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exChange Perspectives Examining the prevailing norms that affect dance as an art form March 27–28, 2015 WELCOME Content p.5 Program 27 March | p.11 Program 28 March p.15 Presentation of lecturers and workshop leaders p.21 exChange Moçambique – Sweden | p.23 Info exChange Perspectives Whose body should adapt to what within the dance field today? How can we challenge the norms that limit diversity and variety? Are we ready to reach beyond the attitudes and descriptions that include some on stage and differentiate and exclude others? exChange Perspectives is a two-day exchange of knowledge examining the prevailing norms that affect dance as an art form in Sweden and internationally. Through lectures, talks, workshops, performances, and a party, we hope to inspire and facilitate discussions about dance that focus on diversity of form, cultural histories, and functionality of bodies within the context of inclusion and exclusion. Claire Cunningham, Mat glencoe Photograph: Sven Hagolani exChange Perspectives is arranged by Dansens Hus in Stockholm and DOCH School of Dance and Circus/Stockholm University of the Arts, in collaboration with CulturArte in Maputo and Skånes Dansteater, with support from Culture Foundation of the Swedish Postcode Lottery and the Swedish Institute. 5 march 27 at DOCH School of Dance and Circus 09.30–10.00 Morning Coffee in the canteen at DOCH 10.00–10.15 Opening Introductory speech by Annelie Gardell, Artistic Director of Dansens Hus and Petra Frank, Deputy ViceChancellor of DOCH. Presentation by Katja Seitajoki, Project Manager for exChange Perspectives and exChange Moçambique - Sweden. 10.15–11.15 Claire Cunningham and Luke Pell in Conversation Left: Luke Pell, Weathered Photograph: Luke Pell Above: DOCH Photograph: Håkan Larsson Performer and choreographer Claire Cunningham, and maker and curator Luke Pell, have a candid conversation about what it means to be making work as a disabled artist today. Taking Cunningham’s diverse and evolving practice as a starting point, they explore the implications of transformations in the body, cultural policy, and the spaces in which we create and encounter dance performance in the 21st century. 11.30–12.30 Renita Sörensdotter A norm-critical perspective of variation in ability Which bodies confidently enter a room, are welcomed, assume their place and move about with distinct self- assurance depend on society’s power structure. Standards and norms can close and open doors. What is considered normal and abnormal in society is more about beliefs, ideas, and expectations than actual bodies. In order to achieve diversity and include a variety of bodies and abilities, we need to rethink and challenge ourselves. In other words, we need to open closed doors by challenging our norms. To help, we can look to the Crip Theory, which makes visible the power Day One: Mar ch 27 structure in society that preserves the “fully mobile” body domination and even gives young and healthy bodies a privileged position. Crip theory is inspired by other normcritical theories, like whiteness studies and queer theory. It uses the concepts of performativity and staging- two terms that can be applied beyond the reaches of the stage. 12.30–13.30 Lunch and lunchbeat with DJ Iki Gonzales Magnusson The new office trend that we also want to try! An hour of intense group dancing that’s suitable for everyone. Come dance and add an hour of euphoria to your workday! Lunch is served in the canteen at DOCH. 13.30–14.30 Workshop with Paloma Madrid Between 13.30–14.30, you can choose between several simultaneous workshops: In the studio, Madrid uses a method called The dancer in resistance. The method is a practice of dialogue and discussion for dancers and non-dancers. The possibility to raise questions of class, power relations, race, ethnicity, gender, femininity and sexuality through the practice of movements is offered. The questions relate first and foremost to making oneself aware of who we are in relation to the topics and then providing 6 a sense of how structures in society work, that is, in relation to our dif ferent life experiences. Bring pencil and paper or a computer and soft clothes. 13.30–14.30 Workshop with Iki Gonzales Magnusson “Operating on Wheels” A workshop where we dance and move with or without wheels. Try what it’s like to receive dance in structions in a wheel chair. 13.30–14.30 Presentation of Dialog at Skånes Dansteater: Examples, experiences, and lessons learned. Tanja Mangalanayagam, project manager for Dialog at Skånes Dansteater, Melody Putu, choreog rapher/ dance teacher, and Caroline Bowditch, choreographer and stage artist, share their experiences and examples of work in conversation with participants. Skånes Dans teater has worked actively for many years to broaden the notion of who claims the stage, as well as who the audience is. Through Dialog’s activities, which aim to increase participation and accessibility of dance, a wide range of activities and initiatives for a variety of groups is offered. 7 13.30–14.30 Workshop with Caroline Hammar – Dance Pedagogy including the perspective of the visually impaired. Dance is often very visual, in terms of how we teach dance, communicate dance, and participate in dance. To make dance accessible to those who have poor vision or cannot see, this workshop aims to foster understanding and arouse curiosity regarding how we work with and communicate dance, with or without limited visual stimuli. Hammar, who is holding this workshop is a professional dancer herself and has a severe visual impairment. Her workshop presents the opportunity to explore different ways to work with dance in order to make it accessible to more people and is aimed specifically at people who are interested in pedagogy. 13.30–15.30 Workshop with Claire Cunningham: “Permission to Speak…” Please note that this workshop lasts for 2 hours Cunningham introduces participants to techniques that are formative in her performance practice, as well as when collaborating with other dancers and bodies. By building methods of communication and trust, she explores the use of Day One: Mar ch 27 language and voice to reveal our relationships to our bodies and dance vocabulary. This workshop is for individuals with some established dance and/or physical practice. 14.45–15.45 A Lecture Performance with Clara Lee Lundberg: “It’s black, it’s white, yeah yeah yeah…” In this Lecture Performance, Clara Lee Lundberg reports on her current masters project “ The Colonial Heritage within the expanded dance field”, which is based on the hypothesis that there is a strong colonial legacy within body and movement in several dance fields in Sweden today. She maintains that racism and prejudice are upheld through racial ideas of white and non-white bodies’ capacity and ability of expression. Her goal is to make the colonial heritage visible in the dance field and work against racism. 15.45–16.15 Coffee break / Jilda Hallin During the coffee break, DOCH-student Jilda Hallin together with Karin Delén present their artistic work with an integrated perspective on dance and disability. Day One: Mar ch 27 16.15–16.30 Victoria Andersson Garcia and Nelly Harrysson Students at DOCH present their thoughts on norm-critical perspectives on dance as future highschool teachers. If dance is going to become more inclusive, a standard critical pedagogy in dance education is required. Children and young people should feel included and welcome to express themselves through dance, regardless of body and background. Andersson Garcia and Harrysson give examples for why and how norm criticism can be integrated in dance education. 16.30–17.30 A Conversation with Caroline Hammar, Luke Pell, Christine Bylund and Iki Gonzales Magnusson. How do we rid of the normative body in dance as we constantly relate to it and stage performances? Why do we not expand dance opportunities so that they include and create room for diversity instead? This is a conversation about the advantages and disadvantages of concepts like integrated dance company and disability. When are these concepts necessary to create awareness about the fact that we are a variety of people 8 with different needs, and when do these concepts about diversity within dance expression and aesthetics actually exclude? 19.00–20.30 Performance: Rayahzone by Ali and Hèdi Thabet at Dansens Hus. “Rayah” means journey in Arabic, and this is an exciting journey where tenderness, authenticity and the joy of being together is in focus. With acrobatics, dance and song, Rayahzone is a performance filled with reflection, poetry, and humanity. In a Tunisian courtyard worn by time, three dancers and five singers meet. The musicians’ songs and voices join the dance and acrobatics and open the door to the spiritual and the divine. 20.30–23.00 Party Dj Aïcha and Tatiana Rucinska Former co-producer of the acclaimed radio show Klingan and SR P2’s online global jukebox SR Världen, Dj Aïcha, plays a contemporary mix of music from the crossed paths of Europe and Northern Africa. Luke Pell, The Long Time. Photograph: Kitty Fedorec 11 march 28 at Dansens Hus, small stage 9.30–10.00 Morning Coffee in the foyer 10.00–10.15 Welcome Petra Frank, Vice President at DOCH, and Annelie Gardell, Artistic Director at Dansens Hus welcome everyone. Presentation by Katja Seitajoki, Project Manager for exChange Perspectives and exChange Moçambique- Sweden. 10.15–11.15 Caroline Bowditch “The Power of the Gaze” “When a disabled dancer takes the stage, he or she stakes claim to a radical space— an unruly location where disparate assumptions about representation, subjectivity, and visual pleasure collide with one another.” Ann Cooper Allbright Right: Skånes Dansteater, Dialog Photograph: David Thibel This page: Riksteaterns Tyst Teater, Vibragera Photograph: Håkan Larsson Loaded with centuries of societal assumptions and expectations, or lack there of, this presentation will explore the weight, power, and potential of an audience’s gaze, disabled and non-disabled, on the performing disabled body. 11.30–12.30 Josette Bushell-Mingo and Tyst Teater Riksteatern The visual and sensory experience of movement and dance when deaf or blind. What is the audience’s experience? What thought processes develop? What challenges are confronted in process, and what physical identities merge or separate on stage? Reflections and observations by Josette Bushell-Mingo, artistic director for Riksteaterns Tyst Teater, the Swedish sign-language theatre currently in preparation for their dance production spring 2016. Sharing reflections and discussing processes related to physical expression, she’ll ask what is the norm in aesthetic inclusion, and ethnic, physical exclusion? Day TWO: Mar ch 28 12.30–13.30 Lunch 12 14.50–15.15 Coffee break 13.30–13.50 Performance: Kurvatur 15.15–16.15 Panaibra Gabriel Canda Danskompaniet Spinn “The Art of (IN)DEPENDENCE” Two dancers challenge the point of mutual balance. Curves, lines, arcs, distance and meeting, everything meets in a meandering asymmetric duet with Emilia Wärff and Malin Kaveryd. Dance Company Spinn continues to develop the integrated dance, putting movement and body in focus in a new work for new spaces. Kurvatur was created by dancers Emilia Wärff and Malin Kaveryd. Since snatching independence from Portugal in 1975, Mozambique has been a land of civil war and social and political rifts, but its inflexible communist model is gradually making way for a fragile democracy. The Art of (In) dependence attempts to answer questions such as how to stimulate creative freedom within such limitations. The body of the project aims to integrate in dance the marginalized body or victim of war and social trauma. This project began as a creative dance training program for performers with or without physical disabilities where dancers’ bodies had retained traces of the physical and mental wounds caused by the military conflicts in their homeland. The (in) dependence program transforms the way we look at the body, seeks to see beauty in strangeness, and points out forms where this appears to be absent. 13.50–14.50 André Lepecki André Lepecki, Professor in Concept and Composition at Stockholm’s University of the Arts, will give a talk on the topic; ‘The post-colony is here; the post-colony is not here. Or: race and the unconscious of movement’. 13 Day two: Mar ch 28 16.30–17.30 Open discussion What do we do now? How do we take the ideas further? How do we create strategies and engage people in the concept of change to broaden dance opportunities for diversity and variation? tion, poetry, and humanity. In a Tunisian courtyard worn by time, three dancers and five singers meet. The musicians’ songs and voices join the dance and acrobatics and open the door to the spiritual and the divine. 19.00–20.30 Performance: Rayahzone by Ali and Hèdi Thabet at Dansens Hus. “Rayah” means journey in Arabic, and this is an exciting journey where tenderness, authenticity and the joy of being together is in focus. With acrobatics, dance and song, Rayahzone is a performance filled with reflec- Left: Panaibra, Point of intersection Photograph: Peter R. Fiebig This page: Claire Cunningham, Mat dream Photograph: Sven Hagolani 15 PRESENTATION of the lecturers and workshop leaders. Read more on www.dansenshus.se/en/exchange-perspectives Caroline Bowditch Above: Caroline Hammar photo: Private Below: DOCH photographer: Håkan Larsson Performance artist and choreographer Caroline Bowditch describes herself as a performer, maker, teacher, speaker and mosquito — buzzing in the ears of the arts industry in the UK and further afield. For several years she held the role as Dance Agent for Change at the Scottish Dance Theatre. She is Associate Artist at Dance 4 in Nottingham, which supported her award-winning production Falling in love with Frida. More than that, she is also an artistic consultant with Skånes Dansteater, Dundee Rep Theatre and British Council, as well as Visiting Professor at Coventry University. www.carolinebowditch.com Christine Bylund Active as a writer, performance artist, club organizer, lecturer and method developer. At present, she is collaborating with the Swedish Independent Living movement and organization STIL. Among other projects, she’ll participate in the feminist anthology Utvägar at Ordfront publishers and will be developing norm-critical method material with functionality as the outlook. Panaibra Gabriel Canda & CulturArte The work of award-winning dancer and choreographer Panaibra Gabriel Canda has been presented in Africa, Europe, USA and Latin America. In 1998, he created CulturArte, which is not just a dance company but also a development centre for performing arts. The centre has enabled the emergence of a contemporary dance scene in Maputo, Mozambique, and of dancers that are, today, internationally recognized. In 2007, Panaibra launched the (IN) DEPENDENCE project, a training and mentoring project integrating abled and disabled people. Claire Cunningham Claire Cunningham is a performer and creator of multi-disciplinary performance based in Glasgow. Her work is often rooted in the study and use or misuse of her crutches, the exploration of the potential of her specific physicality with a conscious rejection of traditional dance Presentation techniques (developed for nondisabled bodies), and the attempt to move with the pretence of a body or aesthetic other than her own. Her current works are Give me a reason to live (2014) and Guide Gods (2014). www.clairecunningham.co.uk Danskompaniet Spinn With inspiration from Candoco Dance Company in UK, Danskompaniet Spinn was founded in 2010 by artistic director Veera Suvalo Grimberg. It is Sweden’s first integrated dance company with professional dancers with or without disabilities. They have created performances, workshops, seminars and talks. In 2014, the youth company of Spinn was also founded. www.danskompanietspinn.se DOCH Photographer: Håkan Larsson Dialog at Skånes Dansteater The purpose of Skånes Dansteater’s Project Dialogue is to increase participation and accessibility of dance, through a wide array of activities and initiatives for a variety of groups. In 2012, Dialog arranged Dance Funk – a festival of dance and disability. The aim was to initiate a national debate on how to reform 16 and develop dance as an art form so that diversity of bodies are seen on the stage. Dialog Project manager: Tanja Mangalanayagam, Choreographer/ Dance teacher: Melody Putu, Artistic consultant: Caroline Bowditch. www.skanesdansteater.se Caroline Hammar Caroline Hammar was trained in modern dancing at the Royal Swedish Ballet School. In addition to her own dance projects, she has worked with choreographers such as Paloma Madrid and Christina Tingskog. She also teaches dance and yoga to both people with and without disabilities. Hammar has a severe visual impairment and has been involved in the National Association for the Visually Impaired. She lectures in diversity, accessibility, and participation – often for new and practicing teachers. Jilda Hallin Jilda Hallin is a student at DOCH. Together with her research partner Karin Delén, she has focused her exam work on physical contact between dancers with different 17 abilities. She has also questioned the language and its effect on our behavior. Apart from studying she is also a dancer and co-creator in the integrated ensemble dance: Work; an on-going project within the cultural organization Share Music Sweden. Victoria Andersson Garcia & Nelly Harrysson Victoria Andersson Garcia and Nelly Harrysson are studying teacher education at DOCH. Garcia Andersson has studied at the Balettakademien in Umeå and Harrysson has studied at Iwanson International School of Contemporary Dance in Munich. Both have also worked as dance teachers and dancers. André Lepecki André Lepecki is Professor in Concept and Composition at Stockholm’s University of the Arts and Associate Professor in Performance Studies at New York University. He is also a curator and a writer. His main areas of research are performance studies, choreography and dramaturgy. He has published widely and edited several anthologies, like Dance (2012), and is author of the book Exhausting Dance: performance and the politics of movement (2006). Clara Lee Lundberg Clara Lee Lundberg is a dancer, cho- Presentation reographer, activist and multidisciplinary artist; currently completing the Masterprogram NPP at DOCH. Always operating at the breaking point between activism, theory and artistic practices, she is particularly interested in analyses of socio-political relations, neo-colonial structures, gender and queer theories, aesthetic norms and philosophy. She has presented a number of her own works at various theatres, galleries and festivals. Paloma Madrid Paloma Madrid is a freelance choreographer, performer, dancer and dance educator. As an active and emerging artist, she has begun to describe herself as a “political body investigator”. Madrid is a pioneer who started off with the use of community dance in Sweden. Madrid´s work is always in search of possible ways for the mind to re-think dance and choreography. www.palomamadrid.me Iki Gonzalez Magnusson, Utopia and c.off Iki Gonzalez Magnusson is a dancer and choreographer, but also an actor, DJ and club organizer. She lectures about mobility, access and availability, and is producer at the non-profit organization Utopia, working actively to create a culture where everyone has a place. In Kroppsfunktion (Body 18 Presentation functionality), a collaboration with c.off, the vision is to expand the boundaries and expectations for the types of bodies and movements that appear on the cultural scene in Sweden. www.utopias.se and www.coff. se/#/projects/kroppsfunktion Josette Bushell-Mingo and Tyst Teater Josette Bushell-Mingo is artistic director for Riksteaterns Tyst Teater; producing performances in sign language. She is chairman for Cinem-Africa and TRYCK; an association for cultural workers of African origin. She is an award-winning freelance director who lectures and leads diversity work, both nationally and internationally. www.tystteater.riksteatern.se Luke Pell Luke Pell is an independent artist who works in and between spaces of dance, theatre and live art. His work has been presented throughout the UK and internationally. Maker, curator and questioner; he collaborates with other artists and organizations imagining alternative contexts for performance, participation and discourse. He is an Associate Artist with Candoco Dance Company, Dance Digital and Fevered Sleep. www.lukepell.org Renita Sörensdotter Renita Sörensdotter has a PhD in Social Anthropology and is a researcher and lecturer in gender studies, most recently at the Centre for Gender Research at Uppsala University. Her research and teaching is focused on queer and intersectional perspectives of the body, sexuality and everyday life. Norm-critical pedagogy has also provided a field for research, as seen in the method studies of In the Eye of Norms (2008). In recent years, Sörensdotter has primarily written about sexual health. Left: Luke Pell, Weathered Photograph: Luke Pell This page: Luke Pell, Waits Photograph: Manuel Vason 21 exChange Moçambique – Sweden exChange Perspectives is one part of the artistic exchange project exChange Moçambique – Sweden where choreographers and dancers from both countries work with an integrated perspective on body and choreography. The exchange project concludes with the presentation of two performances in the autumn of 2015 by choreographers from Moçambique and Sweden. The initiative will be conducted in both countries. exChange Moçambique – Sweden is arranged by Dansens Hus in Stockholm and CulturArte in Maputo, in collaboration with DOCH School of Dance and Circus/Stockholm University of Fine Arts and Skånes Dansteater, with support from Culture Foundation of the Swedish Postcode Lottery and the Swedish Institute. Panaibra, No Limits. Photograph: Michael Bause For more information: www.dansenshus.se Ali och Hèdi Thabet, Rayahzone. Photograph: Renaud De Lage 23 info Register You can choose if you would like to attend exChange Perspectives one or two days. The registration fee for each day is SEK 150 and includes: Light lunch, mid session refreshment breaks and reception friday 27th. In order to supply lunch we need your registration no later than March 23rd. Participants attending exChange Perspective are offered a special rate for the performance Rayahzone at Dansens Hus 27 & 28 of March and pays only SEK 50. Please note that this ticket is to be booked separately. Register: dansenshus.se/en/exchangeperspectives Language English Interpreting services exChange Perspectives provides sign language interpreters translating between spoken English and Swedish sign language. Assisting Listening Systems exChange Perspectives is equipped with Assistive Listening Systems. Wheelchairs Register for guests in wheelchair through the box office at Dansens Hus. [email protected] or 08-508 990 90 Adress Dansens Hus Barnhusgatan 14 111 24 Stockholm DOCH School of Dance and Circus Brinellvägen 58 104 50 Stockholm exChange Perspectives is arranged by Dansens Hus in Stockholm and DOCH School of Dance and Circus / Stockholm University of the Arts, in collaboration with CulturArte in Maputo and Skånes Dansteater, with support from Culture Foundation of the Swedish Postcode Lottery and the Swedish Institute. Photography: Sven Hagolani, Håkan Larsson, Kitty Fedorec, David Thibel, Peter R. Fiebig, Manuel Vason, Michael Bause, Renaud De Lage Thanks to: Rebecca Vinthagen and Tanja Mangalanayagam Graphic Design: Spektra www.dansenshus.se/exchange-perspectives Lectures, talks, workshops and performances that focus on diversity of form, cultural histories and functionality of bodies on stage.