Dances that Describe Themselves: The Improvised Choreography of Richard Bull

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Wesleyan University Press, Sep 4, 2002 - Performing Arts - 334 pages

An inquiry into improvisation as practiced by Richard Bull and his contemporaries.

During an improvised performance, both dancers and audience members reflect on how the dance is being made. They ask themselves: What will happen next? What choices will each dancer make? And how will these decisions contribute to the overall effect and significance of the performance?

Trained as a jazz pianist, Richard Bull did not uphold the opposition often found in dance between improvisation and composition. Instead, he believed that dancers, like jazz musicians, could craft a piece spontaneously in performance. Analyzing performances by Bull and many of his contemporaries, Susan Foster argues that their diverse practices embody distinctive values representative of different artistic communities, yet they all share a capacity to reflect on their own making, in a sense, describing themselves.

 

Contents

IV
19
V
24
VI
31
VII
44
VIII
53
IX
60
X
64
XI
69
XXIV
170
XXV
181
XXVI
186
XXVII
190
XXVIII
198
XXIX
202
XXX
205
XXXI
213

XII
73
XIII
79
XIV
85
XV
93
XVI
99
XVII
106
XVIII
119
XIX
121
XX
141
XXI
146
XXII
160
XXIII
166
XXXII
237
XXXIII
239
XXXIV
245
XXXV
252
XXXVI
254
XXXVII
258
XXXVIII
272
XXXIX
299
XL
321
XLI
329
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