Saturday, 31 January 2009
Drumming Fun
Wednesday, 28 January 2009
Geni e o Zepelin
http://www.goear.com/listen.php?v=6ec11cd
Tuesday, 27 January 2009
Rod Pieces
Sunday, 25 January 2009
'Hatching' Stars in Bradford
* A screening of 'Gift of Fire: Nineteen (obscure) frames that changed the world' by US filmmaker Ken Jacobs
* Short films by Lee Canning and Michelle Heighway
* Video installation by Angelo Picozzi and Karl Dallas
* Participatory paper banner project by Jennyanne Smith
* Audio visual performance by Brian Gilson
* Needle felting with textile artist Kate Ryan
* Performative lecture by Simon Warner
* Work in progress dance by Slanjayvah Danza
* Live art boxing by Nicolas Kilby
* Dance Theatre by Victoria Gray and Kip Johnson
* Poetry jazz performance by Nightdiver
There was an unexpectedly large crowd gathered around our marionette shows, and our little puppets were very well received. Here are some photos from the night:
Kate and Caroline setting up Kate's show, "Luni Lou and the Great Escape"
The 'Hatch' Programme
Friday, 23 January 2009
Guardian Review of Faulty Optic show
Shunt Vaults, London
3 out of 5
* Lyn Gardner
*
o Lyn Gardner
o The Guardian, Tuesday 20 January 2009
o Article history
Some people wake up and discover that they have turned into a giant beetle; others pop out to the beach one day and end up with a giant fish attached to their heads. So it is in this triptych of loosely connected short pieces from UK puppeteers Faulty Optic, subtitled Incidences of a Quirky Kind. And yes, they are extremely quirky. As is always the case with Faulty Optic, you are plunged into a bizarre micro-world where anything can happen - and what does happen, however strange, seems perfectly normal. It is a tribute to the imaginative and technical flair of the company that you can quickly accept the fact that someone's head can become a beach upon which a fish gets stranded.
1. Fish Clay Perspex
2. by Faulty Optic
3. Shunt Vaults,
4. London
1. Until 24 January
2. Box office:
020-7378 7776
3. Venue website
This is all well and good, although in this instance, the three-part nature of the piece hints at something not yet fully fledged. With the surreal comes a need for clarity in the storytelling that is not always fulfilled here. I found myself marvelling at the invention and enjoying the madness of puppet pottery, cotton-wool waves and scribbled cats that turn into devils - but I'd have liked to know a great deal more about how and why you get trapped in a strait-jacketed world of Perspex. And who are the armless, pointy-footed figures that dance about like Isadora Duncan?
The show is maddest in the Perspex section, and funniest in Clay. But it is most emotionally acute and satisfying in Fish, when a baffled puppet with personality tries to make sense of an apparently senseless world.
Thursday, 15 January 2009
Men's corsets??
Movement wise i thought it was interesting.
Women's sensuality : French cabaret song..
This song speaks about what this "demoiselle" (miss) is doing all nights, and the fact is that she is masturbating. But she's using very poetic and hilarious expressions to say it.
I just like the fact that she is talking very nicely about her own sex, while if we think about, most part of the time we remember ugly and bad words to describe it.
So the way she's assuming her sensuality, her physical power as a woman, please me(probably because it is part of my piece as well).
I'm sorry that is in french, but i can still translate few of them if you want me to!
Woman dance
Movement in art
Samba - references
It is a very beautiful and sad song, I wish you could understand his words... But at least you can listen!
http://www.goear.com/listen.php?v=17028c1
Tuesday, 13 January 2009
Sunday, 11 January 2009
A Girdle to Set You Free
"Watson tries to open her students' minds to their freedom to do whatever they want with their lives. She encourages her students to believe in themselves, to study to become career professionals, and to improve their economic futures. She uses her art teachings as a vehicle to put across her opinion to the young women that her students need not conform to stereotypes of women made by society, or the roles made for them by society, as women born to become housewives and mothers. She feels that women could do more things in life than solely adopt the roles of wives and mothers.
In [this] scene of the movie, she shows her students four newspaper ads, and asks them to question what the future will think of the idea that women are born into the roles of wives and mothers." (Wikipedia)
Movement in Art
The second piece that I’ve chosen is from a very important Brazilian artist called Tomie Ohtake. She is Japanese, but she came to Brazil around 1930 and naturalized Brazilian later on. She is a painter and also sculptor and I find that hers sculptures really shows movement. Her art is abstract, but her paintings don’t usually show much movement as her sculptures do. The monument above is at São Paulo – Latin American biggest city and where I live – in the most important avenue of the city – just next to my house… come visit me!
The third piece is from Pablo Picasso and it’s called “Weeping Woman”. For me, movement is a primary impression on cubism in general. Seeing one image from several perspectives and putting all together in one “moment” is almost like when I watch a stop-motion animation – I can slice the movement.
Finally, the fourth piece is a futurist painting called “Charge of the Lancers” by Umberto Boccioni, and it portrays the movement of a horse. Futurism is all about movement in its essence, as we know… I have the same feeling in this painting: it looks like a slicing of the movement, and all the steps were put together in one picture.
Friday, 9 January 2009
Movement in Visual Art and Sculpture
This futurist sculpture shows us movement through the act of action and recovery. The left side in mid action and the next two are depicting the process of landing on the ground. Each bend of the joints and angle of the limbs show us how this man has landed from his leap…though I’m sure it was quite painful for him to land on his knee like that
This sculpture evokes the feel of movement because it looks like a freeze frame from a dance. The bodies half in mid air and half on the ground. Also, to craned necks and very extended limbs and fingers give the impression of movement because they are almost reaching for something. The arch of the back also appears as though they are mid move since no one could be still in the position with the effects of weight and gravity
The motion is shown through the contrast of the stillness of the background and the blurred images of the cars and the street. Somewhat of a futurist look on motion, since with speed, before our eyes things are nothing but a blur.
Painting by Robert Minor. I find that the movement in this painting is expressed by not only the action of the stabbing, but the reaction as well. The dying man is reeling back and you can really sense his weight of falling by the angle of his legs and the impression that his arm is dropping. The man stabbing is in a lunge pose but his arm is also slightly blurred, giving the impression that this painting is depicting the actual moment of the stabbing to us.
Thursday, 8 January 2009
Movement in Visual Art and Sculptures
Here is a statement written by the artist about the sculpture:
"Dancing... is part of my soul, I love movement in what I do because for me it is both physical and metaphysical movement. This sculpture was made from pieces picked up in a field near my home. Each figure was made of pieces from a single walk."
This piece by Maria Gurevich reminds me of the whimsical motifs in Chagall paintings. Just by suspending the scuplture in the air for the shot with her legs outstretched, the figure looks like she is floating. The slight raise of her skirt and the ruffle of in her hairpiece also allude to a passing breeze.
Tuesday, 6 January 2009
Genders in different cultures
The 5 Genders in South Sulawesi (Indonesia)
The Third Gender (Fa'afafine) in Samoa
Eunuchs (Hijras) in India
A poem to think about
Ring'd with the azure world, she stands.
The wrinkled sea beneath her crawls;
She watches from her mountain walls,
And like a thunderbolt she falls.
Sunday, 4 January 2009
Rod Puppet Playtime Day 2
Learning to operate the Ningyo Joruri-style puppets. Each of these puppets require 3 people to operate them. We took turns having a go at operating the head, arms, shoulders and waist (while constantly swapping positions).
Working in groups for a final performance. We used the puppets to create a scene set in an airport departure lounge. The picture shows a family (with a little child at the end who gets left behind)
Saturday, 3 January 2009
Rod Puppet Playtime in London
Playing with Otome-style puppets. The puppets were attached to a strip of cloth tied around each puppeteer (which we have called the 'obi'). There are also two strings that connect the puppet's head to the operator's head, so that the movements of the puppeteer are mirrored in the puppet. Some of the puppets also had additional feet and hands.
Making masks for our Otome puppets
Working in small groups to create short sequences. It was interesting to explore the breathing of the puppets as well as creating personalities for each character (while maintaining the balance of performing in a group).
Performing a simple nursery rhyme and incorporating actions and pauses.