andré lepecki in live: art + performance - adrian heathfield (2004)

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andré lepecki in live: art + performance - adrian heathfield (2004)
Robotların dansı - şeylerin koreografisi
Robotların dansı – şeylerin koreografisi
Mercedes A-Class Production line Yukarıdaki robotların dansını izleyince aklıma Sonbahar 2010 döneminden bir anı geldi: Doktora’da lan oğlum madem dans üstüne çalışıyorsun, artık dans üzerine şöyle entel bir ders almanın zamanı geldi de geçiyor dedim. Şansıma okulda da aynı zamanda dans çalışan ve performans çalışmaları yapan Andre Lepecki var ve choreographing things diye bir doktora dersi…
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“Perhaps she could dance first and think afterwards” (1991) by Vera Mantero, Excerpt from Video Documentation, 2′43
ANDRE LEPECKI /// D A N C E /// DOCUMENTS OF CONTEMPORARY OF ART
Dance Dramaturgy
I found a great article on dance dramaturgy today. It's provided me with some food for thought and I'd like to share some quotes that I found most engaging. The full article can be read here. What does a dance dramaturg do? "I feel that I help translate ideas that could be linguistic, mathematical, or scientific into another form and try to create a ground with the choreographer where our mutual obsessions can interact." ( Hildegard de Vuyst) If I enter in the studio and the work being done at that moment requires a critique, or an expansion, of the visual field, I obviously have "to enter" with the eye. The thing is that I can reinvent this eye. For instance, I can make it listen. Or I use it to lick and taste the scene. So, to summarize: I enter in the studio as dramaturge by running away from the external eye. Just as the dancers and the choreographer, I enter to find a (new) body. That's the most important task of the dance dramaturge -- to constantly explore possible sensorial manifestoes. (Andre Lepecki)
*** "I feel that it works best when I'm not really needed somehow, when I'm not the embodiment of something that is missing. Because if feels like if I'm not necessary in fact then I have a sort of freedom and a playground to stand on." ( Hildegard de Vuyst)