A peek into our Swarthmore Project #3

Shavon Norris reflects again on our Swarthmore project, looking at her experience as a supervisor and outside eye to the project.  Coming next week, we will see some video on our One Year Vlog Project that highlights some of the work our 4 idiosynCratz and 9 Swarthmore students have been doing since October.

*check out our One-Year Vlog Project

It is March, we started in October
mentors, mentees, John Cage
production deadlines, discomfort, newness and April approaching
debates about improv, about what belongs on stage
about how to create a dance, about what dance is
there are challenges
confusion, frustration, understanding, compromise, trust
buttons pushed, toes pointed and bodies moving
there are writing exercises
warm ups that are fun and sweaty
there are insecurities, confidence, change and beauty

there are 13 bodies/brains making decisions
13 bodies/brains negotiating preferences, perspectives, aesthetics
trying to make something honest and good
trying to make art
trying to be heard
trying to be seen
trying to make sense
trying to form relationships, friendships, ownership

this is collaboration to the tenth degree
a collision of histories and personalities in a studio
a collision of values and techniques
of humor, communication and needs

I admire these bodies
I respect these bodies
I am glad I am not one of these bodies
these bodies are journeying into territory that frightens most
they venture into the unknown
they move into undiscovered language and hip flexion
they make time to hear all of what is being said
time to witness all of what is being seen
and include all of what is being created
accept what is offered

the studio does not feel big enough to hold it
the stage deep enough to share the story
but they are making a dance to store the journey and the learning

I look forward to April

above: Karim Sariahmed; photo by Tayarisha Poe


POST-JAZZ

Shannon Murphy shares with us some thoughts about the newest series in idioSomatics: POST-JAZZ.  idioSomatics is idiosynCrazy productions’ free community class, geared toward providing free training for professional dancers.  The class is offered as a part of idiosynCrazy productions’ training initiative, The Physical Laboratory. You can keep up-to-date with the latest series by adding The Physical Laboratory to your Google Calendar.  idioSomatics is Fridays from 10am – noon at the Community Education Center.

*also, check out our One-Year Vlog Project

POST-JAZZ
– Shannon Murphy

Feeling awkward and a little unsure of how things would go, I arrived at the CEC the morning of our first of 5 classes in the idioSomatics: POST-JAZZ series. I usually don’t voice my knowledge in jazz dance in the Philadelphia dance community, although I’m sure that it slips out into my movement all the time. It took a bit of coaxing from Juma, who proposed that I teach a Jazz dance series to kick off 2012’s idioSomatics return. Generally surrounded by the post-modern dance community, I voice my other interests – in Franklin Method, anatomy, and imagery – loud and clear, and it never crosses my mind whether the class will be on board or not, or if my interests are valid. But this, to me, feels different. I am questioning how well I anticipated handling the duality of having a body-mind-centered / jazz class. I wonder how far-fetched my desires were to facilitate exploration of both gentle, aware preparedness AND the spark of accent and fierceness that the persona of Jazz dance usually brings to the studio. This duality haunts me as a teacher. I want class participants to know that this duality is possible.

I’ve been spending much of 2012 soul-searching. So, revisiting my ghosts about Jazz dance seemed to fit right in. After our first class, I chatted with participants Gabrielle Revlock, Marcie Mamura and Ellie Goudie-Averill and found myself finally asking aloud what had been playing over and over again in my head. What are the differences between the persona of a dance style and it’s technique?  Does the selling, or the sexiness that is connected to jazz dance facilitate more than just the look?  Does it give us more options as performers?  And if we take that away, is it another dance style? We begin talking about how “playing the part” is often a part of the culture of dance class. I acknowledge dressing a certain way for ballet class tends to produce a different outcome than wearing the same attire for a release technique class would. I consider if it is just the clothes, or if they facilitate a shift in my state of being. If the latter is true, then I wonder if I take on a different persona as a teacher to facilitate different agendas. I’ve been asking myself how the teacher-student culture differs from jazz to more contemporary dance practices, and if adapting to either will actually help me lead a class where I’m looking to share a balance between mindful embodied movement and a highly energetic and technical practice.

I’ve taken the last three weeks to whole-heartedly dive into teaching my peers contemporary jazz class with clarity of anatomical, and qualitative awareness. I am having fun, rediscovering why I love Jazz, and how I can make it useful to myself and to my dance community. We’ve been focusing on how to hit an accent, completing a line inside the down-beat in a way that won’t give us tennis elbow. We’re talking about moving energy on the inside of our bodies and finding continual pathways of movement in what is commonly known as a hip roll.  To be honest, my language about movement is not that different than what I would offer if I were to be teaching a contemporary movement class, but I find I’m exploring physical vocabulary that has been put on the back burner for a bit now. I know that, for quite some time, I have purposefully neglected my jazz dance roots to find new options. Now after spending so much time digging into new territory I feel confident to welcome back this style of dance in a new light. POST-JAZZ is reminding me that I have something to offer that I, up until this point, have not allowed myself to give.  Fusing jazz, and Franklin Method brings together two ways of looking at my body in motion. I ask myself, “why can’t I let my hair down and know that my clavicle is spiraling into my sternum creating potential energy?” I know this is just the beginning of leaning how these two worlds can collide, and am looking forward to seeing what can develop for me as a teacher, an artist and for the future of POST-JAZZ.

photo by Lindsay Browning


J-Setting Marches Northward

Hello folks,

This past summer, journalist Bruce Walsh wrote a short series of articles centered around our work this summer on Private Places, then called The Flight Attendants Project.  Below is the second article from Bruce, in which he explores some of the origins of J-Sette’s emergence into popular culture.  J-Sette movement has been used as research for the Private Places project.

*also, check out our One-Year Vlog Project

J-Setting Marches Northward
– Bruce Walsh

The tiny staff of idiosynCrazy productions has done their best to cool the only slightly air-conditioned Live Arts Festival rehearsal space on Fifth and Poplar streets. They’ve closed the loading dock of this converted industrial building, desperately saving as much cool air as they can in the vast expanse, where fifteen Philadelphia dancers attempt to keep pace with Dante Beacham.

The barefoot twenty-four-year-old is the only person onstage without formal dance training. Yet today he is, without a doubt, at the head of the class.

Beacham leads them through a series of bold, sharp—almost cheerleader-esque—rapid-fire movements, all to a driving eight-count beat. After a water-break only a third of the dancers return to the stage. The rest watch, out of breath, as the remaining few complete the two-minute routine. When they do applause echoes off the rafters and dancers collapse on the floor in victory, as if they’ve just broken the ribbon at a distance race.

These Philly dancers have just had their first intensive exposure to J-Setting, from one of the current leaders on the J-Sette scene. Local choreographer Jumatatu Poe brought Beacham to Philadelphia to incorporate this club favorite into his latest work, The Flight Attendants Project, which is being developed with the assistance of a $50,000 grant from Dance Advance, an arm of the Pew Center for Arts and Heritage.

Most Americans have only been exposed to J-Setting through the 2008 Beyoncé video, “Single Ladies (Put a Ring On It),” in which choreographers Frank Gatson and JaQuel Knight appropriated the hallmarks of the style. Even Poe admits that the video sparked his fascination with the scene. In a 2009 interview with Vibe Magazine, Knight explained that he, Beyoncé, and Gatson researched J-Setting via YouTube. If so, they were likely influenced by Beacham. His videos are some of the most popular J-Setting clips out there. In an interview with the London Sunday Times, Beyoncé put it this way: “[We] added the down-South thing—it’s called J-Setting, where one person does something and the next person follows.”

That “down-South thing” is more accurately described as a distinctive feature of Southern, African-American gay culture. And many in that community were irked to see it borrowed without a please, thank you, or even an acknowledgment of where it came from.

“I feel as though [Knight] took credit for something that he has no idea about,” says Beacham, now sitting in the cooler confines of the Live Arts Festival’s office. “I feel like he went online, researched it, and took it as [if] he really knew what it was. I would love for someone from this community to be able to bring it to the world, and be able to explain what it is and what it means to us. Instead we have [Knight] trying to explain where it comes from. It bothers me.”

In fairness, explaining where J-Setting comes from is no easy task, and even the scene leaders are somewhat fuzzy on the details.

For starters, the form didn’t begin in the clubs, but on a Mississippi football field.

In 1971, the majorette section of the Jackson State University Marching Band abandoned baton twirling in favor of dancing to pop songs by James Brown and others. A huge hit with the crowd, the majorettes started calling themselves the Prancing Jaycettes. (In 1982, they changed the spelling to J-Settes.)

Their trademark eight-count, lead-and-follow groove was imitated—and later interpreted and evolved—by men in the surrounding area. Eventually, this style— called “bucking” in and around Jackson—started to appear in clubs across the South.

By 2000 the dance was synonymous with Southern gay culture. Dozens of formal male J-Sette teams competed at Atlanta and Memphis Pride festivals—and still do. Beacham’s team, Mystic Force, is one of the top squads going.

For many gay men in the South, J-Setting is a defiant, proud expression of sexuality, amidst some of the most repressive areas of the country. At any given Jackson State football game, groups of men lead their own J-Sette dances in the stands. “I’ve never done it [at the games]. I’m afraid to do it, to be honest with you,” says Beacham, who currently attends Jackson State. “I try to avoid violence, and I know some people are not as accepting as others.”

“We will see that, yes, every now an then we will see somebody imitating us in the stands,” says Kathryn Pinkston-Worthy, the current Prancing J-Sette coach and former 70s-era captain.

For the leader of the Prancing J-Settes, there is only a tacit acknowledgement of their interpretation in gay culture, and an extremely vague understanding of the larger phenomenon.

“From what I’m told—and I have never been there to witness any of it—but I’m told they have different groups in clubs, and they have uniforms, and they imitate the J-Settes,” says Pinkston-Worthy with the emphasis on imitate. “That must be where this ‘J-Setting’ comes from, because we definitely don’t call it that.”

Imagine her surprise when she turned on the television to find Beyoncé utilizing the club-infused interpretation of a J-Sette strut: “I was like, ‘Oh wait a minute, haven’t I seen this before?’”


What do YOU think?

*a quick reminder to subsribe to our weekly vlog project, too

Hello folks,

idioSomatics, our free weekly contemporary dance class for professionals, is back and is now happening at the Community Education Center (3500 Lancaster Avenue) in West Philly.  Fridays from 10am to noon!!!  This time around, we are trying something a little different.  Every three or four weeks, we begin a new session in which the focus will be more specific than it has been in the past.  For example, we might have idioSomatics: Light as a Feather in which, for three weeks, we focus on movement and performance qualities that have a weightless, fleeting nature.  Or, we might have idioSomatics: Break That Back for four weeks in which we focus on bombastic, isolated movement qualities that that draw relationships to club culture.  You can keep track of the series by adding idioSomatics into your Google Calendar (click here).

For the next three weeks, Shannon Murphy is teaching idioSomatics and we are testing our a new name: idioSomatics: POST-JAZZ

Our question to you – What do you think you would find in a POST-JAZZ class?


Founding idiosynCrazy

Founding idiosynCrazy

-Jumatatu Poe

idiosynCrazy productions’ Artistic Director, Jumatatu Poe, reflects on some of the impulses that drove him to found idiosynCrazy productions, and what keeps it feeling relevant for him. Take a look at some of the ideas at work, behind-the-scenes.

*also, check out our One-Year Vlog Project

___________________________________________________________

I am incredibly inspired and driven forward by an amazing workshop experience I had in New York during Winter MELT at Movement Research.  The late afternoon workshops were led by dance artist Trajal Harrell, and were centered around choreographic and compositional choices, and what the social/political/economic inspirations for and impacts of these choices can be.  In my estimations, we addressed being clear about the audiences for whom we were making work.  We talked about the daunting challenge of addressing complicated ideas/themes/images/constructs/concepts within a work, and the (necessary) distance between (artist) intention and (audience) interpretation.  We talked about being clear, for ourselves, and making choices about how clear we wanted to be perceived by others.  Lately, as I question the choreographic work that I make and the (necessary) stakes of making that work for distribution within the world, these things were exactly where I needed to guide my thoughts.  Thank you, to Trajal and other participants of the class, for facilitating this direction!

***

After the workshop, I consumed myself with ideas: about my choreographic work, about idiosynCrazy productions, about the way that I represent my body and allow/invite bodies to be represented.  About a lot of things.  But, what I am most drawn to today is the idea of idiosynCrazy productions – the idea of it today, my original ideas of it, and our (the company’s) ideas about what it could/will be… and what will be the impact for/on us.

When I left grad school and entered, more steadily, into Philly’s professional dance world, I knew that I wanted to make work: I wanted to be a choreographer/director of dance work.  And my desires were somewhat specific… I wanted to have a place to be able to explore really athletic (sometimes), pop-culture-and-urban-lifestyle-influenced (whatever that means), part narrative-abstract-experiential, messy (because, look at this city… it’s unavoidable), modular (being able to be performed in a vast variety of locations, in interaction with different folks) dance work.  I wanted to develop processes that would incorporate discussion of contemporary social phenomena.  I wanted an environment supportive of folks from all backgrounds interested in partaking in this contemporary, experimental dance world (frequently stigmatized as a world exclusively dedicated to White cultural expression).  And I felt like there were folks around me who wanted to do that, too, and that I really wanted to work with.

Having a company namesake was not, and still is not, my interest.  However, it seemed convenient to have some organizational body designed to produce the type of work that, then and now, I need to be making, whether I am directing it or not.  So, I founded idiosynCrazy productions…  Heh, that ellipsis seems appropriate.  Hesitation about the unknown was a significant part of my first interactions with the idea of idiosynCrazy productions.  When I graduated from college, I was one of the founding members of Green Chair Dance Company, a collaborative dance company also based in Philadelphia.  From then, I knew that the collaborative dance-making process (with multiple directors) was not for me.  Not at that time.  Since my last year in college, I had been dancing in Kariamu Welsh’s company (Kariamu & Company: Traditions), and felt fairly certain that the company-namesake model was also not up my alley.  But, I did want to choreograph.  And I also wanted to dance in works directed by others, who had interests in a similar world of ideas as mine.

With idiosynCrazy productions, I always knew that I wanted to have multiple directors of the company.  Growing up with parents who identified (especially in my youth) as socialist and Pan-Africanist, communal decision-making is a part of my developmental-DNA.  I also knew very early that I wanted to build this company with Shannon and Shavon; I have immense respect for both of them as artists and as visionaries.  Right now, the only choreographic work that idiosynCrazy productions has made was directed by either me or Shannon Murphy.  We have discussed soon having other directorial voices enter into the mix, and I am excited about this.  The traditional idea of the “dance company” is becoming largely outdated (especially in the contemporary, experimental dance field), but I am driven to keep working toward the future of idiosynCrazy productions – a future that faces today’s national economy realistically… AND revolutionarily.  There is a place for this work, particularly in conversation with Philadelphia’s communities, and I am excited to help make more of it happen.

***

When I was 17, it occurred to me that I would always, with each new year, look back upon my past ages, tickled, while murmuring, “Wow, I really didn’t know much back then.”  It doesn’t serve me to presume that what I know right now is “much.”  Or that what I know ten years from now will be.  I am looking forward to a time when my current artistic interests and desires are laid to rest, or mutated enough that their resemblance to the past seems coincidental.  The works that I make now with idiosynCrazy productions will one day be less relevant for me, in my future present-tense.  And, if I am paying attention to myself, I feel like this is the only way (I say that now, so authoritatively… while not knowing much).  For right now, though, I am happy to be making work within idiosynCrazy productions.  The work feels like something that I need to be figuring out – and I still have so many questions about it.  Thank you, idiosynCrazy productions, for providing me the space to explore these things that feel so relevant.


Bruce Walsh, Article #1

Hello folks,

This past summer, journalist Bruce Walsh wrote a short series of articles centered around our work this summer on Private Places, then called The Flight Attendants Project.  Below is the first article from Bruce, in which he encounters Jumatatu Poe (the project’s director) and Caleb Levengood (scenic designer) working on the project.

*also, check out our One-Year Vlog Project

_________________________________________________

Modern Dance for Beginners

Jumatatu Poe traverses the barrier between audience and dance

On a blustery January night, an invited audience packs themselves neatly into the Performance Garage for an in-progress performance of Jumatatu Poe’s FLATLAND 2010.

Twenty minutes into the show eleven dancers come bounding off the stage, darting up the aisles and tiptoeing lengthwise between the rows. Each dancer chooses someone to confront and what follows is indeed confrontational: while forcing eye contact, the dancer trembles with a growing fury, eventually releasing guttural, hiccupping bits of jumbled verbiage at their patron of choice.

When mulled over after the showing, the tactic makes perfect sense. FLATLAND is an exploration of the loss of intimacy in a culture dominated by two-dimensional social media. The moment forces audiences and dancers to confront the visceral, needy, uncomfortable aspects of an individual—the parts of a person we typically keep at arm’s length, a distance made all too easy by digital communication.

But in the moment—with dancers convulsing in their laps­—the audience vacillates somewhere between awkward self-consciousness and downright freaked-outedness. “Please don’t choose me,” a woman murmurs to no one in particular, and stares at her shoes.

It’s a problem Poe is acutely aware of, but he’s not willing to dismiss the experiment. Despite these difficulties, audience interaction illuminates the basic question he poses in nearly all of his work: In what ways does this society obscure the human heart?

“It’s just something I’m really interested in about contemporary communication. What does it mean to shift our psychology as performers?” says Poe, sitting onstage at the Live Arts Brewery, where he is currently developing a new work, The Flight Attendants Project. “What does it mean to communicate with an audience member as they’re performing the role of the audience at that time? I want to see those two psychologies—performer and audience—intersect.”

Attendants was inspired by the book The Managed Heart: Commercialization of Human Feeling (University of California Press, 1985) by Arlie Hochschild, a Berkley sociologist. In it, Hochschild argues that the service industry has co-opted the psychological process we naturally use to manage our emotions: waiters, baristas, tour guides, bartenders and—you guessed it—flight attendants, must compartmentalize their feelings and perform with a smile.

Earlier this year, a duet version of Attendants was presented in Seattle and Minneapolis as part of the SCUBA National Touring Network for Dance. Poe received a $50,000 grant from PEW/Dance Advance to further develop the piece with his company, idiosynCrazy productions.  (This article is part of the journalistic component of the Dance Advance grant.)

“I was a little worried at first. Audience interaction is a tricky business,” says Caleb Levengood, a New York set designer who has been hired by Poe to collaborate on Attendants. “The danger is that you push the audience to the point where all they’re concerned about is how they look to other people. But when I saw the video of the [original duet] performance, I saw something really fascinating. People were sitting onstage, but they were given a well-defined role, and that allowed them to be comfortable. I suddenly realized, ‘Oh, they’re passengers on the plane. They’re scenery! I can work with that.’”

* * *

“Now I’m getting a little obsessed with this,” says Poe, as he carries chairs two-by-two onto the stage at the Live Arts Brewery performance space. I’ve asked him to give me a broad sense of where the audience will sit—at least for the initial in-progress version on July 31. But now he can’t stop adjusting the chairs. Precise placement is important, however, since the choreography will be based on visual cues from the audience: i.e., a patron crosses her legs, triggering a specific movement phrase from the dancers.

Three long pillars of seats shoot out from center stage like spokes on a wheel. The seats are arranged in pairs, an arrangement akin to a cramped midsize commercial flight.

Three of Levengood’s set pieces sit center stage: a serving cart and a pair of human-wingspan-length muslin rectangles that suggest a fuselage. “I’ve come to realize that this show is not about designing a set for a play,” says Levengood, sitting in one the simulated passenger aisles. “It’s about giving the performers added possibilities . . .”

Before he can finish, Poe has placed himself inside the serving cart and is crawling up the aisle propelled by his hands and arms while his lower body is concealed within the cart. It’s a nightmarish, crablike effect.

“I never thought you’d do that with it!” says Levengood, with a hooting laugh.

I invite Poe to sit with us for the interview. He gracefully dislodges himself from the cart and intentionally cuts across the aisle I’m sitting in on his way to the adjacent seat.

“See how you’re dancing already?” he says. And I’m suddenly conscious of the way my legs instinctively shift when someone passes me in an aisle of seats.

I’ve never been called a dancer before but in this fleeting moment, perhaps I am.

– Bruce Walsh