March 2019 In Dance

Somatic Costumes: from Choreography to Socio-political Acts

by Sally E. Dean

“ Dance is political not because of its subject mat- ter but because of the way dances are made, how they are structured, and what they show about people relating to each other. ” — Stephanie Skura ( Politics of Method, Reimagining America ) Costume is a powerful agent for personal and socio- political action and trans- for-mation. How costumes

com/178071468). The site also played an important role in the choreographic process: Something’s in the Living Room journeyed across cul- tures (Indonesia-UK-Finland- Spain) through traditional performance venues ( The- atre Guerra , Spain & Taman Budaya , Solo, Indonesia), to universities ( Chester Univer- sity & Edgehill University , UK), to site-specific venues such as a 15th century living room in Edinburgh (Edin- burgh Fringe Festival), a vil- lage hall in the south coast of England, to a private home in Helsinki, Finland. These sites became co-choreographers with costume design. Wearing a Somatic Cos- tume can also uncover new relationships with others, as the audience can become part of the choreography. In a series of Pointy Hat perfor- mances ( Myth of the Porter’s Mess Room , Here and There , and In Search of Water ), the audience is invited into the choreographic experience – dressing up in Pointy Hat cos- tumes and journeying through indoor and outdoor environ-

are structured and designed changes our relationship to ourselves, others, and the world around us. This includes how we dance and the choreography we create. If I wear high heels, the shoe affects the experi- ence of my feet, the movement quality of my walk – transforming the character I present to the world, how I act in it, and how I am perceived by it. Our sense of self, even the parameters of our bodies, blend/merge with the costumes we wear. In this way, choosing a costume to wear is a choreography on the body itself. The costume designs us. For example, the pointe shoe in ballet gives the female dancer a particular relation- ship to the earth, a small point to balance from as her body posture rises towards the sky. The quality of the movement is informed by it, as well as the structure of the foot. They choreograph each other. Today I am wearing my Somatic Costume of Lentil Socks. Filled with dry lentils, these socks respond to tiny movements of my feet, like sand, awakening and massaging with their small, hard, smooth texture – they give my feet a sense of weight that fosters con- nection to the floor. Choosing what I wear is a practice of embodiment and a return to the relationship between the costume and the body. Metaphorically and literally, we move each other. For the last eight years as somatic practi- tioner, performer, choreographer and teacher, I’ve investigated how costume can be applied somatically as the starting point of choreo- graphic works. Since 2011, I have led the Somatic Movement, Costume and Perfor- mance Project (London, UK), collaborating with costume designers/visual artists Sandra Arroniz Lacunza and Carolina Rieckhof. We design Somatic Costumes to illicit specific psychophysical awareness in the performer through the sense of touch. As in somatic movement practices, the aim is to transform movement patterns and psycho-physical hab- its. Internal experience of the body becomes the design and choreographic starting point, as opposed to the external form of the cos- tume or movement. Key somatic practices that are integrated in this project are from my background and training: Amerta Movement (Javanese Supra- pto Suryodarmo), Skinner Releasing Tech- nique (Joan Skinner), Environmental Move- ment (Helen Poynor) and Scaravelli Yoga (Giovanni Felicioni). How do I design a Somatic Costume? Somatic costumes have developed from the somatic practices above and questions that arise in my movement, costume, and per- formance practices. For example, while train- ing in Poynor’s Environment Movement , I quested to understand personal boundaries and the integration of my inner world (in- side the body) with my outer world (outside the body) as a performer. To experience our “skin boundary” between inside/outside, we created the Tube Costume. Constructed from stretchy lycra material, the Tube Costume

Clockwise from top: Balloon Hat Costumes / photo by Luna Pérez Visairas, Tube Costumes / photo courtesy of artist, Bin Bag Skirt / photo by Luna Pérez Visairas

in Amerta Movement with Suprapto Suryo- darmo, I witnessed a quality of containment in dancers, and in the everyday movement of people, that I could see and sense, but was not able to embody myself until I wore the Javanese traditional dance costume, the kain which is a long cloth tightly wrapped around the legs and pelvis and secured by a stagen , a sash tightly wrapped around the waist between the pelvis and the ribs. This costume restricted the movement of my legs, kinesthetically “containing” my mid to lower body. The costume’s sensorial experience (as opposed to its aesthetic, symbol or meaning) was a portal into new perceptions, chang- ing the felt-sense of my body. It also fostered socio-cultural understanding, specifically the movement quality of ‘containment' embod- ied within the Solonese of Java. This experi- ence evoked the following questions: How do we design somatic costumes to stim- ulate new movement vocabulary or quali- ties that might be missing from a performer’s repertoire? Choreographically, a costume is often an afterthought in contemporary dance and choreographic process and typically applied at the end. What if it were the starting point? What if costume is approached as a co-cho- reographer and teacher in the creation pro- cess? To begin, we might generate choreo- graphic material by “following” the cos-tume through improvisational and somatic tech- niques. This encourages “tuning-in” to the costume with eyes closed, sensing the cos- tume’s touch, noticing qualities inherent in the physical material of the costume and the effect on the dancer. Dancers can be invited into the costume before a pre-conceived subject matter, theme, aesthetic is determined. In the choreogra- phy of Something’s in the Living Room , the Bin Bag Costume instigated the movement, character, text, sound in the piece (vimeo. How can somatic costumes generate choreo- graphic material?

ments. One meter high and constructed from canvas and bamboo, Pointy Hats alter how the audience experiences their heads, but also how they move their bodies – adapting their body positions to navigate doorways, corri- dors or low tree branches. The audience’s relationships to the envi- ronment became connected to what they wore. Tall trees, a white obelisk and poles, simi- lar to the verticality of the Pointy Hat, were places that the audience felt akin or drawn to. Wearing uniform costumes also connected participants to one another with a sense of group solidarity and security. Wearing some- times evoked vulnerability, as when pass- ersby respond to Pointy Hats with: “Dunce Cap,”“Klu Klux Klan,”“Dick Heads.” Although originally designed to kines-theti- cally sense the axis of the spine out through the top of the head, the visual can create strong social-political associations. As the Skura quote states at the beginning of the article, the socio-political is endemic in how dances are made and the relation- ships we create. It’s critical during a creative process to consider all relationships involved (dancers, costumes, site, audience, etc.). It’s also important to recognize that the non-ver- bal touch of the Somatic Costume can be as equally powerful as verbal and visual expres- sion. As a somatic resource, costumes harbor within them the potential for awareness and transformation in both cho-reographic and socio-political contexts. Experience Somatic Costumes in Impro- visation and Performance as part of To Be Free: CounterPulse Festival 2019. Based in London, Sally E. Dean (USA/UK), is an interdisciplinary performer, choreographer, teacher and writer with over 20 years experience in university, professional and community settings across Europe, Asia and the USA. Her teaching and performance work is informed by somatic-based practices, her cross-cultural projects in Asia and her background in dance/theatre – integrating site, cos- tume and object. She is an MPhil candidate at Royal Holloway University, UK. sallyedean.com

allows dancers to expand/contract their boundary to explore the space between body and costume skin. Choreographically, the material reveals/ conceals the dancer’s body, accentuating the body’s form, but erasing details of the body such as the face. Aesthetically, dancers become entities that lie between the human form and abstraction – almost amoeba and tube-like. The choreographic material is devised by the costume’s material and the somatic intention that instigated it: boundaries. Other Somatic Costume designs are: the Balloon Hat, designed to sense the volume and buoyancy of skull (from Skinner Releas- ing Technique) ; and Bin Bag Skirt, designed to experience the light-weight pelvis in orien- tation to sky (from Felicioni’s Scaravelli Yoga approach). Although costume has been involved in performance across history, time, and cul- tures, this work proposes a critical re-framing of costume – costume design and costume- based choreography are not generated from the visual effect of the costume, but from its physical and psychological impact through the costume’s touch while wearing it. This somatic approach, as a design pro- cess, has been implemented by cognitive psychologists/neuroscientists, who create costumes to transform body representation through vibrating insoles (biomedical engi- neer James Collin) to instigate postural align- ment in the elderly; and, a full-body neo- prene suit (Dr. Grunwald) to reprogram body image and schema in those with anorexia. If costumes transform wearers’ bodily experi- ences therapeutically, how do we apply them choreographically? Costume’s potential resource as a somatic, choreographic, and socio-political agent became apparent when I was living in Java (2007-8). When I was learning the tradi- tional Javanese/Balinese dances and training

CounterPulse presents Sally E. Dean and the Somatic Movement, Costume and Performance Project: Mar 9 (workshop); Mar 9-10 (performance-making); Mar 17 (performance & talk); CounterPulse, SF. counterpulse.org/tobefree

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in dance mar 2019

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