Keyworddigitization and video

  • Scott deLahunta The Confusing Evidence(evidence that confuses)

    Scott deLahunta The Confusing Evidence(evidence that confuses)

    talk on four topics, the publishing of choreographic ideas, communicating what happens in the studio in the absence of the body, annotation and process documentation, and dance becoming data.

  • Susan Kozel, Margrét Sara Guðjónsdóttir, Jeannette Ginslov, Keith Lim Conspiracy Archives a process archive of an archival process

    Susan Kozel, Margrét Sara Guðjónsdóttir, Jeannette Ginslov, Keith Lim Conspiracy Archives a process archive of an archival process

    This resource reflects artistic research into archiving a choreographic process using digital and analogue materials (including bodies). It is a process archive of an archival process, structured around Critical Questions, Process Notes (taking the form of phenomenological writing and visual imagery) and Design Prototypes. The artistic research at the centre of this resource is the production of a Mixed Reality (MR) archival complement to Margrét Sara Guðjónsdóttir’s performance of Conspiracy Ceremony – HYPERSONIC STATES. The archival work is called Conspiracy Archives and it is currently in its final prototype phase, almost ready to tour either independently or along with the live performance. It is created by the collaborative team of Margrét Sara Guðjónsdóttir (choreography), Jeannette Ginslov (visual capture and editing), Keith Lim (visual processing and programming) and Susan Kozel (project coordination, philosophy and concept). This resource integrates the voices of the collaborators using words, still images, video and design prototypes.

  • Marisa Zanotti Scores, Stills and ScreensDocumentation in Artist Doctorates

    Marisa Zanotti Scores, Stills and ScreensDocumentation in Artist Doctorates

    This reflective essay considers how documenting might be made to work strategically in the doctoral process. The writing explores three functions of screen documentation: Documentation as a research practice; documentation as evidence of a performance or process; and documentation as an integral strategy in the final presentation/ defence of a thesis. The essay draws on thinking about documentation and subjectivity by artists and documentarians such as Babette Mangolte (1978) and Becky Edmunds (2007) and cites examples of documentations of different kinds of live events. The essay includes original scores that link recording technologies to creative process, these scores are designed to open up thinking about documenting in both studio research and recording final performances.

  • Marisa Zanotti & Simon Ellis Habbits of Attention

    Marisa Zanotti & Simon Ellis Habbits of Attention

    Habits of attention: was a conversation between Marisa Zanotti and Simon Ellis exploring documentation in artistic doctorates in relation to different audiences. The dialogue was delivered as a paper by Marisa Zanotti.

  • 10Nivel2019
  • Researching (in/as) Motion978-952-353-012-6 © 2019 Theatre Academy of the University of the Arts Helsinki Accessibility statement
  • ADiE is a partnership between Zodiak Centre for New Dance, Kiasma Theatre Museum and University of the Arts Helsinki (FI), Weld and Stockholm University of the Arts (SE), and Dance4, University of Chichester and Middlesex University (UK), funded by Erasmus+.