This paper discusses some of the means through which non-representational imagery in dance, and in particular in digital choreography, can be understood by audiences. I argue that, although movement that has representational content might have a meaning that can be translated into words, more nuanced interpretations of the movement are understood through an embodied understanding of their more detailed subtleties. I further argue that non-representational movement, which does not pretend to represent anything, can communicate other types of understanding as one engages in the act of viewing the movement of dancers, and more particularly. digital imagery that uses human movement as its source
This article discusses the dance performance project Interface 2, which involved live dancers, anima...
The performativity of dance relies on the the power that different dance practices and choreographie...
During the 1990s, perhaps as part of several strategies aimed at slowing down the boom of the 1980s,...
This paper discusses some of the means through which non-representational imagery in dance, and in p...
Humans were expressing their needs and emotions in movement far before developing speech or any othe...
Contains fulltext : 184231.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)This article pr...
This article provides clarification regarding ‘the what’ and ‘the why’ of mental imagery use in danc...
Philosophers of art draw a distinction between two broad sets of concerns: questions about aesthetic...
Non-representational theory opens up ways to make sense of non-cognitive, bodily, emotional, and aff...
One of the primary assumptions of dance studies is that dance as an art only exists in the moment of...
This practice-led research employs choreographic and somatic practices, and their mediation through...
There was a time when screendance implied a dancing body. The “dance” may have taken the...
This article examines the impact of the presence of the human body on how we perceive dance art. It ...
This research paper explores the framing of the corporeal expression of human emotions within discou...
Abstract This paper discusses some findings from practice-as-research into digital dance performanc...
This article discusses the dance performance project Interface 2, which involved live dancers, anima...
The performativity of dance relies on the the power that different dance practices and choreographie...
During the 1990s, perhaps as part of several strategies aimed at slowing down the boom of the 1980s,...
This paper discusses some of the means through which non-representational imagery in dance, and in p...
Humans were expressing their needs and emotions in movement far before developing speech or any othe...
Contains fulltext : 184231.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)This article pr...
This article provides clarification regarding ‘the what’ and ‘the why’ of mental imagery use in danc...
Philosophers of art draw a distinction between two broad sets of concerns: questions about aesthetic...
Non-representational theory opens up ways to make sense of non-cognitive, bodily, emotional, and aff...
One of the primary assumptions of dance studies is that dance as an art only exists in the moment of...
This practice-led research employs choreographic and somatic practices, and their mediation through...
There was a time when screendance implied a dancing body. The “dance” may have taken the...
This article examines the impact of the presence of the human body on how we perceive dance art. It ...
This research paper explores the framing of the corporeal expression of human emotions within discou...
Abstract This paper discusses some findings from practice-as-research into digital dance performanc...
This article discusses the dance performance project Interface 2, which involved live dancers, anima...
The performativity of dance relies on the the power that different dance practices and choreographie...
During the 1990s, perhaps as part of several strategies aimed at slowing down the boom of the 1980s,...