Vertical dance: a tool for producing new social spaces

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Vertical dance: a tool for producing new social spaces. / Lawrence, Kate.
In: Choreographic Practices, Vol. 10, No. 1, 01.05.2019, p. 93 - 113.

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

HarvardHarvard

Lawrence, K 2019, 'Vertical dance: a tool for producing new social spaces', Choreographic Practices, vol. 10, no. 1, pp. 93 - 113. https://doi.org/10.1386/chor.10.1.91_1

APA

Lawrence, K. (2019). Vertical dance: a tool for producing new social spaces. Choreographic Practices, 10(1), 93 - 113. https://doi.org/10.1386/chor.10.1.91_1

CBE

MLA

Lawrence, Kate. "Vertical dance: a tool for producing new social spaces". Choreographic Practices. 2019, 10(1). 93 - 113. https://doi.org/10.1386/chor.10.1.91_1

VancouverVancouver

Lawrence K. Vertical dance: a tool for producing new social spaces. Choreographic Practices. 2019 May 1;10(1):93 - 113. doi: 10.1386/chor.10.1.91_1

Author

Lawrence, Kate. / Vertical dance: a tool for producing new social spaces. In: Choreographic Practices. 2019 ; Vol. 10, No. 1. pp. 93 - 113.

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Vertical dance: a tool for producing new social spaces

AU - Lawrence, Kate

PY - 2019/5/1

Y1 - 2019/5/1

N2 - Henri Lefebvre proposed that in order to improve our lives we need to change space. Drawing on Marxist ideas of production he developed a triadic theory of space, which he proposed could be brought together through the lived experience of the body, in particular, the dancing body (1974:205). In response, I present a vertical dance manifesto that invites us to look up and imagine dancing on the walls above us and to realize this ambition by talking to people and persuading them that occupying vertical spaces might change how we experience and perceive the urban landscape. I draw upon fifteen years of practicing vertical dance (a hybrid dance form that brings together dance and the equipment of rock climbing), extended research into site-specific practices, my Ph.D. thesis (2017) and three works I created in Belfast between 2009 and 2011. My ideas about relationships between bodies and buildings in public spaces are underpinned by Michel de Certeau’s contention that ‘space is practiced place’ (1984: 117/118), by site-specific discourse in the arts (Kaye 2000; Kwon 2004; Lacy 1995) and recent research on site-specific dance (Hunter, 2015 and Kloetzel and Pavlik, 2009).

AB - Henri Lefebvre proposed that in order to improve our lives we need to change space. Drawing on Marxist ideas of production he developed a triadic theory of space, which he proposed could be brought together through the lived experience of the body, in particular, the dancing body (1974:205). In response, I present a vertical dance manifesto that invites us to look up and imagine dancing on the walls above us and to realize this ambition by talking to people and persuading them that occupying vertical spaces might change how we experience and perceive the urban landscape. I draw upon fifteen years of practicing vertical dance (a hybrid dance form that brings together dance and the equipment of rock climbing), extended research into site-specific practices, my Ph.D. thesis (2017) and three works I created in Belfast between 2009 and 2011. My ideas about relationships between bodies and buildings in public spaces are underpinned by Michel de Certeau’s contention that ‘space is practiced place’ (1984: 117/118), by site-specific discourse in the arts (Kaye 2000; Kwon 2004; Lacy 1995) and recent research on site-specific dance (Hunter, 2015 and Kloetzel and Pavlik, 2009).

KW - dance

KW - performance

KW - place

KW - site-specific

KW - space

KW - vertical dance

U2 - 10.1386/chor.10.1.91_1

DO - 10.1386/chor.10.1.91_1

M3 - Article

VL - 10

SP - 93

EP - 113

JO - Choreographic Practices

JF - Choreographic Practices

SN - 2040-5669

IS - 1

ER -