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Contact improvisation
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==History of contact improvisation== === From ''Magnesium'' to ''Contact Improvisations'' === Contact improvisation was developed in the [[United States]] in the 1970s by a group of dancers and athletes gathered under the guidance of choreographer and dancer Steve Paxton.<ref name=":0" /> In January 1972, Steve Paxton was in residence at [[Oberlin College]] during a tour with [[Grand Union (dance group)|Grand Union]], a collective where he collaborated with other prominent figures in postmodern dance, including [[Yvonne Rainer]] and [[Trisha Brown]]. For several weeks, he offered Oberlin students two sets of practices: # every morning at dawn, a "soft class" involving an exploration that he soon called the "small dance," a form of meditation that is practiced standing, where attention is paid to postural adjustments and micro-weight transfers;<ref>Steve Paxton, "Why Standing?", ''Contact Quarterly'', 2015</ref> # and later in the day, rehearsals for a performance that he transmitted to a group of young men and whose score is to explore the extremes of movement and disorientation, from standing still to falling, rolling, colliding, and jumping in the air. For these rehearsals, Steve Paxton relied on his training in modern dance (he had danced in the companies of [[José Limón]] and [[Merce Cunningham]]), in [[aikido]] and in [[gymnastics]]. The combination of these practices culminated in ''Magnesium'',<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://contactquarterly.com/contact-editions/index.php#book=videoda-contact-improvisation-archive-(dvd)|title=Contact Editions dance and somatics books & dvds|website=contactquarterly.com|access-date=2017-03-08}}</ref> a twenty-minute performance in which dancers performed on gym mats. The piece involved jumping, bumping into each other, manipulating, and clinging to one another. Paxton described the movements as using "the body as a whole, where all parts are simultaneously unbalanced or thrown against another body or into the air".<ref name=":0" /> After about fifteen minutes, the dancers stop and start a "Small Dance" that concludes the performance. In the Spring of 1972, Steve Paxton received a grant from Change, Inc which allowed him to invite dancers to work on the form he was evolving. He invited some colleagues from the [[Judson Dance Theater]] years like [[Barbara Dilley]] and Nancy Topf, [[release technique]] pioneer [[Mary Fulkerson]], as well as students met during his teaching tours, including Nancy Stark Smith and Curt Siddall (from Oberlin College), Danny Lepkoff and David Woodberry (from the [[University of Rochester]], where Mary Fulkerson was a teacher) and Nita Little (from [[Bennington College]]).<ref name=":0" /> At the end of this residency, the group presented a performance that Paxton named ''Contact Improvisations''. The performance took the form of a continuous afternoon practice over five days at the John Weber Gallery in Manhattan. Spectators were free to come and go as the dancers practiced, alongside a concurrent film screening of George Manupelli's ''Dr. Chicago''.<ref name=":4">{{Cite web |last=Hennessy |first=Keith |title=The Experiment Called Contact Improvisation - FoundSF |url=http://www.foundsf.org/index.php?title=The_Experiment_Called_Contact_Improvisation |access-date=2017-03-09 |website=www.foundsf.org |language=en}}</ref> === Expansion Across Regions === ==== In North America ==== ===== Styles ===== Following the first performance of ''Contact Improvisations'' in New York in 1972, the participants scattered to different parts of the [[United States]] but soon began to teach the practice.{{r|Kourlas}} The syncopated, risky, raw and awkward style of the first performances gave place rather quickly to a variety of aesthetics within the form. One of those aesthetics was the development of smooth, continuous, controlled flow of quality in the late 1970s and early 1980s, running parallel with the opposite trend of interest in conflict and unexpected responses, including previously avoided eye contact and direct hand contact.<ref>Novack, 1990 op cit p. 156-8.</ref> Says Nancy Stark Smith, <blockquote>Within the study of Contact Improvisation, the experience of flow was soon recognized and highlighted in our dancing. It became one of my favorite practices and I proceeded to "do flow" for many years-challenging it, testing it: could we flow through ''this'' pass? Could we squeak through ''that'' one, and keep going?<ref>Nancy Stark Smith, "Back in time", Contact Quarterly, vol.11/1, Winter 86, p. 3</ref></blockquote> Regardless of those aesthetic choices, the central characteristic of contact improvisation remains a focus on bodily awareness and physical reflexes rather than consciously controlled movements.<ref>Novack, 1990 op cit p. 152</ref> One of the founders of the form, Daniel Lepkoff, comments that the “precedence of body experience first, and mindful cognition second, is an essential distinction between Contact Improvisation and other approaches to dance.”<ref>{{cite journal|last=Lepkoff|first=Daniel|date=Winter–Spring 2000|title=Contact Improvisation|journal=Contact Quarterly|page=62}}</ref> Another source affirms that the practice of contact improvisation involves “mindfulness, sensing and collecting information”<ref name=":3">{{cite book|title=Contact Improvisation:Moving, Dancing, Interaction|last=Kaltenbrunner|first=Thomas|publisher=Meyer & Meyer|year=1998|location=Aachen (Germany)|page=93}}</ref> as its core. ===== Languaging and observing ===== In 1975, the dancers working with Steve Paxton considered trademarking the term contact improvisation in order to control the teaching and practice of the dance form, consequently for reasons of safety. This idea was rejected in favor of establishing a forum for communication: this became the ''Contact Newsletter'' founded by Nancy Stark Smith, which evolved into the bi-annual journal [https://contactquarterly.com/ ''Contact Quarterly'']<ref>{{cite journal|last=Smith|first=Nancy|title=A question of copyright - some history|journal=Contact Quarterly: A Vehicle for Moving Ideas|year=1998|volume=23|issue=1|page=35}}</ref> which continues to be published online by the non-profit Contact Collaborations (incorporated in 1978) after a final print edition came out in January 2020.<ref name=":2">{{cite web|title=About Us|url=http://www.contactquarterly.com/about/cq_aboutus.php|publisher=Contact Collaborations|access-date=2 November 2013}}</ref>{{r|Kourlas}} The journal, now co-edited by Nancy Stark Smith and Lisa Nelson, brings together different reflections of contact improvisation teachers and practitioners and cements an international community by equipping it with a communication organ, as well as hosting several other orders of reflections, including writings by [[contemporary dance]]rs and [[Somatics|somatic practitioners]]. According to the magazine's statement,<blockquote>''Contact Quarterly'' is the longest living, independent, artist-made, not-for-profit, reader-supported magazine devoted to the dancer's voice. Founded in 1975, ''Contact Quarterly'' (CQ) began as a forum for discussion of the emerging dance form Contact Improvisation. Serving as a meeting ground for a worldwide network of contact improvisers, ''CQ''quickly grew to include writings and interviews on postmodern and contemporary experimental dance, somatic movement practices, improvisational dance, mixed-abilities dance, teaching methods, creative process, and performance.<ref name=":2" /></blockquote>While the development of contact improvisation has benefited greatly from Nancy Stark Smith and Lisa Nelson's editorial work to support the writings of dancers in their exploration of the form, it also owes much to the cameras of Steve Christiansen and then Lisa Nelson, who documented many moments of the work (especially in performance) and allow the contactors to observe themselves with meticulousness.[[File:CIJam.jpg|thumb|left|Contact Improvisation jam in Montpellier, France (2004]] ===== Development of art-sport ===== Since the mid-1970s, regular jams are present in most major cities in North America (New York City, Boston, San Francisco, and Montreal). Other multi-day residential spaces (such as the Breitenbush Jam, which has existed since 1981) have been in existence since the late 1970s. Remembers dancer Mark Pritchard, [[File:Earthdancestudio-outsideview.jpg|thumb|Earthdance artist-run residency center in western [[Massachusetts]]]] The 1979 Country Jam was a first of its kind in the Contact world: over fifty people from the western United States and Canada came together for twelve days of non-structured existence, life and dance: neither a workshop, a conference or a seminar, but an improvisational gathering, with the sole aim of creating a space for dancing and living in flux... Our days were without structure, except for meals: at the beginning, we planned to keep 90-minute slots for the courses, but the idea was quickly abandoned thanks to a system based on Supply and demand, in which each could suggest a topic to be dealt with and offer to lead a class.<ref>Mark Pritchard, "Country Jam", ''Contact Quarterly'', <abbr>vol.</abbr> 5 (1), 1979, <abbr>P.</abbr> 36</ref> These residential events (workshops, festivals, long jams) represent a parallel economy that invited the creation of dedicated spaces of practice, the model of which was provided very early by Earthdance, a residential center built in 1986 by a Boston community of dancers.<ref>{{Cite news|url=http://www.earthdance.net/resources/articles/1996/09/earthdance-survives-changing-vision-changing-times|title=Earthdance survives changing vision, changing times|date=1996|work=Daily Hampshire Gazette}}</ref> ==== In Europe ==== In Europe, contact improvisation was presented for the first time in 1973 (from June 25 to 28th) in an art gallery in Rome, L'Attico run by Fabio Sargentini.<ref>{{Cite book|title=L'attico di Fabio Sargentini. 1966-1978. Catalogo della mostra| year=2010 |publisher=Mondadori Electa|isbn=9788837079574|pages=128|language=it, en}}</ref> In the 1970s and 1980s, Steve Paxton and Lisa Nelson were regularly invited to the [[Dartington College of Arts]] in Great Britain (where early contacter Mary Fulkerson was part of the dance faculty) and the School for New Dance Development in [[Amsterdam]], which served as transmission belts for contact improvisation in Europe. Nancy Stark Smith was key to the organization of the first European Contact Improvisation Teachers Exchange. Subsequent exchanges have been organized since 1985 and hosted each year by a different European country.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.ecite.org/|title=ECITE.org|website=www.ecite.org|access-date=2017-03-29}}</ref> Belgian dancer and choreographer Patricia Kuypers noted in 1999 that, depending on the country and the individual, it has spread more or less rapidly in the world of dance or amateurs. In Belgium, where Steve Paxton had come since the 1980s, invited by the Klapstuk and the Kaaitheater, few professional dancers regularly practiced it, and apart from certain outbreaks of fever in successful jams, it can not be said that contact improvisation left any lasting trace among professional dancers, except in a choreographed form.<ref name=":1">Patricia Kuypers, ''Nouvelles de danse'', <abbr>Vol.</abbr> 38-39, Bruxelles, 1999</ref> ===== In France ===== In France, contact improvisation (sometimes called "danse-contact", as in French-speaking Canada) was introduced for the first time in 1978, where a contact improvisation course was given by Steve Paxton and Lisa Nelson during the musical festivities of Sainte Beaume:<blockquote>Didier Silhol, [[Mark Tompkins (dancer)|Mark Tompkins]], Suzanne Cotto, Edith Veyron and Martine Muffat-Joly attended. Their enthusiasm brought them together, to explore together this new form of dance, to organize new courses by bringing back Steve Paxton, Lisa Nelson and by inviting other teachers such as Nancy Stark Smith. In 1980, they created the association Danse Contact Improvisation and began to teach themselves, mostly in pairs.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.laboratoiredugeste.com/spip.php?article166|title=Le Laboratoire du GESTE|website=www.laboratoiredugeste.com|language=fr|access-date=2017-03-08}}</ref></blockquote>Contact improvisation is now practiced in most major cities of the French metropolis - Paris, Grenoble, Lyon, Marseille, Montpellier, Lille, Rennes all have at least one weekly jam - and is taught in many conservatories, including the National Conservatory of Music and Dance of Paris. ==== In the world ==== The network of social practices or amateurs of contact improvisation has spread to all the continents except Antarctica,<ref name=":2" /> with a particularly intense presence in the Americas, Western and Eastern Europe, Finland, Russia, Israel, Japan, Taïwan, Australia, India, China and Malaysia, as evidenced by the regularity of the jams, festivals and weekly courses taught in these countries.
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