UC Riverside UC Riverside Electronic Theses and Dissertations

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

UC Riverside UC Riverside Electronic Theses and Dissertations UC Riverside UC Riverside Electronic Theses and Dissertations Title Choreographers and Yogis: Untwisting the Politics of Appropriation and Representation in U.S. Concert Dance Permalink https://escholarship.org/uc/item/8ww020mb Author Aubrecht, Jennifer F Publication Date 2017 Peer reviewed|Thesis/dissertation eScholarship.org Powered by the California Digital Library University of California UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA RIVERSIDE Choreographers and Yogis: Untwisting the Politics of Appropriation and Representation in U.S. Concert Dance A Dissertation submitted in partial satisfaction of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in Critical Dance Studies by Jennifer F Aubrecht September 2017 Dissertation Committee: Dr. Jacqueline Shea Murphy, Chairperson Dr. Anthea Kraut Dr. Amanda Lucia Copyright by Jennifer F Aubrecht 2017 The Dissertation of Jennifer F Aubrecht is approved: Committee Chairperson University of California, Riverside Acknowledgements I extend my gratitude to many people and organizations for their support throughout this process. First of all, my thanks to my committee: Jacqueline Shea Murphy, Anthea Kraut, and Amanda Lucia. Without your guidance and support, this work would never have matured. I am also deeply indebted to the faculty of the Dance Department at UC Riverside, including Linda Tomko, Priya Srinivasan, Jens Richard Giersdorf, Wendy Rogers, Imani Kai Johnson, visiting professor Ann Carlson, Joel Smith, José Reynoso, Taisha Paggett, and Luis Lara Malvacías. Their teaching and research modeled for me what it means to be a scholar and human of rigorous integrity and generosity. I am also grateful to the professors at my undergraduate institution, who opened my eyes to the exciting world of critical dance studies: Ananya Chatterjea, Diyah Larasati, Carl Flink, Toni Pierce-Sands, Maija Brown, and rest of U of MN dance department, thank you. I thank the faculty (especially Susan Manning, Janice Ross, and Rebekah Kowal) and participants in the 2015 Mellon Summer Seminar Dance Studies in/and the Humanities, who helped me begin to feel at home in our academic community. Similarly, thank you to Janet O’Shea and my writing group at the 2016 UCR dissertation writing retreat—Paula Propst and Celia Tuchman-Rosta—who made the writing process a little more realistic and less lonely. Thank you to my colleagues at the UCR Graduate Writing Center, for teaching me to respond to and provide critique with increasing care and grace. I particularly thank Writing Center Director, Hillary Jenks, who acted as a mentor, friend, and colleague, and who earned the trust to see so many shitty first drafts, whether she wanted to or not. iv Thanks are likewise due to my colleagues in the University Writing Program, especially Kathy Moore and John Briggs, for pedagogy opportunities that allowed me room to improve my own writing and relationship with writing. Thank you to Arlene Yu, Danielle Castronovo, David Vaughan and the NYPL Jerome Robbins Dance Division reserve and audio-visual collections staff. Research is not a solitary endeavor, and I would never have encountered some of the most interesting material in this dissertation without ideas generated through the connections I made at the library and at conferences. So, thank you to the many people who pointed me down fruitful paths, especially Carrie Noland, and the generous audiences at the 2014 and 2015 Race and Yoga Working Group conferences. This research has been supported by several generous grants and awards, including the New York Public Library Short-Term Research Grant, the UCR Center for Ideas and Society Humanities Graduate Student Research Grant, the UCR Dance Departmental Research Grant, the UCR Dissertation Research Grant, and several conference travel grants from the UCR Graduate Student Association. I also thank the selection committee for the 2016 Society of Dance History Scholars Selma Jeanne Cohen award. On a personal note, thank you to my first writing group, Natalie Zervou and Meghan Quinlan, for the support and hilarity during the writing process. Thank you to my cohort—Katie Stahl-Kovell, Jes Mulette, Dan Schuchart, Monica Rodero, and Kendall Loyer—for making the first years of grad school so much fun. Thanks to Xiomara Forbez, Zoe Thompson, and my colleagues at the UCR GradSuccess office for v making an office job helping other grad students succeed so entertaining and enjoyable. To Bailey Anderson, for being my yoga and dance studies sister, and talking and laughing through practically every idea or chapter of this dissertation. To Julie Pearson, for all the coffee shop hours, and to Jamie Macpherson for the pep talks and unshakable belief in my ability to finish this thing. To David Yeaton-Massey—I owe you one, too J. Finally, thank you to my family—Judy, Tom, and Kate—for all the years of support, love, motivation, and guidance that’s kept me not only on track, but able to begin to slow down and enjoy being there. Thank you. vi ABSTRACT OF THE DISSERTATION Choreographers and Yogis: Untwisting the Politics of Appropriation and Representation in U.S. Concert Dance by Jennifer F Aubrecht Doctor of Philosophy, Graduate Program in Critical Dance Studies University of California, Riverside, September 2017 Dr. Jacqueline Shea Murphy, Chairperson Choreographers working in the United States have been practicing yoga since the early 1900s. They mention their yoga practice in autobiographies and interviews, include physical poses (asana) in their choreography and classroom exercises, and rely on breathing techniques (pranayama) to support their movement technique and personal practice. Meanwhile, yoga practice in the United States has increasingly become associated with thin white women in elaborate poses and tight pants smiling on the beach at sunset. So how did this association come about? I contend in this dissertation that this is at least partly due to white choreographers’ portrayal of yogis onstage and incorporation of yoga into their dance training. I focus on renowned (post)modern dance choreographers, such as Ruth St. Denis, Martha Graham, Merce Cunningham, and Bill T. Jones, and recover the influence of yoga on their careers to help us better understand how vii yoga has shaped modern dance throughout its history. As their use of yoga became a tool in their creative and innovative interventions in dance, these (mostly white) choreographers encouraged or facilitated the forgetting of the labor of the yogis and yoga teachers who instructed them. This dissertation therefore also attends to the innovations of their teachers, such as Swami Vivekananda, Swami Paramananda, Yogi Vithaldas, and A.C. Bhaktivedanta Swami Prabhupada, who strategically and selectively emphasized aspects of their yoga teaching to suit contemporaneous cultural trends and confront Orientalist fantasies. I apply the tools of movement analysis and the theoretical frameworks of critical race studies and critical yoga studies to autobiographies, published scholarship, archival records of dance technique training and choreography, yoga training manuals, and dance and yoga videos. My dissertation interweaves the frequently disparate fields of yoga studies and dance studies, reorients scholars to the historical affinities between these two modes of physical practice, and complicates contemporary models of cultural appropriation. This work disrupts the economy of affirmation and forgetting that places yogis as non- agentive culture bearers and concert dance choreographers as individual geniuses via the logic of colonialism. It also encourages us to recognize the stakes of naming and valuing genealogies of practice under the system of racialized capitalism. viii Table of Contents Introduction: Possessive Individualism, Cultural Circulation, and the Intertwining Histories of Yoga and Modern Dance 1 Chapter 1: Yoga at Denishawn: Ruth St. Denis, Swami Paramananda, and the Performance of Spirituality 35 Swamis and Denishawn 47 Yogis on Stage: Dancing the Divine in The Yogi and A Dance Pageant of Egypt, Greece, and India 55 Teaching Yoga at Denishawn 71 Chapter 2: Constructing Modernism: Wide-Legged Seats in Yoga and Modern Dance in the 1930s 78 Martha’s Modernism: Graham Technique, Denishawn Floor Set No. 1, and Delsartian Yoga Breathing 83 Creating Modernist Bodies in Mysore 97 Chapter 3: Seeing Yogi Vithaldas: Merce Cunningham and the Asana-Performing Dancer Onstage 105 Vithaldas’s Yoga: Physical, Psychological, and Medical Appeals 109 “Every Morning Merce Cunningham Does His Yoga” 120 Seeing Cunningham’s Yoga Onstage: Rune and Variations V 131 Chapter 4: The Yogic Practices of Bill T. Jones 147 Yogic Breathing: The Early Development of Contact Improvisation 153 Jones’s Yoga Practice and Teaching 158 ISKCON: Yogic Practice as a Means of Identity Exploration 163 Blauvelt Mountain: Seeing Yoga in Jones’s Dancing 167 Seeing Jones’s Yogas—Implications 171 Coda 177 Yoga as “Also Studied” 179 Foregrounded Specific Yoga: Ananya Dance Theater’s Yorchha™ 187 Bibliography 194 ix List of Figures Figure 1.1 Ruth St. Denis in The Yogi 59 Figure 1.2. Ruth St. Denis and Denishawn dancers in Yoga meditation 74 Figure 3.1 Merce Cunningham Dance Company in Variations V 138 Figure 3.2 Merce Cunningham, Barbara Dilley Lloyd, and Gus Solomons, Jr. in Variations V 140 Figure 3.3 Merce Cunningham in mayurasana on his yoga pad 144 x Introduction: Possessive Individualism, Cultural Circulation, and the Intertwining Histories of Yoga and Modern Dance There is a man standing in the background with his hands
Recommended publications
  • Rudolf Laban in the 21St Century: a Brazilian Perspective
    DOCTORAL THESIS Rudolf Laban in the 21st Century: A Brazilian Perspective Scialom, Melina Award date: 2015 General rights Copyright and moral rights for the publications made accessible in the public portal are retained by the authors and/or other copyright owners and it is a condition of accessing publications that users recognise and abide by the legal requirements associated with these rights. • Users may download and print one copy of any publication from the public portal for the purpose of private study or research. • You may not further distribute the material or use it for any profit-making activity or commercial gain • You may freely distribute the URL identifying the publication in the public portal ? Take down policy If you believe that this document breaches copyright please contact us providing details, and we will remove access to the work immediately and investigate your claim. Download date: 30. Sep. 2021 Rudolf Laban in the 21st Century: A Brazilian Perspective By Melina Scialom BA, MRes Thesis submitted in partial fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of PhD Department of Dance University of Roehampton 2015 Abstract This thesis is a practitioner’s perspective on the field of movement studies initiated by the European artist-researcher Rudolf Laban (1879-1958) and its particular context in Brazil. Not only does it examine the field of knowledge that Laban proposed alongside his collaborators, but it considers the voices of Laban practitioners in Brazil as evidence of the contemporary practices developed in the field. As a modernist artist and researcher Rudolf Laban initiated a heritage of movement studies focussed on investigating the artistic expression of human beings, which still reverberates in the work of artists and scholars around the world.
    [Show full text]
  • Guide to the Michigan Dance Archives: Harriet Berg Papers UP001608
    Guide to the Michigan Dance Archives: Harriet Berg Papers UP001608 This finding aid was produced using ArchivesSpace on June 11, 2018. English Describing Archives: A Content Standard Walter P. Reuther Library 5401 Cass Avenue Detroit, MI 48202 URL: https://reuther.wayne.edu Guide to the Michigan Dance Archives: Harriet Berg Papers UP001608 Table of Contents Summary Information .................................................................................................................................... 3 History ............................................................................................................................................................ 4 Scope and Content ......................................................................................................................................... 4 Arrangement ................................................................................................................................................... 6 Administrative Information ............................................................................................................................ 6 Related Materials ........................................................................................................................................... 7 Controlled Access Headings .......................................................................................................................... 7 Collection Inventory ......................................................................................................................................
    [Show full text]
  • Dance Program and Ephemera Collection, 1909-1987
    http://oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/kt1b69p38p No online items Guide to the Dance Program and Ephemera Collection, 1909-1987 Processed by Processed by Linda Akatsu, Emma Kheradyar, William Landis, and Maria Lechuga, 1997-2001. Guide completed by Adrian Turner, 2002. © 2003 The Regents of the University of California. All rights reserved. Guide to the Dance Program and MS-P026 1 Ephemera Collection, 1909-1987 Guide to the Dance Program and Ephemera Collection, 1909-1987 Collection number: MS-P26 Special Collections and Archives The UCI Libraries University of California Irvine, California Processed by: Processed by Linda Akatsu, Emma Kheradyar, William Landis, and Maria Lechuga, 1997-2001. Guide completed by Adrian Turner, 2002. Date Completed: 2002 Encoded by: Andre Ambrus © 2003 The Regents of the University of California. All rights reserved. Descriptive Summary Title: Dance program and ephemera collection, Date (inclusive): 1909-1987 Collection number: MS-P026 Extent: 10.3 linear feet (25 boxes and 5 oversize folders) Repository: University of California, Irvine. Library. Special Collections and Archives. Irvine, California 92623-9557 Abstract: This collection comprises printed materials, primarily dance programs, documenting significant international dancers, dance companies, festivals, performances, and events. The bulk of this collection comprises materials on 20th century American and European ballet performers and companies, such as the American Ballet Theatre, Ballet Russes and related companies. The collection also contains dance programs documenting world and folk genres, and international dance styles, primarily Indian, Japanese, and Spanish. A small group of printed ephemera documents various dance festivals, dance companies, and individuals such as Isadora Duncan, George Balanchine, Mary Wigman, and others.
    [Show full text]
  • Legends in Dance
    Legends in Dance Martha Graham Martha Graham’s impact on dance was staggering and often compared to that of Picasso’s on painting and Stravinsky’s on music. Her contributions transformed the art form, revitalizing and expanding dance around the world. She will forever be known as “the Mother of Modern Dance”. In the Beginning Martha Graham (1894 – 1991) was born in a suburb of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, on May 11, 1894. Her father, a doctor specializing in nervous disorders, was very interested in diagnosis through attention to physical movement. This belief in the body’s ability to express its inner senses was pivotal in Graham’s desire to dance. As her doctor father would say, “bodies cannot lie”. When she was ten years old (1904), and after one of her sisters developed asthma, the family moved to California because the weather was better. Graham became interested in studying dance after she saw Ruth St. Denis (1880–1968) perform in Los Angeles 1911 (1914). Inspired by St. Denis’ performance, Graham enrolled in the arts-oriented Cumnoch School. She attended from 1913-1916 graduating with her studies in theater and dance. She later studied at the new Denishawn School; a collaboration of Ruth St.Dennis (the dance she originally saw and was inspired by) and husband/dancer Ted Shawn. Over eight year period from 1915-1923, as both a student and an instructor, Graham made Denishawn her home. She would later comment that “everything she did was influenced by Denishawn”. By 1923, she was ready to branch out. She found her chance dancing in the Greenwich Village Follies; A New York based vaudeville and variety show where she danced her own solo routines she choreographed for the shows.
    [Show full text]
  • News from the Jerome Robbins Foundation Vol
    NEWS FROM THE JEROME ROBBINS FOUNDATION VOL. 6, NO. 1 (2019) The Jerome Robbins Dance Division: 75 Years of Innovation and Advocacy for Dance by Arlene Yu, Collections Manager, Jerome Robbins Dance Division Scenario for Salvatore Taglioni's Atlanta ed Ippomene in Balli di Salvatore Taglioni, 1814–65. Isadora Duncan, 1915–18. Photo by Arnold Genthe. Black Fiddler: Prejudice and the Negro, aired on ABC-TV on August 7, 1969. New York Public Library for the Performing Arts, Jerome Robbins Dance Division, “backstage.” With this issue, we celebrate the 75th anniversary of the Jerome Robbins History Dance Division of the New York Public Library for the Performing Arts. In 1944, an enterprising young librarian at The New York Public Library named One of New York City’s great cultural treasures, it is the largest and Genevieve Oswald was asked to manage a small collection of dance materials most diverse dance archive in the world. It offers the public free access in the Music Division. By 1947, her title had officially changed to Curator and the to dance history through its letters, manuscripts, books, periodicals, Jerome Robbins Dance Division, known simply as the Dance Collection for many prints, photographs, videos, films, oral history recordings, programs and years, has since grown to include tens of thousands of books; tens of thousands clippings. It offers a wide variety of programs and exhibitions through- of reels of moving image materials, original performance documentations, audio, out the year. Additionally, through its Dance Education Coordinator, it and oral histories; hundreds of thousands of loose photographs and negatives; reaches many in public and private schools and the branch libraries.
    [Show full text]
  • ABSTRACT Title of Dissertation / Thesis
    ABSTRACT Title of Dissertation / Thesis: MAKING DANCE THAT MA TTERS: DANCER, CHOREOGRAPHE R, COMMUNITY ORGANIZER, PUBLIC INTELLECTUAL LIZ LER MAN Lisa Traiger, M.F.A., 2004 Thesis Directed By: Visiting Associate Professor Karen Bradley, Depar tment of Dance Washington, D.C. -based choreographer and dancer Liz Lerman, a MacArthur Award recipient, has been making dances of consequence for 30 years. Her choreography, her writing and her public speaking tackle “big ideas” for the dance field and society at large. Lerman articulates those ideas as questions: “Who gets to dance? Where is the dance happening? What is it about? Why does it matter?” This thesis investigates how Lerman has used her expertise as a choreographer, dancer and spokesperson to propel herself and her ideas beyond the tightly knit field into the larger community as a public intellectual. A brief history and overview defines public intellectual, followed by an examination of Lerman’s early life and influences. Finally, three them atic areas in Lerman’s work – personal narrative, Jewish content and community -based art – are explored through the lens of three choreographic works: “New York City Winter” (1974), “The Good Jew?” (1991) and “Still Crossing” (1986). MAKING DANCE THAT MATTERS: DANCER, CHOREOGRAPHE R, COMMUNITY ORGANIZ ER, PUBLIC INTELLECTUAL LIZ LERMAN By Lisa Traiger Thesis or Dissertation submitted to the Faculty of the Graduate School of the University of Maryland, College Park, in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Fine Arts 2004 Advisory Committee: Visiting Associate Professor Karen Bradley, Chair Professor Meriam Rosen Professor Suzanne Carbonneau © Copyright by Lisa Traiger 2004 Preface The first time I experienced Liz Lerman’s choreography, I danced it.
    [Show full text]
  • New Worlds of Dance
    NEW WORLDS OF DANCE WHEN PEOPLE LEAVE THE SOCIETY THEY WERE BORN INTO, EITHER VOLUNTARILY OR INVOLUNTARILY, DANCE IS ONE OF THE THINGS THEY TAKE WITH THEM. WHEN AFRICANS WERE TAKEN AS SLAVES TO THE AMERICAS, DANCE CHANGED FROM BEING AN EXPRESSIVE, COMMUNICATIVE EXPRESSION TO PRIMARILY ENTERTAINMENT. AS LONG AS THE SOCIAL DANCING OF ENSLAVED AFRICANS DID NOT OFFEND THE WHITES’ NOTIONS OF PROPRIETY, IT WAS TOLERATED. FUSION OF AFRICAN & EUROPEAN DANCE IN U.S. DANCING CONTESTS ON SOME PLANTATIONS ENCOURAGED AFRICAN SLAVES TO DEVELOP THEIR DANCING SKILLS. DANCES PERFORMED BY SLAVES: A. THE JIG-A FUSION OF IRISH AND WEST AFRICAN DANCE FORMS B. THE BUCK-FROM ANIMAL PANTOMIMES OF WEST & CENTRAL AFRICA C. THE PIGEON WING-FROM ANIMAL PANTOMIMES OF WEST & CENTRAL AFRICA D. THE CAKEWALK-SYNCOPATED STRUTTING EVOLVED FROM BLACK PARODIES OF WHITE FORMATION DANCES E. THE RING SHOUT-ADAPTATION OF THE TRADITIONAL AFRICAN CIRCLE DANCE AFRICAN AMERICAN PLANTATION DANCE ONE OF THE SOURCES OF THE CAKEWALK MINSTREL SHOWS MADE POPULAR IN THE 1830’S BY AN ENTERTAINER KNOWN AS DADDY “JIM CROW” RICE. HE BLACKENED HIS FACE WITH BURNT CORK MIMICKING AN OLD CRIPPLED SLAVE. HE ENTERTAINED WHITE AUDIENCES WITH A COMIC SONG AND DANCE ROUTINE KNOWN AS JUMP JIM CROW. IT WAS THE FIRST INDIGENOUS AMERICAN MUSICAL THEATRE. IT BLENDED CLOG DANCING OF BRITAIN AND JIGS OF IRELAND WITH SHUFFLE STEPS AND LOOSE LIMBS OF AFRICAN DANCE. T. D. RICE IN JUMP JIM CROW 1833, BOWERY THEATRE, NEW YORK MASTER JUBA ALL FEATURED PERFORMERS OF MINSTREL SHOWS WERE WHITE EXCEPT WILLIAM HENRY LANE, A FREE-BORN NORTHERN BLACK, 1825-1852.
    [Show full text]
  • International Exchange in Dance Annual of Contemporary Dance Double Issue 3.50 1963 • 1964
    7 INTERNATIONAL EXCHANGE IN DANCE ANNUAL OF CONTEMPORARY DANCE DOUBLE ISSUE 3.50 1963 • 1964 • • WW * Copyright 1963 by Impulse Publications, Inc. l^yyKA' \s<s y Inde x S. I. Hayakawa THE UNACKNOWLEDGED LEGISLATORS 5 Rhoda Kellogg THE BIOLOGY OF ESTHETICS 9 Adele Wenig "IMPORTS AND EXPORTS" —1700-1940 16 Walter Sorell SOL THE MAGNIFICENT 29 Arthur Todd DANCE AS UNITED STATES CULTURAL AMBASSADOR 33 Walter Sorell A FAREWELL AND WELCOME 44 RECENT "EXPORTS" 46 as told to Rhoda Slanger Jean Erdman Meg Gordeau Paul Taylor as told to Joanna Gewertz Merce Cunningham Ann Halprin Jerry Mander THE UNKNOWN GUEST 56 Isadora Bennett SECOND THOUGHTS 63 Letter from Thomas R. Skelton STAGING ETHNIC DANCE 64 Thomas R. Skelton BALLET FOLKLORICO 71 Antonio Truyol NOTES FROM THE ARGENTINE 73 Ester Timbancaya DANCE IN THE PHILIPPINES^ 76 Joanna Gewertz THE BACCHAE 80 Ann Hutchinson NOTATION — A Means of International Communication 82 in Movement and Dance QLA Margaret Erlanger DANCE JOURNEYS 84 SPONSORSHIP AND SUPPORT 88 t> Editor: Marian Van Tuyl Editorial Board: Doris Dennison, Eleanor Lauer, Dorothy Harroun, Ann Glashagel, Joanna Gewertz; Elizabeth Harris Greenbie, Rhoda Kellogg, David Lauer, Bernice Peterson, Judy Foster, Adele Wenig, Rhoda Slanger, Ann Halprin, Dorrill Shadwell, Rebecca Fuller. Production Supervision: Lilly Weil Jaffe ACKNOWLEDGMENTS: Cover design by David Lauer Photographs by courtesy of: San Francisco Chronicle 15 Harvard Theatre Collection 18, 19, 22, 23 Dance Collection: New York Public Library 21, 25, 26 Hurok Attractions, New York 29, 30, 31 Studio Roger Bedard, Quebec 31 Fay Foto Service, Inc., Boston 32 U.S. Information Service, Press Section, Photo Laboratory, Saigon, Vietnam 33 U.S.
    [Show full text]
  • The Reaccession of Ted Shawn a Study in Virtual Permanence
    The Reaccession of Ted Shawn A Study in Virtual Permanence Adam H. Weinert n the spring of 2013, I was invited to represent the modernist choreographer Ted Shawn at the Museum of Modern Art as part of the exhibition 20 Dancers Iof the XXth Century, curated by Boris Charmatz. The exhibit proposed the both radical and rudimentary notion that the main museal space for dance is the human body. In many ways, this is in keeping with how dance has historically been preserved—passing down from generation to generation as an oral and kinesthetic tradition without the benefit of a comprehensive or standardized nota- tion system. With this tradition in mind, I endeavored to become a living archive of Shawn’s work. In determining how to approach this task, particularly in the absence of any living company members or company apparatus, I had to ask both practical and theoretical questions about the archive and dance re-performance. I chose to reconstruct some of Shawn’s most beloved and iconic dances, includ- ing Four Solos Based on American Folk Music (1931) and Pierrot in the Dead City (1935). To ensure the authenticity of the performances, I reconstructed Shawn’s technique class, trained in the studios he and his dancers built, and studied every form of documentation I could find. All the while I had to ask: Is it even possible to faithfully reproduce these works, which were originally performed outdoors on a farm in the Berkshires, in a white-walled museum in midtown Manhattan? What is the best strategy for revitalizing these historic works? Perhaps it was my dissatisfaction with traditional cenotaphic approaches, or that I was inspired by the inventive conceit behind the exhibition itself, but following the performances at MoMA, I felt compelled to do more.
    [Show full text]
  • Martha Graham Collection
    Martha Graham Collection Processed by the Music Division of the Library of Congress Music Division, Library of Congress Washington, D.C. 2007 Contact information: http://hdl.loc.gov/loc.music/perform.contact Catalog Record: http://lccn.loc.gov/2010561026 Finding aid encoded by Library of Congress Music Division, 2010 Finding aid URL: http://hdl.loc.gov/loc.music/eadmus.mu010008 Latest revision: 2012 July Collection Summary Title: Martha Graham Collection Span Dates: 1896-2003 Bulk Dates: (bulk 1926-1991) Call No.: ML31.G727 Creator: Graham, Martha Extent: 350,100 items ; 398 containers ; 590 linear feet Language: Collection material in English Location: Music Division, Library of Congress, Washington, D.C. Summary: Martha Graham was an American modern dancer, choreographer, teacher and company director. The Martha Graham Collection is comprised of materials that document her career and trace the history of the development of her company, Martha Graham Dance Company, which became the Martha Graham Center of Contemporary Dance, and school, Martha Graham School, later to be called the Martha Graham School of Contemporary Dance. Selected Search Terms The following terms have been used to index the description of this collection in the Library's online catalog. They are grouped by name of person or organization, by subject or location, and by occupation and listed alphabetically therein. People Barber, Samuel, 1910-1981. Copland, Aaron, 1900-1990. Dello Joio, Norman, 1913-2008. El-Dabh, Halim, 1921- Emmons, Beverly. Graham, Martha--Archives. Graham, Martha--Correspondence. Graham, Martha--Photographs. Graham, Martha. Graham, Martha. Hindemith, Paul, 1895-1963. Horst, Louis. Hovhaness, Alan, 1911-2000. Karan, Donna, 1948- Lester, Eugene.
    [Show full text]
  • Beginning Modern Dance History
    Beginning Modern Dance History Brief History: In the twentieth century a new dance had emerged, and was classified as “modern.” Its essential purpose was to reveal something about people. Aiming to communicate to each individual some emotional state, idea, or situation which one could identify with or relate to their own experiences. Modern dancers in the beginning attempted to rediscover natural movement and wanted to break away from the rigidity of ballet. They also felt that ballet technique was not compatible with their primary purpose to communicate. The twentieth century needed a dance art that could speak to modern man of his humanity. The term “modern dance,” refers to this new type of dance, which did not rely upon pantomime, or story line much like ballet did. Modern dance bases its technique on natural movement. This includes not only the use of the body in its rhythmic, dynamic, and linear function, but also in an enormous amount of gesture or pedestrian movement. As modern dance began to be established, the rest of the stage arts were gradually added. New music or unusual accompaniment was added. Whole dances were supported by percussion only, or with new sounds from old instruments, and at times music was even dispensed with altogether. Sometimes the dancer would make vocal sounds and use that as their music. Modern dancers have been particularly enterprising in the way that they are constantly searching out new themes. They dance about social or personal problems; they translate plays, poems, and novels. They also use subject matter from folklore and religious themes.
    [Show full text]
  • Mary Campbell Was Like an Angel with Her Full White Curly Hair
    Mary Williams Campbell, A Dancer in Spirit Biographical Introduction to the Collection Author: Janice LaPointe-Crump With appreciation to Catherine Loveday and Dawn Letson © 2004, J. LaPointe-Crump Mary Campbell was like an angel with her full white curly hair. Occasionally I would stand by the piano in Studio 2 at Jacob's Pillow and just listen to her play. She inspired me to incorporate my emotional feelings in my dancing, which is so important to the dancer. It makes all the difference between exercising and really dancing! And to elicit this blossoming in the dancer requires the accompanist to also be a dancer in spirit! --Susan Kramer, Jacob's Pillow alumna 1963 & 1964 A dancer in spirit is a frequent phrase used to describe a woman whose gentle charisma drew in alert listeners from all walks of life. Mary Williams Campbell was much more than a skilled accompanist or a talented composer. She was a moving scholar who helped dancers and students learn the structure, form and the classic codes for creating works. She dedicated her life to unleashing the imagination and instilling a respect for the history of dance, particularly modern dance. Campbell’s unique artistry shined “as a beacon” [through her openness and generosity] to emerging artists and experienced artist- teachers alike. The partnering role of an accompanist with the teacher and choreographer has only recently begun to be analyzed and appreciated. Accompanists are expected to have the patience of Job and be willing to be at each rehearsal, each class, playing the same work again and again in ways that motivate dancers.
    [Show full text]