What does it mean to set up an experimental practice? What are the social/
political implications of insisting on an experimental practice being important in
itself, beyond the results the practice might reach?
Does an experimental practice have visibility? Who are the spectators of such
a practice? What can the sharing of artistic strategies create within the field of
performance, not as a self-affirming act but as an opening towards a critical
space that insists on questioning and moving the borders of choreography further,
even beyond bodiless performance, choreographic objects and dances
without dancers etc.
Does art, when being concerned with affirmation, actually loose all its critical
potential?
Is the sentence; «it was great!», followed by a smile so much better than the…
»it’s interesting but I am not sure I understand what you really want» followed by
a disappointed frown?
If we are speaking about works that are not about dancing well or feeling good,
but works that create problems, works that force you to ask yourself what the
hell the performers are doing, works that leave you space to think, works that
are not entirely complete and closed off and ready to be consumed, works that
want to find out something and works that articulate their own area of interest,
then maybe we have to reconsider these criteria of evaluation.
Say…you just presented a work that stretches time on purpose for very specific
content related reasons and the remark you get is “I liked it a lot but it was a little
bit too long…”, then all you can say is; GOOD, that’s exactly what I had hoped
for.
How badly do you really want to make a GOOD piece, if a good piece would
be the end of reflection, of searching, the finishing of a process that fixes the
performance into an object?
I guess it depends on the alternative. If trashy, dysfunctional and bad would be
the other option - then yes, I would prefer to make a GOOD performance. But,
if the alternative would be the risky, the not-yet-established, the exploration of
different modes of presentation I would definitely prefer that, and sometimes that
might even be the trashy, dysfunctional and bad.
The terminology of good and bad is maybe exactly what we need to get rid of.
Finally, the reception of an artwork is always much more complex than what we
can reduce to binary judgments. It is composed by the relationship between the
artist, the spectator and the artwork itself, but I would say at least as much by
the institutional frame in which it is presented, the discursive or artistic environment
that it has be created out of, and not to forget the social, political, contemporary
or historical conditions the work has been defined by.
Once all these parameters have been clarified we can maybe attempt to ask
the question about when an experimental practice becomes interesting to share
with a general audience. In which state of development should experiments and
practices be shown and for what reasons? Because why should an audience not
be confronted with the different steps within an artistic research, if these steps
could be the place where the complexity of the artwork would be unfolded? Are
artworks only relevant once they have found their final form or can they also be
discussed on the way, can this way even be the artwork in itself?
However much we (artists, curators and spectators) would like to predict the
future, all we can do is to speculate; what will be the next break-through, the
next new thing on the market, the next master piece that will tour for 10 years…
In the meanwhile we (artists, curators and spectators) might as well stop wanting,
favouring and making GOOD performances and start making whatever it
is that an invested practice produces and fight for the possibility to exist in as
many different forms and products of presentation as possible. Of course, this
does not mean that the performances produced are bad, or unfinished, rather
that they put emphasis on the integrity of the practice and allow the outcome to
result from that.
I am not interested in showing you my process; I am interested in what the process
performs.
It is not the same notions of performativity and intention that appears before, during
and after the making of a work. The question is how to allow all these modes
and times of producing to differentiate, to find their specificity and particularity
and, more importantly, their frames.
OPEN UP, I want to see your rehearsal!
To rehearse is not something interesting to witness in itself, it can indeed be very
boring to watch people repeat the same thing over and over again. But, this is
not to be confused with what rehearsing can perform. The type of expressions
that are impossible to reproduce once placed on stage. To “write” in experience,
to solidify in the act of speaking/doing/rehearsing and practicing can in itself be
seen as a performative practice. We cannot or should not distinguish practices
into categories of rehearsal, performance, reflection and preparation if we want
to invent new temporalities and spaces for performance. We should rather try to
find the right frames of presentation that would allow different modes of interaction
to exist, without misunderstandings being the result of that process.
We have to do away with preparations taking place in our spare time, with rehearsals
taking place in dance studios, with performances always being connected
to theatres and institutions. We have to do away with after-talks being the
only place for explanation and reflection, away with applications being the only
place for conviction and speculation.
In order to rethink research within the field of performances… Please, do not tell
me what I should do!
If performing artists are only supposed to make their work public in the moment
of showing the finished result, and in this moment they become subject to public
opinion and the mechanisms of the market that tends to reduce art practices to
mechanisms of failure and success, it will be the sure way to an art that is scared
to fail. With an art that is scared to fail I mean practices that rely on formulas that
have already been established, so that the chance of audiences not understanding
or not being able to follow would be eliminated. Practices we could call
anti-experimental.
On the other hand, to remain marginal on the outskirts of the market, not “making
it” into the popular circulation equals that one simply does not exist as
a performing artist. Without a stage to perform on, there is simply no performance…
or is there?
Do we, as performing artists, not have to insist on making work visible on many
different levels of production to avoid the danger of this marginal invisibility? In
other media the time of existence is not limited by the “running time” of the artwork.
Films, sculptures and video installations, for instance, do not disappear
the moment they are not being shown. Within the performing arts we have to
continue finding ways of existing beyond the hour of presentation, extending the
life of performances beyond ephemeral disappearance.
Coming back to the question of defining experimental practices. Maybe we
should try to think them in terms of practices that make the medium of dance differ from itself. From its own fundament, its history, conditions and modes of
production. Of course we could say that hybrid practices, practices that think
choreography through other media, could qualify as experimental today, but that
does not suffice to create a definition. Experimentation must have to do with
breaking with what is normatively established, it cannot have to do with what
one actually does. It has to be an approach rather than a way of working that
can be clearly defined.
To practice experimentation must be
1. to differ from the normative code that is established within the field
2. to differ from oneself
3. to finally produce a difference both within the field and within oneself
Think of sexual practices, for instance. What might be totally new and experimental
for you might not at all be new and experimental for somebody else.
Naturally, this does not mean that you won’t feel the effects of the experimentation,
nor does it eliminate your curiosity or desire. In this sense experimentation
for the sake of oneself, to differ from one self, must be considered an important
parameter in relation to having a motivation and a drive to experience something
new. However, when thinking about this in relation to artistic practices the impact
on the wider field cannot be substituted with this kind of personal satisfaction.
The practices have to produce an effect on the broader context as well, which is
why we should insist on the sharing of these experimental practices as well. The
work we do for ourselves might exactly be what works for somebody else.
Nevertheless, you can never know when the others will be flabbergasted by your
experiments, so at least make sure you will be flabbergasted yourself.