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Mission Statement for the
Deborah Hay Dance Company
The Deborah Hay Dance Company's mission is to foster a discerning
appreciation for the human body within the cultural construct
of contemporary society, through dance as experienced by audience,
student, and/or performer. Central to this mission is the role
of humor in recognizing the wildly cogent dancer we are capable
of exercising into action.
The goal of the DHDC is: a) to challenge judgments
which limit how we identify the physical body in time and space,
and attempt to broaden historical and current traditions of flow,
beauty, and form that prevail in dance, and, b) expand the cultural
concept of 'dancer' to include the dancer as a site for inquiry
including a bodily presence trained in the performance of parallel
experiences of perception. An outline for advancing this revisioning
follows:
1) continue to introduce and explore through teaching and performing,
how the cellular body, when invested with imaginative capability,
can produce feelings of altering immediacy and gripping relatedness
in the sensate body;
2) raise our standard of participating in a world beyond the
subjective, where dance can become not just the site where movement
and shape are produced, but a threshold where energies shift,
multiply, and become visible;
3) expand the notion of choreography to include the conditions
by which the choreographer transmits a dance to a performer,
accounting for the many and often discontinuous threads within
a visible and invisible context for beholding now.
4) In response to the rapid proliferation of digital technology
and thus the dormancy of lived time, the DHDC is consolidating
its effort to reclaim the human body as a value to be nurtured.
The DHDC, a shard-of-a-niche
In April, 1999, Deborah attended a meeting steered by Nello McDaniel
and George Thorn of Arts Action Research, who work with professional
arts organizations on (a) planning, (b) clarity and articulation
of vision/mission and direction, (c) organizational structure,
(d) human resource development, and (e) transitional issues.
Their presence in Austin was at the invitation of Lisa Fehrman,
a dancer, choreographer, and the director of Stillpoint Dance
Company.
The concept that made Deborah's mouth drop open was what Nello
described as a new entrepreneurial term, shard-of-niche. It used
to be that a business described its niche. The Arts Action Research
team requested that each arts organization at this meeting answer
the following five questions in order to help determine its shard-of-a-niche.
The DHDC decided to publish its response as a way to update our
commitment to our work and community.
1) Describe the historical context in which the DHDC exists:
In 1960, at the age of 19, Deborah Hay moved from Brooklyn into
Manhattan. Her choreographic work developed in the midst of the
most radical cultural revolution in the United States. Hay soon
became one of the central figures in the Judson Dance Theatre,
a community of artists whose work challenged the prevailing canon
of modern choreography, from who dances to the very notion of
what constitutes a dance. Out of these explorations, fabulous
collaborations occurred between visual artists and dance artists.
Their works were primarily showcased at Judson Memorial Church
in Greenwich Village, in art galleries, and museums. It is in
this context that Hay collaborated with artist Robert Rauschenberg,
which then led to her participation in the Merce Cunningham Dance
Company during a six-month world tour in 1964. As the most radical
trends in the NYC art scene moved in new directions, Hay, unlike
many of her peers, left Manhattan to settle in Vermont, where
she lived in a community for six and a half years. It was during
those prolonged periods of quiet rural life, that the foundation
of her current work was laid.
Following the noisy vanguard years in NYC, Hay's experience of
Vermont's day to day stillness synthesized her ideas into a minimal
concept of dance, ethically and aesthetically grounded on the
principle that less is more. To this day she makes dances without
a linear construct to achieve. She creates conditions for a direct
experience of all kinds of phenomena. She locates in those phenomena
the interpretive keys to the performance and understanding of
each dance. Her faith in this process, now in its 30th year,
is the innermost raison d'etre for her ongoing experiments.
When she moved to Austin, Texas, in 1976, it was as a single
parent with a five-year-old daughter and the intention of supporting
them teaching and performing dance. This happened without compromising
her work. She has produced a remarkable output of solo performances,
and has become a prominent member of the artistic community,
where she is praised not only for her performances but also as
an extraordinary teacher and advocate. She performs and teaches
all over the world, writes extensively, and has published several
articles and two books, Moving Through the Universe in Bare Feet,
Swallow Press, 1975, and Lamb at the Altar: The Story of a Dance,
Duke University Press, 1994, which are highly regarded in their
genre. A third book, My Body, The Buddhist, Wesleyan University
Press, is in production.
2) Describe the DHDC's central philosophy, aesthetics or programming
filters. What is the value system that Deborah Hay embodies?
As Northrop Frye remarks in his introduction to Gaston Bachelard's
The Psychoanalysis of Fire, (transl. Alan C.M. Ross. Boston,
1964),
"to the imagination, fire is not a separable datum of experience:
it is already linked by analogy and identity with a dozen other
aspects of experience."
The same is true, if not more so, of dance. Dancer and dance
are alive with images ranging from slut to angel, animal, vegetable,
mineral, water, light, love, god, spirit, dust, beauty, universe,
etc. It is nearly impossible to read the body without these psychological
encumbrances, in other words, not simply historical and cultural
references but material imbedded in our psyches.
Hay's choreography is structured so that the dance performer
must divest attachment to even the magic of each moment in order
to fulfill the choreographic requirements of her dances. The
dancer is then without the weight of her/his convictions about
dance. What remains, for the dancer, and in turn the audience,
is an opportunity to see what has not been seen before. Thus
dance is alive with the recognition of one's perceptual activity
rather than assurances found in memory, desire, physical training,
or prowess, which, by analogy, could as well be found in sports.
3) What are the overarching goals of the DHDC? How does this
work want to impact the art, the audience, the community?
The goal of the DHDC is:
a) to challenge assumptions which limit how we identify the physical
body in time and space, through a revision of prevailing historical
traditions and a critique of our current understanding of flow,
beauty, and form in dance, and,
b) to expand the cultural concept of 'dancer' by redefining his/her
role as a site for inquiry. An outline for advancing this revisioning
follows:
- in response to the rapid proliferation of digital technology
and thus the decline of lived time, the DHDC is consolidating
its effort to reclaim the human body as a value to be nurtured;
- to explore through teaching and performing, how the cellular
body, when invested with imaginative capability, produces feelings
of altering immediacy and gripping relatedness in the sensate
body;
- to stress our participation in a world beyond the subjective,
where dance can become not just the site where movement and shape
are produced, but a threshold where energies shift, multiply,
and become visible;
- to expand the notion of choreography to include the process
through which a choreographer transmits a dance to a performer,
accounting for the many, and often discontinuous threads within
a visible and invisible context of presence and immediacy.
4) What are the programs/activities that support this center
and who are they designed to serve?
Most of the classes and workshops conducted by Deborah are attended
by untrained and trained dancers/performers. This format continues
to challenge the old paradigm about who is the dancer what is
a dance. Hay does not teach a movement technique. Her language
is simple, though deceptively so. It is directed to the imaginative
rather than the physical body. She seeks to instill a sense of
transparency and brilliance through attention to each moment,
thus bypassing assumptions about beauty and form. Her teaching
is allied with how one sees others dancing, so that while the
dancer is being served, so is the future audience for experimental
dance.
Because writing has become a central element in Deborah Hay's
understanding and the transmission of her dances, it is also
part of her movement/ choreography training. Writing down the
dance, giving it linear form when and where it is possible, lifts
dance out of the silent world it inhabits. She believes that
to write about the experience of dancing is to help address the
body's intelligence, power, and magic for the dancer and dance
audiences.
Deborah's large group dances span her career, yet her most stimulating
work, challenge, and pleasure is now found in solo performance.
In the last ten years she has choreographed nine solos: The Man
Who Grew Common in Wisdom, a trilogy made up of The Navigator,
The Gardener, and The Aviator,
Lamb at the Altar, Voila, Exit, "O", The Other Side
of "O", and FIRE. Watching Hay perform, audiences realize
that their usual references for making sense of what they see,
fall apart. At this moment audiences can make a quantum shift
in how they see. New doorways of perception can open onto an
inner world within the viewer.
Deborah's performances are primarily showcased in 80-125 seat
theaters. Her audiences are those associated with the theater
in which she is presented, plus dance critics, scholars, her
students, and/or a small but constant group of people who find
reward in following her artistic development.
5) What is the criteria for success? What are the qualitative
aspects that lets us know the DHDC is working?
At the most fundamental level, the company's ability to support
Deborah's continuing investigations and contributions to the
field of new dance is its criteria for success. Our qualitative
indicators are the energy, sustenance, change, and depth Hay
brings to community through her contribution to the discipline
of dance and the arts in general. The Deborah Hay Dance Company's
Board of Directors is dedicated and proud to support the creative
life of this major figure in American dance.
This page maintained by Elliot
Cole
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