Brown, Katrina ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0001-9651-5233 and Irvine, Rosanna (2016) what remains and is to come. [Performance]
Performance 'what remains and is to come' at Karst Gallery Plymout ... |
Remaining outcome from performance Karst Gallery 2014 |
What Remains e-book (4MB) |
Item Type: | Performance |
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Event Summary: | what remains and is to come/Tramway Glasgow /2016 |
Creators: | Brown, Katrina and Irvine, Rosanna |
Abstract / Summary: | what remains and is to come consists of a performance installation – an immersive performance event of 50 mins duration with the residue of the event remaining as installed work - and an Artist Publication 'what remains and is to come: A Document' published 2014 ACE/Dance4/Middlesex University. The practical research in 'what remains and is to come' led to new understandings of drawing and mark-making as choreographic activity in relation to material, score and flatbed distribution rather than expression, further proposing a low orientation of the performer presenting in the horizontal plane in the midst of other surfaces, materials, and bodies. The project contributes to a field of choreography as expanded practice and presenting in visual art contexts, bringing attention to notions of horizontality, human and non-human agency and spectator perspective. The performance-installation is a dynamic activation of material processes between paper, charcoal, bodies and breath. The audience is mobile, invited into the upcloseness of the event. A work-like approach, repetitive action, systematic enquiry and a concern with treating materials not as tools but as equal in the making process are guiding principles in the project. The book consisting of written scores, images and essays extends the concerns and concepts of the research and performance event. |
Contributors: | Contribution Name Falmouth ID (DO NOT USE) Choreographer Brown, Katrina 118023 Choreographer Irvine, Rosanna UNSPECIFIED Writer of accompanying material Leahy, Mark 140980 Writer of accompanying material Burt, Ramsay UNSPECIFIED Writer of accompanying material Ivkovic, Ivana UNSPECIFIED |
Date: | 18 November 2016 |
Additional Information: | The choreographic research project, what remains and is to come 2012-2016 was a collaboration 2012-2016 between Dr Katrina Brown and Dr Rosanna Irvine. Through systematic procedures and task-based constraints, we investigated an activation of material relations between charcoal, paper, body and breath, locating the research within a network of European conceptual choreographers concerned with non-human centric approaches to performance making. The project has a multi-component outcome including public performance, journal articles and an Artist Book. The Artist Book what remains and is to come: A Document includes written scores from the performance-installation, photographic images and essays by writers/academics Ramsay Burt, Ivana Ivković and Mark Leahy. The book’s compositional design disseminates and extends the conceptual concerns that guided the research in relation to material agency and processual performance-making activities. what remains and is to come approaches drawing in performance as a choreographic activity in relation to material and flatbed distribution rather than in terms of expression and representation: approaching the body as material, as moving surface: charcoal as material rather than hand-held tool: re-considering the ‘female nude’ in Western painting traditions by bringing attention to shifting relations and the surface contact between paper and skin. The project operates in an expanded field of choreography presenting in visual art contexts. In bringing attention to notions of horizontality, human and non-human agency and spectator perspective, the project proposes a low orientation of performer presence working in the horizontal plane, amongst other surfaces, materials, and bodies. The project contributes to an ongoing discussion of heterogeneous hybrid practice and artistic research concerned with drawing and moving as ways of knowing. Another less disseminated aspect of the artistic research was the collaborative process between the two of us, each with our separate concerns and research focus. It instigated a slow process, a step-by-step decision-making in which there was no pre-conceived outcome, but a rigorous attempt to follow the logics presenting themselves; this touching upon and contributing to a discourse around non-human centric approaches in performance making. |
Subjects: | Performing Arts > Dance & Choreography Creative Art & Design > Illustration & Drawing Performing Arts Creative Art & Design |
Courses by Department: | Academy of Music & Theatre Arts |
Depositing User: | Katrina Brown |
Date Deposited: | 07 Mar 2017 10:06 |
Last Modified: | 18 Nov 2024 13:21 |
URI: | https://repository.falmouth.ac.uk/id/eprint/2374 |
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