Thursday, April 12, 2012

Why William Forsythe? Why Should You and I Care?




“The rules are not stated anywhere. They do not have legal status. There is really no legal function to ballet.” This is quoted from Forsythe himself in an interview with John Tusa on BBC Radio 3 from Ballet Magazine.

http://www.ballet.co.uk/magazines/yr_03/feb03/interview_bbc_forsythe.htm

Our generation is all about breaking rules. It is one of the best ways to expand our artistic ideas and boundaries and also for all of those who have come before us. William Forsythe is known from almost every review or writer that talks about him for "reforming classical ballet." Although, knowing this about him, they tend to all still feel that at the very end of the day it falls short and is too hard to fully define what he has done. I personally appreciate his work because of what he has done through his development of the ballet technique. Like I mentioned in a previous post on his style, he builds from a foundation of classical structure. He always stretches every principle and passes every boundary held in this concept of "classical ballet." Together with modern and classical forms, he melts them together forming his own artistic voice in style.

I not only respect William Forsythe for his creativity and "no rules" concept, but also for his intelligence. Everything has a meaning for him. There is always something to wrap our heads around when it comes to his philosophy and digging into the core of his work. I think that following the ideas of Rudolf Laban, Forsythe's root of movement is based upon a crystalline geometry of the body. Everything is just so absolutely intricate, and difficult to execute I would say. He uses this structure to to emphasize on points and planes in the body which initiate a wide range of movement. I would also like to add that he is so mathematically inclined and has some scientific definition for many things that he talks about in interviews; Very analytical. Physics, Math, and Philosophy make up the mind of Forsythe. One great example of this comes from a piece he made called "Nowhere and Everywhere At the Same time." The aesthetic of it reminds me of just these three things that describe him.

Link to "Nowhere and Everywhere..."
http://vimeo.com/32051973

Going along with what he has done to pass boundaries in classical ballet, he has also somewhat meshed the gender roles for dancers. He makes sure that there is an equal importance in both dancers (partnering) to simply execute the movement.



Another great accomplishment that Forsythe has contributed to the dance world was the development of the CD-ROM. It was in 1994 that he created a computer application called "Improvisational Technologies: A tool for the Analytical Dance Eye."


This CD-ROM is an awesome program that assists in creating new movements in improvisation. It has been used by professional companies, universities, conservatories and even architecture programs!



William Forsythe has done an amazing contribution to the art and has shown importance in his own individual pieces as well. He has redefined ballet in modernizing it, and also modernizing the ballerina! 
On the other hand, looking at his work and at him, much of his stuff has it's own characteristics that sets him apart and gives him importance and value in the dance world. 

Even though the whole purpose of post modern dance today is to break off entirely from classical techniques and ideas, I still feel that Forsythe goes beyond that and instead, picks selective rules to break and or expand on and even enhancing those broken rules that have already been broken. Looking at ballet, I personally see it as strict and at times redundant-but Forsythe expands and breaks this idea of ballet in my mind and and creates a beautiful modern form while continuing to keep some aspects of ballet such as pointe shoes and also the technicality. 

There is no doubt that he has succeeded doing this today and continues to prove it well done by his work internationally. 


Friday, March 30, 2012

The Bigger Picture

Recently in 2011, William Forsythe and Dana Caspersen, also a dancer in The Forsythe Company, presented "KNOTUNKNOT" in the Festival Frankfurter Positionen which provides a space designated to the promotion of experience and insight. In this case, "KNOTUNKNOT" is a social, install-choreography that invited visitors to interactively share a social experience which consisted of assembling and disassembling a knotted object.


Another section engaged structured conversations between visitors. This work is particularly interesting in that the meaning behind assembling and dissembling the knotted object suggests that the object depends on the strength and intentions of it's makers. ALso, the structured conversations between the visitors simply examine how we as as humans shape our society based on our beliefs, values, assumptions and what we do on an individual basis or a collective basis, or even why we do it.


In the midst of economic standing, and everything that is happening with the recession in the United states-Germany has proved to be thriving according to a New York Times article. This is an example of how we shape our society economically. Here is a link to read more:
http://www.nytimes.com/2011/09/30/world/europe/with-germany-in-fold-slovakia-is-next-to-vote-on-euro-fund.html?_r=1&hp=&pagewanted=print.

Also, in 2011, the Cebit Expo was in Germany. This is one of the biggest tech conferences in the world! According to Kasia Lorenc in a review of "2011 Tech Events for IT Pros and Developers" the Cebit Expo event is organized in sections designed for specific audiences including, business operations, consumer, government solutions, as well as research and development. The “hot topic” of the 2011 expo is “Work and Life with the Cloud.”

Even as a community there is always something to be developing or creating and working together; we create the "object that is knotted."

Tuesday, February 28, 2012

Professional Lineage and Influences

Jacksonville University, The Joffrey Ballet, and the School of American Ballet were all different places that William Forsythe received his formal modern and ballet dance training from. This became a huge opportunity to be influenced by teachers such as Nolan Dingman, Maggie Black, Finis Jung, Jonathan Watts, Meredith Baylis, William Griffith, and Pat Wilde.

His first choreography was produced at Stuttgart Ballet where he was invited by John Cranko. Within these good five years at Stuttgart-he blossomed, creating works for ballet companies in Munich, London, Berlin, Frankfurt am Main, Paris, New York, and San Fransisco. In 1984, he became the ballet director of Frankfurt Theater where his seeds blossomed for twenty years.

With collaborations of architectural and other art based projects, he joined with Ohio State Department of Dance and Advanced Computing Center for the Arts and Design to work with and create an exciting website that explores his work on new levels! It includes tools as to how to see choreography in new ways!

Here is a link to this website:

http://synchronousobjects.osu.edu/content.html#/movementMaterialIndex

Tuesday, February 21, 2012

Who is William Forsythe?

William Forsythe was raised in New York. He is linked to contemporary dance having a choreographic work that stems from a "neoclassical" style with exploration in Modern dance codes that have classical ballet vocabulary underneath.

He has created such a wide range of audience with all the mixing of different styles and methods influenced by other choreographers, but has gained mostly the European scene. There is something so precise, yet so freeing about his choreography and style. Not only that, but the perspective in which he creates and develops is so exciting! Some examples include architectural and performance installations by architect-artist Daniel Libeskind. Also his piece "One Flat Thing:Reproduced" is filmed from above to show the use of tables and the different ways in which the body goes through, over and under and how that looks like from different angles.





Forsythe is so interested in the question of, "How does dance work?" By this question, he explores the definition of choreography and the mechanics of it. In an interview with Forsythe that I came across on youtube, he states, "makers of dances are looking at how things are made, the emergence of motion, trying to understand what the decisions are that are being made in order to engender that." Exploring this concept goes deeper in that he also is finding ways to make ordinary people know or understand the depth of what he consideres "the awareness of the dancer" and that dancing is not just something that comes together and "boom!" But it is a complicated sophisticated compositional process.

If you ask me, William Forsythe is someone not to miss!

About Me

Hi I'm Ashley! Before I begin telling you about William Forsythe, here is a little something about me...
I am currently a Junior studying dance at the University of Milwaukee-Wisconsin. Growing up, I never took interest in dance as a form of art or something that I ever thought I would even pursue, at least not until high school. I remember it being one of those, "I want to be one of those drill team girls dancing for the school" moments! I always was involved in some type of sport; soccer being my favorite, but because of my newly found passion for dance, that was something I had to sacrifice-working twenty-five hours just to pay for two classes and attending school became too much for me to handle at the age of seventeen. I was always exposed to dance which is something that I am very grateful for now. The hispanic side of my family never failed to dance for five hours at every family party we had-dances including salsa, merengue, cumbia, and bachata. And that was normal-go figure! I guess I never realized it would come in handy to help for future purposes. Apart from dance I also pursue a passion for photography and enjoy it very much! I have to say- being twenty-one, married, studying in college, AND pursuing my passions, I am very blessed to be able to have a kind of life such as this. But to give this all to "fate" or "luck" would not be true on my part. My relationship with Christ has a lot to do with where I am and the gifts that He has blessed me with-and most of all-providing a very supportive Husband to encourage and push me. I love dancing, I do. But oh-I LOVE choreographing. The process and the experience that goes with making something come to life just absolutely amazes me. My goals are to choreograph dance pieces that are a reflection of my heart, a reflection of who I am in Christ, and things that He has shown me and things that he has sparked a burden in my heart for. This is my motivation and my drive to do what I love to do. One aspect that I love about dance is honesty. Who is the choreographer? What is the choreographer's intentions? That is something that I want-to be able to tell a story, or create something-ANYTHING-but that it be honest and genuine (even in the most abstract way), and it impact the viewer and the dancer in a profound, moving, way.