Breathing in the atmosphere : affect and improvised dance performance
Version 2 2024-06-03, 09:49Version 2 2024-06-03, 09:49
Version 1 2016-09-28, 13:40Version 1 2016-09-28, 13:40
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posted on 2024-06-03, 09:49authored bySC Mcleod
Whether conceptually or experientially atmospheres are hazy. Atmospheric situations often emerge without us being able to control or fully apprehend the conditions of their emergence. Atmospheres affect us not at the cognitive level but through embodiment - through the sensory capacities of our bodies and subsequent registers of affect. We feel atmospheres. Dance improvisers also feel what emerges in an improvisation, whether as the adrenalizing effect of the audience’s presence or because the dancer is immersed in their own movement (as the affect of interest). But dance improvisation is a situation in which atmospheres (and their affective impacts) emerge in unpredictable ways. Becoming attuned to ‘what is going on’ is an aspect of improvisational skill but improvised performance is also an exposure to ‘not knowing’ – not knowing what will happen (or how it will change), not knowing what motivated the movement. This exposure to ‘forces of not knowing’ is similar to many atmospheric situations in everyday life which we negotiate according to personal habits and personal levels of discernment. This performative paper picks up on Gernot Bőhme’s concept of a “new aesthetics” such that hazy atmospheres, and the uncertainty of where they come from, can be claimed as part of an aesthetic encounter. It also reflects on the act of breathing as a potential interface between aesthetic and scientific definitions of ‘atmosphere’.
History
Location
Melbourne, Victoria
Start date
2016-07-05
End date
2016-07-09
Language
eng
Publication classification
X Not reportable, J1 Major original creative work
Copyright notice
2016, The Creator
Extent
Performed presentation with improvised movement and spoken text