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ABOUT DANCE v1 Ep3: Artistic Curation

Jul 3rd 2021 Jul 4th 2021

The framing question for this forum episode was “What Do We Need?”. Over the course of two days this question provided the guiding thread for an exploration of the stakes — personal, practical, and systematic — in making art. What became clear is that the work of dance/dancer, performance/performer and art/artist is an ever evolving process of negotiations. EXPAND for a summary of how the weekend unfolded >>

DAY 1

I INTRODUCTIONS

Marcela — In introducing herself and her role as Lake Studios Artistic Director, Marcela remarked on how carefully she and her partner (in life and in all things Lake), Mark, named the forum series. They landed on About Dance as the word “about” felt both focused and open; an indication that the forum is a place where an expansive conversation can happen in and around the field of dance. The second part of the name, forming futures is a signpost to how these conversations might ripple out beyond the forum itself, expanding in space and time. 

Gabi — Director of ada Studio & Bühne, Gabi gave a brief history of the evolution of her approach to running a studio and performance venue. Initially, she saw her work as a programmer — less about hand picking artists and more about creating a space that is an anchor of opportunity for dance makers in Berlin. Of course, the funding structures that made ada’s continued existence possible required her to take more of a curatorial position and this led to a philosophy of curation that is grounded in the idea of taking care.  

Julek & Diethild — As co-curators of the A.PART Festival (ada’s initiative for Berlin dance students and alumni), Julek and Diethild introduced the challenge they faced in curating a performance festival during corona lockdowns. They had to re-think artistic practice and presentation formats from the ground up. This gave rise to a focus on sharing process, as opposed to product, and to the richness of exchange in unexpected collaborations.
Particpants — And then we came to the circle of professional artists that attended the forum live, including: Iris,

Lenka, Tabi, Julie, Siontu, Dakota, Jessy, Raphael, Frederike, Sonya, Maria, Asya and Teoma. As a group, we represented dancers, choreographers, students, teachers, cultural managers, art administrators, performers, performance makers, executors, creators, and scholars.

II GETTING LOST After the round of introductions, participants were paired up with a stranger and sent off to get lost at the lake. The task was simple: have a conversation. We were encouraged to share personal artistic practices, and to keep our eye on the forum’s group Telegram chat, where conversational cues would drop as we wandered. 
Upon return each duo shared a re-cap of their conversation and/or path to and from the lake. And out of the sharing, a collective vision board began to take material form. On an oversized sheet of butcher paper tacked to the outdoor studio’s back wall, participants and moderators began taping smaller pieces of paper upon which they wrote responses to the question, “what do we need?”

III CAKE And then we braked for cake!

IV PERFORMATIVE INTERVENTION The first performative intervention was given by Tabi, who guided the group in a personal practice that explores emotions via qualities of movement and their manifestation in increasingly specific regions of the body

V VISION We returned to the large butcher paper, — our collective vision board — and continued to build a written mental map of what we need.   DAY 2

I INTERVENTION The second day began with another performative intervention, this time from Asya. Asya spoke about coincidence and synchronicity, shared some of her personal video work, as well as her collaborative work for A.PART festival, and then opened the intervention to a small group discussion.

II VISION Next we returned again to our vision board. This time, it was Gabi who started us off with an orientation to Berlin’s funding systems and structures. Gabi stressed the necessity of keeping in view the long arc of an artistic career and encouraged us all to envision possible funding systems from the lens of career continuity and sustainability
After a group discussion on funding structures, we began to physically rearrange the pieces of paper taped to the butcher board into categories of likeness.
This process continued: we were encouraged to keep rearranging as we saw fit. The exercise unfolded in silence and was wrapped in a meditative atmosphere of wordless negotiation. Here are photos of the vision board at different points over the course of the weekend:

III INTERVENTION The final performative intervention was offered by Iris, who gave a brief introduction to how a background in psychology influences her work and then performed a brief and captivating movement solo followed by participants written and spoken reflections. 

IV — 1 MINUTE The two days culminated in a sharing round where everyone was given one minute to speak. The minute was timed and the time was strictly adhered to. In the spirit of working within pre-set parameters, here is summary of each person’s one minute closing remarks in no more than ten words per person:

  • Iris — everything is of value
  • Lenka — felt no pressure
  • Tabi — change the system from the outside or the inside
  • Julie — how/now what
  • Siontu — perfect location
  • Jessy — the conversation never gets old
  • Dakota — woke up to what we still need to research
  • Teoma — the curation of a discussion on curation very well curated
  • Raphael — you can start the one-minute timer
  • Sonya — we need more impulses like this
  • Marcela — the one-minute is the embarrassment performance
  • Maria — grateful to join 
  • Gabi — came with plan, the participants took over, made it rich
  • Asya — how to deal with the themes, challenge working process
  • Julek — how to practice, how to keep telegram groups alive
  • Diethild — how to get rid of the pressure to summarize

And with that, the vision board was floated down from the wall and carefully folded as the moderators and participants said good bye and wandered back into their individual lives and practices, tethered to the forum by a Telegram chat group.

LINKS TO DIVE DEEPER

~ Peak behind the forum scene and continue the discussion in the Telegram group

~ Check out A.PART Festival’s Artist Blog

~ Sign up for the Basic Income Lottery, Mein Grundeinkommen

~ Explore ada Studio & Bühne

A visual diagram of Berlin’s Funding System:

Some inspiring book recommendations:

ARTIST and PRESENTER BIOGRAPHIES

Gabi Beier dance dramaturge and manager, was employed as a ballet dramaturge at various state theaters in Germany from 1996 to 2006 and was head of the youth dance program at Berlin’s Pfefferberg from 1999 to 2002. In 2002 she founded the office tanzbaustelle – dance dramaturgy and management and has since worked as a freelance dramaturg and manager for various dance and theater productions (including Milla Koistinen, Petra Sabisch, Jess Curtis/Gravity, Jeremy Wade). In 2006 she was one of the co-founders of ada Studio & Bühne für zeitgenössischen Tanz (Berlin), of which she has been the sole artistic director since 2008. In addition to her work at ada Studio, Gabi accompanies and teaches young choreographers in Germany and abroad. Since May 2021, she has been a mentor in the newly founded Hub for Dramaturgy and Production Management/Tanzbüro Berlin. www.tanzbaustelle.de. www.ada-studio.de

Julek Kreutzer is a dancer and choreographer living in Berlin. She studied dance, context and choreography at the Hochschulübergreifendes Zentrum Tanz Berlin (HZT Berlin). She is a founding member of the association Tänzer ohne Grenzen e.V. As a dancer, she has worked with Lina Gómez, Anna Nowak, Alice Chauchat, Lyllie Rouvière and Bella Hager, a.o. Her piece Entenübersetzung brings performers with and without prior experience together on one stage and questions the boundaries, spaces and viewing habits of a theatrical event. Since 2020, she curates the festival A.PART together with Diethild Meier, Gabi Beier and Alex Hennig. She also curates the Tanztag for young choreographers at the annual Hoffestspiele at Expedition Metropolis. She is a scholarship holder of the pilot project Tanzpraxis 2020/21 of the Berlin Senate, DanceWeb-er in 2021 and one of 6 artists of the international residency programme DanceMe UP in 2021/22.

Diethild Meier lives in Berlin and works as a freelance dance artist in various collaborative constellations and creative positions. She studied “Dance, Choreography and Context” at the HZT Berlin (BA 2015) and has since participated in numerous dance productions. She developed a close collaboration as a dancer and co-creator with choreographers Lina Gómez (2014 to present) and Mirjam Gurtner (2018 to present). She is a scholarship holder of the pilot project Tanzpraxis 2020/2021 of the Berlin Senate Department for Culture and Europe and receives the #TakeCare funding 2021 of the Fonds Darstellende Künste for her research project SOMATICHORUS. She works as a production manager for several Berlin artists and is the dramaturg of Nir Vidan since 2019. Together with Julek Kreutzer and Alex Hennig, Diethild curates the A.PART Festival for Berlin dance students and alumni at ada Studio Berlin. Diethild is a photographer (Diplom Fachhochschule Dortmund 2008) and filmmaker and has been documenting contemporary dance in Berlin in still and moving images for 7 years. www.diethildmeier.de

Trailer for Artistic Curation

“What do we need?”Curating as Artistic Process

During the first weekend in July, Gabi Beier, Julek Kreutzer and Diethild Meier invite dance, choreography and performance artists to Lake Studios to explore together the question: What do we need? In other words: How can we actively shape the landscape of presentation formats and funding structures in which we currently operate in order to create more adequate conditions for our artistic processes? 

Curating comes from Latin: curare, which means to care for or look after something. As actors in Berlin’s independent dance scene and as festival curators, we would like to take this literally and, together with you, spin visions of the future for sustainable structures and new formats of participation. We understand processuality, curiosity and exchange as an artistic practice in itself, and we would like to create a platform for encounter, dialogue and empowerment with you. Our (silent) goal is to change existing structures in a sustainable way, to pave the way for new formats of presentation, to test them and to strengthen the positions of dance artists in dialogue with institutions.

The “What do we need” weekend at Lake Studios involves: Discussion formats in which one’s own body is not forgotten but activated, getting lost at Müggelsee and getting lost in thought, thinking big together (and small, too), cookies, an insight into the A.PART festival and into the works of artists involved, a critical examination of the existing funding system, performative interventions, utopias, sun and air.

PROGRAM

Saturday 3 July 

13:00   OPENING with Gabi Beier, Julek Kreutzer, Diethild Meier and Marcela Giesche 

14:00    “Getting lost at Müggelsee”: walk and talk in teams of two

15:30    BREAK with CAKE

16:00    Performative intervention by Tabea Antonacci 

16:30    Vision Lab: “What do we need”

18:00    Good Bye

Sunday 4 July

14:00   Performative intervention by Asya Ashman

14:30   Vision Lab 

16:00   BREAK with CAKE

16:30    Performative Intervention by Iris Rosa Gravemaker

17:00     Vision Lab / Final discussion round

18:00    Good Bye


Hosted by: Gabi Beier, Julek Kreutzer, Diethild Meier

Artistic Direction: Marcela Geische 

Assistance & Documentation: Maria Kousi, Jessy Tuddenham 

Camera & Editing: Noam Gorbat

The ABOUT DANCE, Vol 3 participants included the following artists:  

Tasha Hess Neustadt, Dakota Comin, Julie Peters, Sointu Pere, Lenka Vorechovska, Raphael Beau, Frederike Doffin, Sonya Levin, Teoma Naccarato.

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