Soloing on the page, choreographer Annie-b Parson rethinks choreography as dance on paper.
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Lastly, nodding to the history of chance operations in dance, Parson creates a generative card game of 52 compositional elements for artists of any medium to cut out and play as a method for creating new material.
Charts of erasure, layering and language serve as dynamic and prismatic tools for dance making.
In chapter two, Parson delves into the choreographic mind, charting such ideas as an equality in the perception of objects and movement, and the poetics of a kinetic grammar.
These Charts reconsider her dances both from the perspective of the resonance of things, and for their abstract compositional properties.
Divided into three chapters, the book opens with diagrams of the objects in each of her pieces grouped into chart-structures.
These drawings serve as both maps of her pieces in the aftermath of performance, and a consideration of the elements of dance itself.
Parson draws her dances into new graphic structures calling attention to the visual facts of the materiality of each dance work she has made.
Colorful mappings of choreographic ideas Soloing on the page, choreographer Annie-b Parson rethinks choreography as dance on paper.
Within the duality of form and content, this book explores the meanings that form itself holds, and Parson\'s visual maps of choreographic ideas inspire new thinking around the shared elements underneath all art making.
Lastly, nodding to the history of chance operations in dance, Parson creates a generative card game of 52 compositional elements for artists of any medium to cut out and play as a method for creating new material.
Charts of erasure, layering and language serve as dynamic and prismatic tools for dance making.
In chapter two, Parson delves into the choreographic mind, charting such ideas as an equality in the perception of objects and movement, and the poetics of a kinetic grammar.
These Charts reconsider her dances both from the perspective of the resonance of things, and for their abstract compositional properties.
Divided into three chapters, the book opens with diagrams of the objects in each of her pieces grouped into chart-structures.
These drawings serve as both maps of her pieces in the aftermath of performance, and a consideration of the elements of dance itself.
Parson draws her dances into new graphic structures calling attention to the visual facts of the materiality of each dance work she has made.
Soloing on the page, choreographer Annie-b Parson rethinks choreography as dance on paper