well and
people feel it worthwhile acquiring their own props (i
can get these at cost price for anyone who is
eventually interested), it is still my intention to
seek out alternative spaces and run the classes
cheaper.

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Wed, 04 Nov 2009 01:22:22 -0800 Obstacle course for the mind http://skellis.posterous.com/obstacle-course-for-the-mind http://skellis.posterous.com/obstacle-course-for-the-mind

Yes - there are plenty more where this came from.

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Mon, 02 Nov 2009 04:58:53 -0800 Self-cleaning http://skellis.posterous.com/self-cleaning http://skellis.posterous.com/self-cleaning

This is the first in series of scans from a single magazine, read in route from New York to New Haven in early October. It was entertaining and soul destroying – a hearty mix indeed.

The magazine is called Sky Mall and it is living (huh?) proof of just far humans have progressed, and just how far we shouldn't have progressed.

(Don't forget – it's also suitable for larger cats)


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Thu, 22 Oct 2009 01:29:47 -0700 tell 'em Terry http://skellis.posterous.com/tell-em-terry http://skellis.posterous.com/tell-em-terry
In principle, however, capitalism is an impeccably inclusive creed: it really doesn't care who it exploits. It is admirably egalitarian in its readiness to do down just about anyone. It is prepared to rub shoulders with any old victim, however unappetizing. Most of the time, at least, it is eager to mix together as many diverse cultures as possible, so that is can peddle its commodities to them all.

Eagleton, Terry. (2004). After Theory. London, Penguin Books. (p.19)
 

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Wed, 30 Sep 2009 22:36:00 -0700 Yvonne Rainer http://skellis.posterous.com/yvonne-rainer-0 http://skellis.posterous.com/yvonne-rainer-0
Beyond the resonance of the title, however, the 21st century dance footage (itself containing 40-year-old instances of my 20th century choreography) can be read multifariously—and paradoxically—as both the beneficiary of a cultural and economic elite and as an extension of an avant-garde tradition that revels in attacking that elite and its illusions of order and permanency. Or, finally, each dance image can be taken simply as a graphic or mimetic correlation with its simultaneous text. Some may say the avant-garde has long been over. Be that as it may, the idea of it continues to inspire and motivate many of us with its inducement—in the words of playwright/director Richard Foreman—to ‘resist the present.’


Yvonne Rainer (from Dance Camera West advertisement), talking about her work After Many a Summer Dies the Swan: Hybrid (2002, 31 min, video)

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Tue, 29 Sep 2009 06:24:32 -0700 Bacon's dog http://skellis.posterous.com/bacons-dog http://skellis.posterous.com/bacons-dog

Study of a Dog, 1952
Francis Bacon
From http://bit.ly/c0ybS

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Sun, 27 Sep 2009 07:56:56 -0700 the body and walking http://skellis.posterous.com/the-body-and-walking http://skellis.posterous.com/the-body-and-walking

From Rebecca Solnit's "Wanderlust: A History of Walking" (p.27)

The phenomenologist Edmund Husserl described walking as the experience by which we understand our body in relationship to the world, in this 1931 essay, 'The World of the Living Present and the Constitution of the Surrounding World External to the Organism.' The body, he said, is our experience of what is always here, and the body in motion experiences the unity of all its parts as the continuous 'here' that moves toward and through the various 'theres.' That is to say, it is the body that moves but the world that changes, which is how one distinguishes the one from the other: travel can be a way to experience this continuity of self amid the flux of the world and thus to begin to understand each and their relationship to each other. Husserl's proposal differs from earlier speculations on how a person experiences the world in its emphasis on the act of walking rather than on the senses and the mind.

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Thu, 17 Sep 2009 03:05:00 -0700 failure http://skellis.posterous.com/failure-5491 http://skellis.posterous.com/failure-5491

On Saturday 12 September Colin Poole and I performed a version of our duet "Colin, Simon & I" at The Place in London as part of the Touchwood season (designed to show works in various stages of development). We'd had about 7 weeks development (on and off), and there are some notes at http://colin-simon.tumblr.com.

The final section of the work involves Colin moving to sit deep in the audience, and then me effectively trying to 'fail' as a performer. At least I think this is accurate. We'd cultivated a certain degree of awkwardness in how I was attempting to be, but of course things only stay awkward for so long. So, we didn't really rehearse it at all. I was left talking (addressing the audience very directly) and dancing and attempting to find out (and share) what it was like to no longer have Colin on stage with me, and also talk to the feeling of wanting to entertain them (whilst trying to avoid doing just that).

Long silences. Long pauses. Flurries of movement. Some music (which made me feel more comfortable for sure). Discussing a slight feeling of frustration that Colin had elected to 'disappear', a monologue about how he hadn't really disappeared ... and then, a missed cue from the ushers. We thought they were going to ask the audience to leave whilst I was still attempting to fail. They didn't and I was left with a really close experience of on stage awkwardness. Excellent fun indeed.

But what is it to fail on stage? The 'dying' I'd felt in an earlier showing wasn't really there this time - it felt far too easy to go into 'entertaining' mode. Is it to not know what is going on? Is it resisting training/experience? How can I do this?

It reminds me of playing tennis as a youngster: when there were certain parts of my game that I was having trouble with, one strategy for coping with this would be to develop control of the failure. That is, to practice various degrees of failure (say, hitting the ball at the bottom of the net, then a bit higher, then a bit higher still, then to just touch the top, then to pass just over etc). It goes against all the rules in sport of "perfect practice makes perfect" but it was a powerful way of 'owning' the failure ... or being able to choose to fail (and therefore choose to 'succeed').

As a performer/dancer, perhaps it is in listening to the silences and the stillnesses, and how audiences are 'coping' with these that can step the practice of failing into the foreground? Of course, the paradox is that seeking failure opens up the body to all kinds of listening that inevitable is not failing at all. Ugh.

I guess another question is about why I'd want to be failing ... but in terms of this work with Colin it had to do with absence/presence on stage. That is, it was an aesthetic or creative decision.

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Tue, 15 Sep 2009 04:31:00 -0700 influence http://skellis.posterous.com/influence-16 http://skellis.posterous.com/influence-16

Last Friday I went and saw Duncan Jones' film "Moon" at the Prince Charles Cinema in Leicester Square. The film was wonderful—intelligent, moving, simple—and superbly acted by Sam Rockwell.

Afterwards, Duncan Jones led a Q&A with the packed audience (300+). He spoke very directly and passionately about the work (his first feature film). What was really fantastic was just how openly he described his influences, and how he is a fan of, for example, Ridley Scott (among others).

There is a certain generosity and lack of preciousness about sharing this information, and it seems like (from the outside) filmmakers are particularly good at owning up to influence, and even borrowing from others.

I am not sure that choreographers share this generosity. We seem to be preoccupied with owning particular notions of originality.

So, for the record, I am a fan of Helen Herbertson (Melbourne choreographer) ... and of Jerome Bel ... and of Kirstie Simson ... and I think I am a fan of Duncan Jones now as well. There are others, but I need to do some work.

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Sun, 13 Sep 2009 02:29:36 -0700 Just out of Furness, Scotland (August 2009) http://skellis.posterous.com/just-out-of-furness-scotland-august-2009 http://skellis.posterous.com/just-out-of-furness-scotland-august-2009

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Sat, 29 Aug 2009 00:32:56 -0700 embodiment http://skellis.posterous.com/embodiment http://skellis.posterous.com/embodiment


I think about embodiment a lot. Last Saturday I saw a performance at the Royal Court in Sloane Square ...

Jez Butterworth's Jerusalem is played in front of a mobile home in a Wiltshire glade, at the very edge of England's green and pleasant land. It is the home of Johnny 'Rooster' Byron (Mark Rylance), an English everyman—lovable, despicable, gypsy, boozer, jester, dealer, sage and former motorcycle stunt man—whose existence is threatened by the satanic mills of England's 'New Estate', filled with pedantry, notices, and micro-bureaucrats in hi-viz sleeveless jackets.

Jerusalem is a vision of contemporary England in crisis, struggling and screaming under the weight of its history. It is England being eaten from the inside out, hoping that the rest of the world will hear her screams because she used to matter.

Rylance's performance of Rooster is phenomenal. He jettisons any pretence of character, and embodies the weight, ticks and fragility of a near-broken man. Rooster is danced by Rylance—sensitive, forceful, aware—his very pores listening to the possibilities of the lived moment. The wonderfully complex script seems to be written only as it is spoken by Rylance, the words brought into being by his entirety. I was gobsmacked really, and in the final aching image of Rooster banging a drum, summoning the poets and giants of his and England's past, I witness every ounce of his being believing that this act might just work, but knowing that it is too late ... and I understand.

In theatre or performance I can be moved, grabbed, bored, pushed around and shocked, but for the most part I remember the contract I have signed to leave my disbelief at the door. In Rylance's performance I forgot about the contract. It was a shock to see him (with the rest of the cast) taking their curtain calls after this moment. It felt like a rude (and unnecessary) intrusion on Rooster's reality. Sometimes I just can't forgive the conventions of theatre.


Jerusalem
Royal Court
London
Written by Jez Butterworth
Directed by Ian Rickson
22 August 2009

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Tue, 25 Aug 2009 01:34:26 -0700 methods for testing grace #2 http://skellis.posterous.com/methods-for-testing-grace-2 http://skellis.posterous.com/methods-for-testing-grace-2 Shopping at Tesco on Christmas Eve.

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Mon, 24 Aug 2009 07:17:59 -0700 methods for testing grace #1 http://skellis.posterous.com/methods-for-testing-grace-1 http://skellis.posterous.com/methods-for-testing-grace-1 Cycling in London

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Mon, 24 Aug 2009 03:13:10 -0700 fleeting http://skellis.posterous.com/fleeting-4 http://skellis.posterous.com/fleeting-4

I've been reading Darwin's Origin of Species recently, mostly because of having a number of conversations with people about the ethics of medical intervention. These conversations often end up talking about natural selection and evolution, so I thought it might be worth going back to the source.

It's such beautiful writing - uncertain, clear, poetic, and world's away from Science's dogmatic persistence with the facade of objectivity. If I were reviewing it for a London freebie, I'd give it 5 stars. If I were tweeting a review I'd say:

Darwin's "Origin of Species" confronts humanity's self-importance and is better than anything by that bloke Dan Brown.

Here's a bit:

How fleeting are the wishes and efforts of man! How short his time, and consequently how poor will be his results, compared with those accumulated by Nature during whole geological periods!

Charles Darwin - Origin of Species

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