We’ve been thinking about the dancing body as a material or substance with its own set of properties. We’ve been thinking about the impermanence of materials and about the natural tendency towards evolution. We’ve been thinking about how dance follows a trajectory of accumulation and decay within each singular body as that particular body moves through time, yet how Dance (as its own type of material) manages to spread itself across many bodies in order to maintain and grow itself.
Lilian: For a long time I’ve felt resistant to the idea of dance and technology working together. I love the analog-ness of a live human body dealing with its own nature, the rigour involved in working within the fleshy, bony, fluid and emotion filled human condition. But then I think about the joy of my own impermanence and consider,
a) what kind of impressions/fossils I’d like to leave behind,
b) that Dance does not exist within only human bodies,
c) that the process of exchange has a materiality and memory too.
Patrick: I have anxieties about the type of permanence that results from digitisation. In digital space, creators have control over user experience – visualising and other types of digital capture immortalise events. Moments can be revisited and experienced again and again by all well into the future, and a digital experience never fully captures the live. It seems unnatural for our bodies, words, behaviour, experiences etc. to exist in the cloud. At times it feels un-human.
So we’ve been thinking about the human body and its trajectory of decay, about memory and memorialisation, archiving and archaeology, embodied experience of one bodily form vs. another, the potential for permanence and the associated joy and fear…
…so this project is some kind of attempt to capture a dance, to memorialise it, but only in order to create a new dancing body that has the ability to further evolve/dissolve, with a destiny to eventually exist only as memory material, just like the dance that gave birth to it. This new dancing body hovers in front of us, performing for us, enigmatic but staunch in its gesturing towards notions of time, creationism (in the non-religious sense) and the power of long-lasting echo.