Sunday, February 16, 2014
Steve Paxton
Steve Paxton was born in 1939 in Phoenix, Arizona and is currently still alive today. In his early years he did gymnastics and studied with Merce Cunningham (3 years) and José Limón (1 year). He is associated with the post-modern movement time period. He was very influenced by the art and performances in New York in the 1960's and 1970's. He developed Contact Improvisation and explored giving weight equally and created a movement dialogue that involved both participants being totally engaged for endless amounts of time. Paxton's choreography questioned the established parameters of dance and explored movements like walking and running, which had not usually been considered part of dance vocabulary. Paxton was fascinated by expression of the human body and untrained dancers trying out his movement. He sees the form of the body being like a physical machine, sharing weight equally, having points of contact, being expressive by nature, and very human. The movements and form were very human like because the movements were simple every day movement mechanics. He also used architecture and the human body to show how the body can manipulate itself around objects. His content of dance explored texture, size, and shape.
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I find it interesting to see what parameters of dance he questioned. I think his inquiry on contact improvisation gave him a major answer to that question because now dancers can rely on physical touch and partnering as a way to generate new material. I enjoy the section where Paxton views the body as being very human and reinforces this idea with human activities such as walking and running.
ReplyDeletePosted by Maria Tordoff