1 research outputs found
Intimate bodies and technologies: A concept for live-digital dancing
This thesis considers the relationship between dance and digital media, and
considers a specific type of case regarding this relationship: live and mediated.
My motivation has been to identify and investigate, through practice, some of the
difficulties presented when live and mediated bodies are placed within the same
performance environment. In order to challenge some of the difficulties of what
I consider as the problematic medium of digital dance, this thesis offers an
examination of the ways in which digital media can positively transform the
processes of making movement, and explores how the assimilation of media, as
an integral agent within movement generation, can counter the dominance of the
digital.
Such dominance has been considered using a Practice As Research (PaR)
model, and thus the thesis exemplifies both the creation of, and a deep reflection
on, three works: Shift (2010-11), Betwixt & Between (2012-13) and
Modulation_one (2013-14). Through the development of these works, I have
sought to formally analyze and illuminate how media technologies, and in
particular projection, can enrich the processes for making movement. This has
been done in the context of a proliferation of digital technologies being available
within a studio setting. In particular, the works have been established from the
perspective of the dancer, which represents a specific case study for challenging
the dominance of the digital.
What follows in the written thesis is an analysis of what is a continuing and
emerging practice. The written thesis therefore serves as both a document of the
process and presents an illustration of a methodological approach for generating
synergistic relationships with movement and projection. This relationship is
proposed as a concept for live-digital dancing, which represents the main
contribution to knowledge. The term live-digital advances the idea that a dancer
is neither bound or restricted by either a live or digital construct, rather she is
inspired to move and respond, in the moment of performance, to an unfolding
assemblage of live and digital materials. Significantly, this has been established
through the experiential encounters of the dancer moving with simultaneous
projections of self. Live-digital therefore offers a methodological approach for
constructing digital dance performance environments, which place perception
and experience at the fore