17 DECEMBER 2006
A SARMA project, in the framework of B-Chronicles
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picture to zoom in.
photo : David Bergщ after a concept of Myriam Van Imschoot
Are in the
photo: Franz Lohrengel (dance photographer), Ambra Pittoni (dancer,
choreographer), Xenia Wiest (Staatsballett Berlin), Susanne Foellmer
(dramaturg, dance theoretician), Anja Weber (interdisciplinary freelancer),
Hermann Heisig (dancer, performer), Davide Sportelli (dancer, performer),
Chat Linder (artist, choreographer), Woudi Ensie (tourist), Nathan Fuhr (no
function specified), Barbara Friedrickx (TanzRaumBerlin), Jeroen Peeters
(freelance dramaturg, critic, performer, teacher), Beck Hans (spectator),
Keil Sigrid (standby), Peter Pleyer (no function specified), Cobie Orger
(contributor, supporter, dancer, director), Koen De Preter (dancer Sasha
Waltz), Andrщ Thщriault (Festival Veranstalter), Martin Nachbar
(choreographer), Ulrike Bodammer (dancer), Frank Willems (dancer), Meg
Stuart (choreographer), Sheri Togan-Willems (FrankТs mother), Jenny Haade
(artist), Paula E. Paul (choreographer, dancer), Christopher Langers (no
function specified), Bart Van Den Els (tourist), Christine Peterges
(tourmanager), Sabine Panossian (no function specified), Nathalie
Nienkemper (dancer), Gabriel Galindez Cruz (dancer), Els De Bodt
(programmer), John Zwaenepoel (manager), Ulrike Becker (programmer,
producer), Jean-Marc Adolphe (chief editor Mouvement), Madeline Ritter
(organiser), Bettina Masuch (programmer, dramaturg), Karin Kirchhof
(organiser), Uwe Kфstner (producer), Salvana Sudrez Cedeno (choreographer,
Two Fish, performer), Liliane Schaus (director).
Message to the people of the Dance Community in Berlin
By way of this black-and-white advertisement in the publications Tanzraum
and the brochure of Made in Berlin 2006 people were welcomed to come to a
collective one time photo shoot that would represent the Berlin dance
community on that day. лаFunction, nationality, dress code or ageа╗ did
not matter, the advertisement said. As long as the person considered him or
herself to be лаpart of the dance community of Berlinа╗, he or she was
welcome to join the photo shoot. Thus, the Community Picture Berlin, a
project by Myriam Van Imschoot in collaboration with David Bergщ, entered
for the first time the public sphereа in the form of a rather anonymous
advertisement. The more zealous readers who wanted to know more could surf
to SarmaТs website www.b-kronieken.be and find out that Sarma was engaged
in a research project on mobilities, investigating the impact of
displacements on the formation of selves, artistic identities and
communities. And that was that.
What is a community pictureа?
Who would come to a photo shoot announced in such a manner - outgoing and
oblique at the same timeа? Who would feel addressedа? Was there such a
thing as a dance community in the first place, and if there were one, was
it representable at allа? For sure, a collective photo shoot would portray
a crowd of people, but would it also pass as the representation of a
communityа? Whereas in the tradtion of photography the group portrait is a
well-established genre, the Сcommunity pictureТ is not an existing genre.
It may be because in contrast to any finite group of people, the
СcommunityТ is always already a category that is infused with the
phantasmagorical. One can capture people in oneТs lense, but the strands of
ideology that make people adhere to certain formations and make those into
СcommunitiesТ are much harder to seize.
What makes a communityа? With Jean-Luc Nancy one could sayа: лаcommunautщ
inavouable parce que trop nombreuse mais aussi parce quТelle ne se connaюt
pas elle-mъme, et nТa pas р se connaюtre.а╗ It is precisely these paradoxes
at the verge of impossibility that the project Community Picture seeks to
embrace. After a concept of dramaturge, curator and writer Myriam Van
Imschoot it seeks to investigate how the notion of СcommunityТ operates and
manifests itself in a specific context by way of peopleТs response to an
open invitation. It does not celebrate the community nor does it affirm it
uncriticallyа; rather it offers a frame to see what identifications and
disidentifications operate in and around such a notion. Driven by curiosity
and wonder, within the tradition of frivolous science and research methods,
it boldy seeks to represent an СunrepresentableТ.
For the first series of the Community Pictures it was decided to focus on
Сdance communitiesТ, with photo shoots in Cairo (12 December 2006) and
Berlin (17 December 2006) and plans for subsequent shoots in New York and
Vienna. Especially in cities like Berlin and Vienna the notion of dance
community has gained a strong operational force as the segment of
independent artistis have been expanding significantly over the course of
the 1990s. The dance community pictures serves as a just one instrument to
look for what is symptomatic and emblematic in these fields.
That day - the 17th of Decemberа; the location, the team
The photo (at the right) shows the huge 25 meter banner that spanned the
faчade of the Volksb№hne am Rosa-Luxemburg-Platz on 17 December 2006. It
was painted by Myriam Van Imschoot and David Bergщ, the photographer who
helped realizing and developing the Berlin dance community picture. Much to
their suprise the terrain were the photo shoot was to take place, a sand
square next to the Volksb№hne am Rosa-Luxemburg-Platz, was unavailable
because the city had started to plant trees just a couple of days beforeа.
It was then decided to move to the public square on the other side of the
theater, right in front of what is called Сthe white pavilionТ.
The team who helped to prepare the terrain and welcome the people was a
mixture of volunteers, friends and affiliates from Sarma and the
Volksb№hne. The slideshow (at the right) wants to pay tribute to these
helpers by showing them during the preparations. The full credits are also
included at the bottom of this page.
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Clint Lutes (MC) entertaining the Berlin community members
during a battery problem of the photographer
Who cameа?
An open invitation in the form of an advertisement, a date and a place of
rendez-vous. Yet, the the burning question until the last moment was лаhow
many people would finally appearа?а╗. Having communicated mainly through
mass media announcements and flyers, the organizers were left to
speculation and prognosisа: 5, 50 or 500а? At 15а:30 it turned out that 53
people featured in the photo shoot. Many of this temporary constellation
came from other countries, some happened to be in Berlin for one of the
events that were organised in that period (Made in Berlin, Tanznacht and
the festival Intimate Strangers, with the Sarma-event Alien Resident), and
two girls were mere passersby who wanted to be Сin thereТ. They all
registered and received in turn gl№hwein and a sticker with the label
Сself-alleged member of the Berlin dance community, 17 December
2006Т.
A comparison with the Dance Community Picture Cairo 2006
Only five days earlier a Dance Community Picture was held in Cairo. This
was a primer and the first in the series. The most remarkable difference
between the two events so close in time is not so much that in Cairo tea
was served rather than gl№hwein, but the chosen communication strategy. The
hosting organizer in Cairo, Adham Hafez (from the dance organisation
HaRaKa), preferred personal and direct announcements to the more СpublicТ
anonymous advertisements of the Berlin counterpart, because he doubted that
his colleagues would respond to an invitation if it was not affiliated
directly with a person or institution. While this might influence certain
people to come or abstain from coming, this partiality was still a better
option than to step outside a clearly socialized network and its internal
operations. Moreover, it enabled Hafez to collect many reactions that his
invitation to the photo shoot engendered.
The need for anchorage in reliable and identifiable people or organisations
motivated also the choice for the location of the Cairo photo shootа: the
roof of the Contemporary Image Collective. Social control, policing and the
natural hectic turmoil of a much-populated capital city, make artists look
for lieus that ensure a fluent gathering rather than they would use public
spaces, where gatherings could be misperceived as demonstrations or other
political action. In Egypt culture still is subject to a strong state
control and even censorship.
Considered together, the two events in Cairo and Berlin, touch upon
questions of communication styles, anonymity versus personal contact, mass
media versus parallel information substrata, use of public space and
institutional СreservatsТ, difference in organisational cultures, cultural
politics,etc.
Credits
After a
concept of Myriam Van Imschoot the Community Picture Series
is realized in collaboration with local photographers and hosts. David
Bergщаwas the
photographer and co-organiser in Berlin.
Production: Sarma and Volksb№hne am Rosa-Luxemburg-Platz.
Co-production: Damaged Goods, Kunst/Werk.
Lay-out
advertisement: Katrin Schoof.
Helpers Сsur placeТ: Alexandra
Engel, Philip Hochleiter, Ula Lisson, Clint Lutes, Jeroen Pede, Charlotte
Vandevyver, Frederik Le Roy, Delphine Hesters, Min Kyoung Lee, Valentina
Desideri, Marko Milic, 2 volunteers of Volksbuehne.
Special thanks
to: Tanznacht, ZtB and Tanzraum for the distribution of the
advertisement.
Duration of the shoot: 60 min
Weather forecast: cold & cloudy
Extra facilities: gl№hwein
Pronostics: 300 stickers printed
More information on
The Community Picture Series
More information
on Dance Community Picture Cairo 13 December 2006
More
information on Dance Community Picture New York 23 September 2007
click on the pictures for a full-screen slideshow.