Wednesday, March 10, 2010

Isn't the human body miraculous?

Even more astounding is what we’ve learned about our bodies in the last 100 years, particularly through scientific discovery. While scientists continue to reveal amazing details about our bodies, artists have been using the body, or images of the body, to convey the many events, questions and mysteries within us. Scientists and artists alike tackle ideas with exploration and discoveries, and in Connections: Body and Soul you are watching some of that exploration.


Steven McMahon’s piece took its base from a book by Dr. Jill Bolte Taylor, My Stroke of Insight, A Brain Scientist’s Personal Journey. Dr. Taylor’s stroke, which occurred when she was only 37, and her subsequent journey through recovery, inspired Steven to create a work about the dualityof the human brain, in which each hemisphere has a different priority, or motivation. Steven explores what those hemispheres would look like in an unfolding dance work. The evolution of Julia Adam’s piece stems mainly from a documentary on PBS about 9/11. The commentator wondered about the people jumping out of the towers, holding hands. Were these acts of great love or great desperation, or both? At some point soon after, Julia and I talked about all the things we do with our hands and agreed it would be important to make a work about that someday. Finally, we are able to do it and the hands of our joyous labors can be seen today.


When I asked Nicole Corea to concentrate her work on feet, she kept thinking about a South African dance company she knows well. This company does a lot of gumboot dancing, which derives from the fact that many South African miners had to wear boots because the mines they worked in filled with water. It reminded Nicole of the spirits of her South African friends, and how much they have risen through in their culture. Nicole also uses steps from a South African dance, the pantsula, which is more of a fun, loose dance that was made up in the streets. Dance is not something South Africans separate from their daily lives. When I did my research into many of these dances, I found that all kinds of groups had this connection to the earth, this way of speaking to the earth through our vibration, and then it climbs up through the rest of your body.


Feet, hands, right brain/left brain—all moving within us while we spend our days in this life together. It is truly something joyful to investigate and celebrate.

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