Showing posts with label choreography. Show all posts
Showing posts with label choreography. Show all posts

Monday, 9 February 2026

Becoming Propositional/The Human Neuron.: Each Proposition/Activates Contrast/The Dialectic of Duration.

Outpost 100823

The Dialectic Of Duration, Gaston Bachelard. 1950

Bachelard argues for a discontinuous time, made of instants out of which we construct new durations and deconstruct old ossified ones. A time experienced as durations that addresses the nature of time in its irreducibly fractured and interrupted state, and within which Bachelard urges us to launch projects and lead lives of creative rhythms. 


Becoming Propositional.

Developing in the Incipiency of Relations/Ecologies between Things/Phenomena.

One has to realize what restraint it needs to express oneself with such brevity. Every glance can be expanded into a poem, every sigh into a novel. But to express a novel in a single gesture, joy in a single breath: such concentration can only be found where self-pity is lacking in equal measure. These pieces can only be understood by those who believe that sound can say things which can only be expressed through sound.

Arnold Schoenberg, from the introduction to the Six Bagatellies for string quartet, Opus 9, by Anton Webern, a Viennese friend and contemporary of Egon Schiele's.

Rachel's, Music for Egon Schiele. 1996.  

Individuations Dance/Relationscapes

There is no time to return to the line, the line must draw the movement, the gesture itself must become line. One pass with the paint and that's all, move the canvas. The result a vastness of localized movement, a movement across that is at once microscopic and macroscopic.

Erin Manning.








The Swimming Pool Drawings

Michael Grimshaw, Winchester School of Art.


We land into the focus of an awareness that becomes us.

Whitehead. 1929.


The architecting of spacetimes of experience co emergent with bodies in the making.

Choreographic Propositions/Mobile Architectures, Erin Manning.

The choreographic proposition  serves not to delineate positions or forms from one another in a normative practice of movement notation, but to create a diagram that captures in a fleeting moment the qualities of movement expressibility, such that their force of form can be felt.

Deleuze defines the diagram via Francis Bacon as the operative set of asignifying and non-representative lines and zones, line-strokes and colour patches, whose function is to be suggestive. He  speaks of the diagram capable of unlocking areas of sensation, suggesting that the diagram is chaos, catastrophe, but also a germ of order or rhythm.  






https://www.flickr.com/photos/russellmoreton/


In Closing.

OURSELVES


Here, on the edge of what we know, in contact with the ocean of the unknown, shines the mystery and the beauty of the world. And it's breathtaking.


I believe that our species will not last long. It does not seem to be made of the stuff that has allowed  the turtle, for example, to continue to exist more or less unchanged for hundreds of millions of years; for hundreds of times longer, that is, than we have been in existence. We belong to a short lived genus of species. All of our cousins are already extinct. What's more, we do damage. The brutal climate and environmental changes which we have triggered are unlikely to spare us.


For the Earth they may turn out to be a small irrelevant blip, but I do not think we will outlast them unscathed – especially since public and political opinion prefers to ignore the dangers which we are running, hiding our heads in the sand. We are perhaps the only species on Earth to be conscious of the inevitability of our individual mortality. I fear that soon we shall also have to become the only species that will knowingly watch the coming of its own collective demise, or at least the demise of its civilization.

Carlo Rovelli. 2016.




It could be said that the most fantastic material is the human neuron. It dominates most materials around it, it is a prime agent of change and determines many forms on the planet.


For Cragg, ninety-nine percent of those forms are solely utilitarian, driven by survival and economics. The result is an impoverished material world. Utilitarianism censors the possibilities of form, this not only applies to designed objects and architecture the world over, it also applies to forms of education and society in general.


Our super-thinking material the human neuron with that prime position in the hierarchy of material, has a responsibility for all other material within its grasp whether mineral, plant or animal. 

Tony Cragg, Sculptures and Drawings. 2011.



Each Proposition

Activates Contrast.



Architectures based on a full recognition of the embodied human condition and of the multitude of instinctual reactions hidden in the human unconscious. A piece of furniture sets up a proposition for a event, the encounter with itself and the body of the user.


Alvar Aalto's buildings are not based on a single dominant concept or gestalt; rather they are sensory agglomerations. They sometimes even appear clumsy and unresolved as drawings, but they are conceived to be appreciated in their actual physical and spatial encounter, 'in the flesh' of the lived world, not as constructions of idealised vision.

Juhani Pallasmaa, Alvar Aalto.


Choreography As Propositional/Relations/Generative Practice.


Choreography starts from any point, it cleaves an occasion activating its relational potential. It makes time, beginning its process anew, always from the middle of the event. Choreography is thus a proposition to the event. Choreography asks/inquires into the event, how its ecology might best generate and organize the force of movement-moving.

William Forsythe, Erin Manning.


Choreography, a self generating act proposed into a movement/potential motion/event of a milieu/gathering.



Making/generating/organizing as a proposition/task/technique to the material.

Developing in the incipiency of a choreography creative ecologies of the force of movement/making/movement. 



Tony Cragg/In and Out of Material.

Carlo Rovelli/Seven Brief Lessons On Physics.


Intertwining Thinking and Making.

Architecture and the Senses.

Juhani Pallasmaa/The Eyes Of The Skin.





Bayfield Hall.

Making and deploying theoretical objects/installations/workshops.

Exploratory Clay/Ceramic based inquiry.

Creative entanglements in a world of/with materials/others.


CLAY.

Ceramic Components/Composite Sculptures.

Templates/Painted Cardboard. 

Extruded/Sledged/Moulded. 


Julian Stair/Art, Death and the Afterlife.

Sainsbury Centre.


As proposition to the event, choreography does so not by abstracting itself from the event but always as part of the event, it can never be separated out from its coming-into-itself-as-event. 


Choreography/unfolding-as-event is the fielding of a multiplying ecology in a co;constitutive environment, it develops in the incipiency of the in-between, spurred on by tendencies that waver between  the rekindling of habit and the tweaking of a contrast that beckons the new. 


For an event to tune itself choreographically many techniques are necessary. Techniques can be generated as tasks, or they can be self generated. 


Chorepgraphy as a generative practice must ask, how the tasks become propositional, how the coalescing ecology becomes more than the enabling constraints that set it into motion.

Erin Manning.



On The Body of Drawing/Demarcations

Localized/Relational/Choreographic.

Transparency/Translucency/Erasure 

  

What Remains/Of The Other Sister

Dead on Arrival.


The life drawing separated from its corporeal event is now just a representation marooned in its media.


The Life Room, a space where an individuals mental reality meets cultural narratives.



Sunday, 21 April 2024

Communicative Space Of Drawing : Radical pedagogy transduces rather than transmits.

 Outpost 081223


The Communicative Space Of Drawing.

Braking down research.

Radical pedagogy transduces rather than transmits.

Re-combinent poetics/praxis.


The Architectural Scriptorium

The Photographic Darkroom.

The Observatory.










Drawing, defined variously as an extruding, a gathering and/or a pulling closer.


The paradoxical nature of drawing is that it is simultaneously a form of recording and invention, somewhere situated between unconstrained gestures and the reiteration of a point of view.


To re-examine the significance of the human body through drawing performatively and architecture.


To understand how buildings affect individuals and communities emotionally, how they provide people with a sense of joy-identity-and place.



Across The Space Of A Page.

Drawing Propositions/Propulsions from the Body.  

Landing Sites: Organism/Person/Environment


The World Opens Up In Front Of Us And Closes Behind.


The experience of our bodies, of what we touch and smell, of how well we are 'centred' is not locked into the immediate present, but can be recollected through time and memory.


Collisions with Bounded Spaces.

The Haptic and Geometric Grid/Centripetal and Centrifugal Radials. 


Haptic choreographies/circulations that create collisions with environments and bodies.


Body 'fit' and movement is affected by the haptic sense and by the tactile qualities of the surface and edges we encounter.


Patterns are composed mostly of paths and places, but it is the system by which they are related, that allows us to make sense of a bounded space.


Place and its choreography of collision that facilitate the transaction between body, memory and architecture, allowing us to dwell in them in the fullest sense.


All architecture in its beginnings was derived from a body-centred sense of space and place. The power of the home, comes from its being the one piece of the world around us which still speaks directly of our bodies as the centre and the measure of that world.


Buildings can encourage a choreography of dynamic relationships among the persons moving within their domains. 


Emily had been playing house in a nook right in the bow of a boat and tiring of it, she was walking rather aimlessly aft – when it suddenly flashed into her mind, that she was SHE.


Gaston Bachelard.

Poetics of Space.


Emily was neither particularly conscious of, nor looking at, the centre from which she was departing – nor the centre towards which she as walking. But she was able to detect her identity in the bodily act of moving from one centre to another, she recognized that SHE had been withdrawn and was now emerging.


How can the personal world of the body provide an alternative to excessive and disorienting events in the environment?


To diminish the importance of the body's internal values is to diminish our opportunity to make responses that remind us of our personal identity.


Memories at the Centre.

Body, Memory, and Architecture.

Bloomer/Moore.



John Latham.

Drawing/Unbounded Sensations of Time.



The Stage Of Drawing.

Gesture and Act.


Conversation : Avis Newman/Catherine de Zegher.


CdZ: What happens in the space between the gesture moving away from the body, towards everything that is outside of the self, and its landing as a trace on the page?


AN: I was thinking on the way the transmission of thought can depend on the hand and eye, and how this relates to the psychic space in which the mark exists as a potentiality. The effort of the mental and physical act of projection out from the body, away from the body, firstly into the air  -  an act that pitches the hand across the space of the page to site a mark where one intends – is quite a precise act : the most thoughtful and deliberate of acts, which I would speculate harbors a necessary thoughtlessness, in the sense that the certainty of coordinated actions is always in some way provisional and as such relies on the vigilant cooperation between eye and hand.


CdZ: Drawing may also be a recovery of the gesture that allows a discovery for the eye.


AN: To retrieve the gesture in a drawing is to translate the mark back into the action of the hand. It is very pleasurable to recover the gesture in that way and in so doing to follow the action of making. I think that experience in a drawing is very precise.


CdZ: Because the eye manages to discern what has become a trace on paper from a gesture in the air?


AN: Yes, the mind's eye. Perception becomes an act of reconstruction that moves unobtrusively between interior and exterior. I would make an analogy here between how we experience unconscious emotions in the repetition and accumulation of marks (irrespective of what is being drawn) and the intonation, hesitations, and inflections of speech, all of which hold a complexity of messages and can be at odds with what appears to be said, but which nonetheless determine meaning. It seems to me that this occurs independent of sight, as that which is generated by the mind and mediated by perception.


CdZ: In drawing, the space is open-ended and unframed, while the marks are articulated over time and in time.


AN: My concern in making images relates more closely to the conceptual space of drawing, which is less circumscribed  than painting. In particular, the manner in which the boundary or edge comes to define the work is of a completely different order in drawing. In fact, the idea of inside  and outside does not occur in the same way. The marks define a position across the surface and are not registered in relation to limits. As a result the often ambiguous nature of borders can leave a vague uncertainty as to the stability of the image.


CdZ: Can you elaborate on this different notion of boundary?


AN: The natural inclination of mark-making is a relational organisation of individual inscriptive acts, which is not an expression of a unitary world. The frame as the window on the world, which traditionally internalizes the picture. This view creates an illusion  of the unique experience of looking, in the sense that there is coherence to the image. There is not that illusory consistency in drawing, as the space and image are essentially open-ended and speculative. The unframed interferes with any anticipation we might have of ordered limits or completion, and suggests the possibility that something is missing and will always elude our attention, because it cannot be framed. It is the uncertainty of the edge and how it meets the real that I find fascinating.


CdZ: Drawing is thus not to do with perceptual illusionism, but with infinite space as mental possibility. Is the drawing itself, the ground, a space of transience?


AN: There is no pressure from the outside inwards; in drawing, it bis all pressure from the inside outwards. And the idea of boundary then becomes problematic, our boundary as we project it onto the work. The physical structure of a drawing is always conditional, and when one looks, for example, at the drawing by John Latham, One-Second Drawing (17'' 2002) (Time Signature 5: 1) the work itself defies any possibility of framing because the action is embedded in the pure sensation of time. We are left with only the effect. So the idea of framing as a way of 'confirming' the space – this is not part of  drawing's language. The condition of boundaries is that they are dissolvable.



Body, Memory, and Architecture.

Sense/Sensing/Feeling/Memory.

Hapticity and The Body of Memory/Experience.


Haptic drawings are composed of piece by piece responses to the situation at hand, rather than being based on any kind of visual or conceptual grand design.


The stone and wood of a house itself are embodied in these memorable centreplace's and even they belong to the body of memory, something that maybe regarded as possessing uniquely haptic properties.


The heat  from a fire, the rushing water in the fountain, and the smooth tactile objects on the mantle deliver feelings of touch and even permanence. Here in this interior space the lifetime memories of the person collaborate with the timelessness of the world outside.



Exercises on the Haptic Experience of Space.


Drawing Choreographies : Hapticity/Mark-making/The Body.


All architecture functions as a potential stimulus for movement, real or imagined. A building is an incitement to action, a stage for movement and interaction as such it is one partner in a dialogue with the body. 


Egon Schiele/Jenny Saville, drawings rendering an insistent corporeality.

Drawing marks that can be possessed, felt, touched and known, haptic drawings are memories of human experience, seeing, feeling, experiencing and exploring corporeality.


Wednesday, 20 December 2023

Drawing Technicity : Lines/Choreographies for Potential Eventness.

 Outpost 010823


New Occasions of Experience.


Housing The Body.

Dressing The Environment.

Forcefields/Associated Milieu.

Individuations Dance.









Lefebvre acknowledges that geographical space created through the body, through routes which were inscribed by means of simple linear markings. These first markings, paths and tracks drawn into the landscape would become the pores through which without colliding would produce the establishment of places, localities made special for one reason or another. There is no stage at which  human beings do not demarcate, beacon or sign their space, leaving traces that are both symbolic and practical.

The Production of Space, Lefebvre. 1991.

 


Durational play, crafting of the as yet unthought, where the microperceptual and the micropolitical meet to create new movements in the making.


We land/dance into the focus of an awareness that becomes us.


Objectiles thrown into the world and invitations to move-with.








Propositions are ontogenetic, they emerge as the germ of the occasion and persist on the nexus of experience to take hold once more through new occasions of experience.


The proposition I am seeing on the table is a hammer, the eventness of the proposition now persists in my hand, what moves a body, returns as a movement of thought.


Objects exist in the between of a proposition and its eventness, in so doing they are inciting co-constellations of movement-moving.


Technicity and its choreographies for potential eventness.

In this strange time-loop, what is lived is less the encounter with space pre-formed or objects pre-existent than a direct experience of relation.

William Forsythe/Erin Manning.


Making Divides Fluid.

Fielding Differences With Curiosity.


Kairos, the movement and its moment.

Being Alive, Tim Ingold.


Much of our thinking happens across various kinds of divides.


Choreographic Thinking.


Choreography has the capacity to craft an associated milieu of relations that extends far beyond the stage.


Experiencing environment as gradually taking form, using choreographic objects to help shift the everydayness of time, towards the durational time of play. The choreographic proposition begins with the folding of space more than the form-taking of bodies.


A Lure For Feeling.


Like his choreographies Forsythe's choreographic objects are created with very precise conditions for the movement experimentation. They insist on the precision of parameters for movement (technique) without divesting the movement of its potential for eventness (technicity). They are carefully crafted towards generating certain kinds of participation and yet unforeseeable in their effects.

Erin Manning.


An Attitude to History.


At Castelvecchio, Carlo Scarpa embarked on a much more far-reaching idea of not only cleaning the building but attempting to clarify and expose the layers of history by selective excavation and creative demolition. He attempted to cut and then disentangle one epoch's construction from another so that the building itself becomes a giant exhibit revealing its growth and change in nature.


Scarpa was primarily interested not in any concepts of restoration but an idea to do with historical clarity, making history visible by the co-existence of overlaying fragments of construction.










Ceramic Testing/Prototyping/Making


Hungate Glass Assemblages.


Drawing/Diagrams/Choreographies into the Architectural Body.

Relationscapes/Propositions/Organism/Person/Environment.

Arakawa, Gins, Manning, Forsythe, Irwin.


Shotesham SPAB.


Bayfield Hall Sculpture Trail.


Propositions into the Figural.

The Social/Private Body on Display.

The Physical Self, Peter Greenaway. 1992. 


As we draw the human figure we both reveal and hide ourselves and it.





The Life Room is a peculiar place and Life Drawing is a bizarre activity.

How you draw is contingent on why you are drawing.


What you bring to the Life Room defines you.

Before embarking on a program of Life Drawing, you need to ask yourself how and why you are doing it. Your answers to these two questions should qualify each other.


We do not dispute that Life Drawing is an important aspect of an art education. But if it is to be significant, it must extend into the rest of life and begin to touch upon things that matter to you, otherwise it is an empty activity, the development of a skill with no purpose.

Peter Stanyer, Terry Rosenberg. 1996.


What is the occasion and purpose of the drawing?


We need to be aware of what it is we need to reveal.


Is the nude as a form of art still valid?


The curious and uneasiness of the psychology of nakedness.


The practical and theoretical issues of the confrontation with the the unclothed human form.

Sunday, 13 August 2023

Grisaille Patterning : Drawing into/Dwelling with incipient movements of interference and negotiation.

Divergent Practices/Choreographic Thinking

Exploring and Activating/In and Out of Material.

Painting/Choreography divergent propositions on the verge of things.






https://www.flickr.com/photos/russellmoreton/


For Erin Manning, thinking choreography as a technique for bringing to expression the patterning of incipient activity towards the definition of a movement-event, an activist philosophy. 

Grisaille Patterning/Fielding Thinking : Landing Sights/Painting Surfaces/Mapping/Choreutics 

Painting and Mapping/Choreutics 

Chaos, territory, art, Deleuze and the framing of the earth.
Elizabeth Grosz

Spirituality in Contemporary Art, the idea of the Numinous
Jungu Yoon

Peter Zumthor, Atmospheres
Architectural Environments : Surrounding Objects

House : Black Swan Theory
Steven Holl

Architectural painting for glass exploring slowness and repetition.

An Anthropology of Landscape
Christopher Tilley
Kate Cameron-Daum


lightness, luminosity, fluid, hybrid media, material, 
asperity, field, gesso, molochite, yellow ochre

















Monday, 14 May 2012

Registering overlapping spaces #2

Public intimacies, personal dialogues in social spaces.

"Blocking in" of a private studio space of creative inquiry into the public realm as a permeable intervention.

Main reception area,UCA Canterbury 2010.
Russell Moreton, Spatial Practices.