Tuesday, December 15, 2015

Conclusion




In conclusion, light and colors are really important for dances and for all the arts. Lights and colors could change the mood and create some specific atmospheres for us such us, mysterious atmosphere, horrible atmosphere or bloody atmospheres. Different colors have different meanings. For example, red is the sample of passion, war, lucky… Green is the sample of health, nature, youth…


Fondly Do We Hope... Fervently Do We Pray

In addition, light would not only add colors on objects, but also create shadows, add texts and pictures. One good example is Bill T. Jones’s dances Fondly Do We Hope... Fervently Do We Pray which combines colors, texts and pictures. Now, more and more artists using lights and colors in their dances to show audiences their feelings and thoughts. In the future, I would write more about this topic--- light and colors influence 20th Century concert dance. 

Review and Comments about the Tensile's Choreographer---Alwin Nikolais

There are a lot of reviews and comments about Nikolais’s dances


Nikolais was a leader. He brought one to the doors of their imagination, to find their own way. Where this process led to was not his concern, but to open their imagination was...” —Murray Louis---
Nikolais’s dances are dehumanizing, which full of imagination.
(Austen, Diamond. "Dance Review: Alwin Nikolais Centennial." The Daily Feed. Salt Lake City Weekly, 22 Apr. 2011. Web. 12 Dec. 2015.) 

Here is a dance review about Alwin Nikolais’s dance “ Tensile Involvement”.


The program began with “Tensile Involvement,” which had eight dancers moving white webbing hung from the opposite upper corner of the stage. With flashing lights, the effect was a technicolor spiderweb serving as the backdrop for soloists (dressed like psychedelic Ronold McDonalds) dancing in and out of time with the industrial, erratic soundtrack. It was shocking and awesome, despite how desensitized we are in 2011—one can only imagine how the 1955 premiere wowed the audience.
(Austen, Diamond. "Dance Review: Alwin Nikolais Centennial." The Daily Feed. Salt Lake City Weekly, 22 Apr. 2011. Web. 12 Dec. 2015. <http://www.cityweekly.net/TheDailyFeed/archives/2011/04/22/dance-review-alwin-nikolais-centennial>.)

Here is my personal opinion about Tensile. In this dance, Nikolais tried to use wedding hung and electric colors to create a mysterious atmosphere for us. By changing the webbings’ shapes and angles, Nikolais showed us a spider web which was attractive and vivid. By adjusting the colors, Nikolais showed us his boundless imaginations and his main idea --- “dehumanizing”. The varying colors and shapes showed a kind of liberating. These colors changing without order which made me feel that I was in a dream.


   Tensile Involvement



Background of Tensile's Choreographer--- Alwin Nikolais

Background of Alwin Nikolais

Alwin Nikolais, was born in November 25, 1910/1912, Southington, Connecticut, U.S.,and died in May 8, 1993, New York. He abstract dances combined motion with various technical effects and a complete freedom from technique and established patterns. Those technical effects absolutely include light effects.


Nikolais began his study of dance with Trude Kaschmann around 1935. In 1937 he founded a dance school and company in Hartford. He was director of the dance department of Hartford school of Music from 1940 to 1942 and from 1946 to 1949. He became Hanya Holm’s assistant after World War II. In 1948 he joined the Henry Street Settlement in New York City and founded its school of modern dance. Then he became artistic director of its playhouse.


The Nikolais Dance Theater was formed in 1951. In 1953 the company presented Nikolais’s first major work, Masks, Props, and Mobiles, in which the dancers were wrapped in stretch fabric to create unusual, fanciful shapes.


In later works—such as Kaleidoscope (1956), Allegory (1959), Totem (1960), and Imago (1963)Nikolais continued experiments in integration of motion, sound, shape, and color. His later works include Tent (1968), Scenario (1971), Guignol (1977), Count Down (1979), and Talisman (1981). Nikolais frequently composed electronic scores for these productions.


Imago

Totem

Tent

Although Nikolais’s choreography was sometimes criticized as “dehumanizing,” he maintained instead that it was liberating. He asserted that, in depersonalizing his dancers, they were relieved of their own forms and, hence, allowed to identify with whatever they portrayed. Nikolais was also noted for advancing the related concept of  “decentralization”. It means focal point could be anywhere on the dancer’s body or even outside the body. This was a departure from the traditional opinion that the “centre” of focus was the solar plexus.

During the 1970s the Nikolais group toured widely abroad. In 1978 the new National Centre of Contemporary Dance at Angers, a Nikolais school and company that made its debut in Angers, France, in November 1979. Then, Nikolais made films of his works.

Personal opinions about Fire Dance and X- Factors

Personal opinions about Loie Fuller’s fire dance.



In this dance, Loie Fuller tried to use soft silk and electric colors to mimic fire. The China silk is really good for mimicking flame because it is soft and serpentine. Because of these qualities, Chinese also use silk in the traditional Chinese dances. By rotating, folding and curving the silk, Loie Fuller created a illusion which looked like vivid fire. By adjusting the colors, Loie showed fire’s temperature variation. For example, the main colors were changing all the time during the dance. There were red, yellow, green, blue, light blue. There were no specific order about these colors which pointed out the temperature was changing all the time. However, because the red appeared frequently, we could not only easily find out this dance presenting fire to us, but also easily feel Loie Fuller’s passion about her dance. Around 1900, French focused on invitations and new techniques. By using electric light into her dances on stage, Loie fuller also showed us that she was interesting in invitations and high technics. In addition, I really appreciate Loie bring those invitations to the stage. This action not only redefined the modern dance, but also brought benefits to the later artists.   

Additional sources: (X-factors)---Inspirations coming from Loie Fuller and Loie Fuller's inspirations
1.    Here is a link which shows us a performance created by current dancers and photographers.  The inspirations were coming from Loie Fuller.

Reimagining Loie Fuller's Ballet of Light

2.    There are some traditional china dances which involves silk strips. These dances maybe influenced Loie Fuller.

Red Ribbon Dance

Tang Dynasty Dinner Show - White Sleeve Dance