Thursday 3 July 2014

Opening night - the dance, music, and film collaborations.........


The Recital Programme:



A Manner of Thinking:

Elise's dance performance begins the evenings recital with an introduction from Dance tutor Kate Monson. 
James' photographic montage film throws evocative landscape imagery and rippling light on her performance whilst Daniel's audio recordings add a further layer of sound imagery.


Y Step:

We all move out to the main foyer to the area where Stephani has chosen to perform a site specific dance.
She uses the closed off area behind the glass doors as a kind of captive's cage and we are prompted to consider human incarceration behind social or self imposed barriers.  It is a powerful and moving performance. 


Time Erosion:

Kate introduces her own choreographed piece about the effect of time and natural processes on the landscape. The two dancers,  Elise and Nicole are accompanied by the improvised sounds produced by Daniel, Nate and Stuart. This work also includes the spoken word which Nicole delivers with energy and passion through out the performance, it is a statistical mantra of the losses and changes suffered by the land. 




(Un)Natural Sounds:

We move location to the really impressive Madsen Recital Hall and wait with great expectation.
Scott is waiting in the darkened wings off stage and a light illuminates the slightly ajar door.
 We don't see him, then he begins to play a plaintive and beguiling saxophone. It is a beautiful and reflective piece and it transports us to a place in our imaginations.

Noticing:

Nate and Jay worked together on this edited film and music piece. Jay's film was an impressionistic layered montage of the landscapes we had visited in Yellowstone and the Tetons. We watched ourselves become blended into the colour and light of these places and Nate's slow and elegiac piano music prompted the strong emotional response which had many of us brimming up. How did they do that? 
It worked extremely well.     

A Trail to Explore:






It was so good to see so many of our WMC group volunteer for this dance piece, they were more than ready for any potential embarrassment! This piece mirrored our own actions and behaviours that we had increasingly noticed in ourselves during our Yellowstone trip. It got to the point where we became highly self-conscious of our habitual responses to point and photograph, to capture and collect information.  
Nicole and Stephani's dance piece perfectly captured this and it was great to see that aspects of our performance challenge had been incorporated into the work. 

Our opening night - the artists' books




The Western Wilds project has incorporated art, music, dance and performance and involved 53 artists. With so many ways of interpreting the themes we had discussed over the last two weeks we were all excited to see just what everyone would produce. I was especially interested to see how my students had worked in collaboration with the music and dance students, but first the artists' books took centre stage as Joe opened the evening in the main 303 Gallery in the Harris Fine Arts Centre at BYU.
Michelle Rowley







And here are the Wirral Met books to start with:
 
 
Sarah Romano WMC
 
Jay Chesterman WMC

Scott Rule WMC

Lottie Millington WMC 

And Lilah Carrol!


Michelle Rowley WMC

James Bowman WMC

Susan Leach WMC

Rachel Perry WMC 
Bernadette McHugh WMC

Clare Flinn WMC

Claire Holtaway WMC

Bill Fletcher WMC

Yvonne Davis WMC

Over the next week we will post more of the books and include more information about them and we will show you the performances works too..................

Exhibition installation - Saturday morning

At 10am on Saturday morning we started off by identifying where all the audio works, the film screenings and the special lighting requirements would be sited. After all these areas were settled the plinths were arranged and the shelves were installed. As the books started to get placed on the plinths, some as soon as they were finished and that included mine, it stated to look really interesting. During the week everyone had been working hard on their individual book works and now the works were revealed for the first time and it was great to see how inventive everyone had been.     

The space starts to become an exhibition as the works come in. 

Clare and Sarah carefully install the text pieces generated by
Sunny's Challenge on our journey back from Yellowstone.
And here is Sunny working on another text.
The most fiddly part of the exhibition was the job of transferring all the vinyl text pieces to the gallery walls. There were five in all and also the exhibition information and it took a long time to get it right. But when we were done we left the music guys to work out their sound installation and film projections with Joe keeping an eye on technical matters.
Michelle Rowley