Categories
Latest news & Articles

Pact with Pointlessness – Written by Katie Dale-Everett

‘Pact with Pointlessness’ by Wendy Houstoun
Brighton Dome Studio Theatre
Tuesday 14th April 2015, 8pm.

What do you expect when you are told that you are going to see a work called ‘Pact with Pointlessness’? A random assortment of comical nonsense? Clowning on stage? A work which will be enjoyable in the moment but forgotten later? Insert movement artist Wendy Houston into the mix and you receive an intelligently thought through and powerful work throughout which you will be laughing out loud in one moment and then reflecting upon your own life in the next.

Starting with the drawn out choreographed movement of over the top coloured lights, projection of the words ‘Pact with Pointlessness’ and funfair music, the audience is immediately hit with a sense of futility. Entering the stage wearing black tracksuits and a t-shirt, Houstoun continues this theme by running around a microphone stand multiple times and it is refreshing to see an older, female dancer holding the stage alone. Taking her audience on a journey of reflection, we witness not only dance but poetry, film projection, quotes and comedy, each episodic section able to stand alone within its own right, but together creating a constant sense of moving forward, something which Houstoun suggests is the only thing we can do in this pointless world which is taking us further and further towards our death.

Within the final scene, Houstoun’s recognition of the pointlessness of a life in which we are constantly trying to ‘keep everything up in the air’ hits strongly home as she reduces humanity to different parts of the human body. It could be argued that she even reduces her own art form, a form in which she says offers her the chance to be in a constant state of rediscovery through repetition is pointless as it is a construction that will only ever be ephemeral.

Although I had heard of Houstoun many times before, I had never been fortunate enough to attend her work. As an artist I found her performance committed and invested; the audience knowing that of course she is performing a repetition of something which she has done many times before, yet her performance still maintains the ‘innocence of the first act’ (Trisha Brown).

Contrary to the theme of pointlessness running throughout the evenings work, ‘Pact with Pointlessness’ is an important piece of work made to celebrate Houstoun’s long standing as an important figure within contemporary performance. Taking up the position of South East Dance’s ‘Established Artist Fellow’, for this year, the work forms part of the celebration of Houstoun’s thirty five years as an established movement/theatre maker within contemporary theatre.

To conclude, for me this work is a must see not only for those interested in dance, but a work to be seen by comedy lovers, theatre makers and poetry artists. So in answer to the question is this work pointless? I would argue not at all, in fact I think it stands as a highly regarded work, which I will continue to think about for a long while yet.

Written by Katie Dale-Everett

Images © Hugo Glendinning

Source – South East Dance Blog

Categories
Latest news & Articles

Digital Tattoo by Katie Dale-Everett

In a society that is becoming increasingly obsessed with the digital, I am interested as a choreographer in exploring our relationship to these developments and what this means for the individual. Coming from a researched background of exploring authorship and documentation, I am fascinated by the possibility that the online world creates for sharing information which is constantly moving, transforming, flowing and exposing, but also the capacity for permeance and the dangers of this. As each day we are asked to input more and more information about ourselves online, the online becomes an expanding platform for not only communication and knowledge, but an extension of the self.

Inspired by a Ted Talk of the same name by academic Juan Enruquez which I came across when researching documentation, ‘Digital Tattoo’ looks at the exposing nature of the online, but also the permeance of this data, which is most likely to outlive the flesh, symbolically shown through film projection onto the body. Relevant to recent debates about the right to be forgotten, ‘Digital Tattoo’, hopes to remind its audience of the permanence and uncontrollable nature of the online and to encourage them to think more before sharing/posting/uploading.

As a choreographer I am also interested in the people I work with and that is why I am often seen working with different dancers each time and both those trained in dance and those not from dance backgrounds. For this work, I am working with two trained dancers who are able to respond quickly to choreographic tasks and are open to play. This was integral for the research and development of the work, which involved both learning set choreographed movement, but also a lot of task based work, drawing either directly from their real online profiles or from feelings, facts or stories, such as the greek myth Narcissus. They also needed to have a strong connection to each other to convey communications and interactions.

What has been a really exciting element during the development of this work has been the opportunity for artistic development through integrating new technologies into my work and working with digital mentor Nic Sandiland and dramaturge Lou Cope, creating new choreographic challenges, questions and possibilities.

To read more about the choreographic process and those involved please visit Katie’s blog: http://katiefay100.wix.com/digitaltattoomusings  

 

See the work on the 10th, 11th, 12th and 14th of November. 

Synopsis:

What if your online information were electronic tattoos? What would yours say about you? Would you wish for the right to be forgotten? In a society that is becoming increasingly obsessed with the digital, Katie Dale-Everett Dance brings to Brighton ‘Digital Tattoo’, a new exposing interdisciplinary dance and film projection work exploring the permanence of our online act.

To buy tickets:

Phone 01273 987516 or visit Otherplace Production’s website.

 

Katie Dale-Everett is supported by South East Dance’s Emerging Artist Programme, the Arts Council, is supported artist at Otherplace Productions, is supported by Screen South Ignition Network Centre for Film Work and is a Brighton Dance Network Featured Artist.

Website: http://katiefay100.wix.com/katiedale-everett

Twitter: @katiefay100

Facebook: Katie Dale-Everett Dance

 

Source – South East Dance Blog