Pictured dance artists Anders Duckworth and Evangelia Kolyra
Miles Hedley Greenwich Visitor March 2017
Miles Hedley Greenwich Visitor March 2017
Monday, 14 September 2015
Dirty Electronics @ DigitalLab
Pictured dance artists Anders Duckworth and Evangelia Kolyra
Tuesday, 1 September 2015
Touch Wood Sharing
Come to our sharing at The Place / Touch Wood
on Friday 18th September, 7.30pm. Stephen Moynihan, Aaron Markwell and
Richard Court will perform a short extract of our new work in progress entitled 'Tracing Gestures'. In this work a range of visual media are used by the performers to trace each other's movements. We will show an excerpt using video recording and projection, which will be follwed by a charcoal drawing performance. I am very interested to see how these two very different media can be connected to bring the audience closer to the negotiations that take place between the dancers, and to the images that are being created alongside. Let us know what you think!
To book tickets (£5) click here
Rehearsing at South East Dance Studios:
To book tickets (£5) click here
Rehearsing at South East Dance Studios:
Drawing without looking
In our process
we are most of the time not looking at the visual art work while it is
created. We use other methods that include touch and proprioception.
Here are some interesting work by visual artist Claude Heath entitled Epstein's
Hands Sequence
(1999, Ink and blutack on mylar film, 150 x 60 cms), and some thoughts by writer Tom Lubbock about drawing blind.
“Drawing
from touch carries a quite different body of knowledge from drawing by eye.
There is no light or shade, for one thing - a big difference, because even in
the most linear eye-drawing light and shade make themselves felt. And even
though the object may be presented from a particular aspect, there is no angle
of vision in the visual sense. An object seen always has a profile, a visible
edge, the line of its shape as it stands out silhouetted against the world
behind it. An object felt has any number of contours running over its surface,
but none of them has the special status of this profile.
Or again,
in any view of an object there is large amount of that object's surface that
cannot be seen. There's its far side, its back. There's whatever of its near
side is concealed behind some other part of it. Drawing by eye always deals
with these restricted visibilities. But drawing from touch has no such limits.
It has no prejudice in favour of near side over far side, or in front of over
behind. It deals indiscriminately with the whole tangible surface. On paper,
all contours superimpose in confusion.”
(Tom
Lubbock discussing Claude Heath’s work entitled Epstein’s Hands Sequence/ The Independent, Don’t Look Now , 08/10/2002)
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