user avatarMalcolm Manning Eligible Member // Teacher
user avatarKerstin Kussmaul Eligible Member // Teacher
user avatarstephanie maher // Teacher
user avatarPia Lindy Eligible Member // Teacher
IDOCs » Teaching As Performance
This idoc about teaching as performance was created by Steph Maher, Pia Lindy, Kerstin Kussmaul and Malcolm Manning. The time frame was to create this idoc within 1 hour, from starting the discussion about several themes and narrowing it down to teaching as performance, which turned out to be the most animated topic. The original plan, to use Malcolm's and Steph's notes for Pia and Kerstin to dance with, could not be kept due to time constrictions. Here you see the video with the different view points and can read Malcolm's and Steph's notes to what seemed most important to them.
2012.04.21

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TEACHING AS PERFORMANCE

malcolm's notes

STEPH : life as performance - lowering performance tone while teaching - as a teacher trying to stay in the real person body and not a performative body - enjoying the performances that happen in between activities - liminal performances

MALCOLM : conscious choice for financial reasons to focus creativity on teaching rather than performing - turning classes into performances - using improvisational and compositional choice making skills in construction classes that were really my own rather than repeating classes that I had learned

KERSTIN : likes teaching because there's no need to perform - creating performances in more interesting than showing the final performances - the students as audience have a different and more physical experience of something

PIA : teaching as sharing something and performance as sharing knowledge skills etc - so performance can easily be seen as an act of teaching - teaching/performing as a way of meeting people - using her skills as a performer in order to handle the situation - in her teaching encouraging people to practice being willing to be seen and be willing to see others

 STEPH : being open and vulnerable and willing to show yourself on stage is a form of teaching that the audience finds valuable

MALCOLM : in 1995 already I was thinking that the radical aspect of dance, particularly contact improvisation, is in getting the audience involved - getting them moving

Teaching as performance/ notes from stephanie

 

stephanie:

not to over perform while teaching, trying to bring things down to a lower tone, bring the personality of the teacher in a bit softer. A different level of presentation for me is important

 

as a teacher I try and stay in a real body, a person body, not as the performer body. I try and demonstrate less and give them a chance to experience the work without too much visual input from the teacher.

 

At the same time life is a performance, or being in public space with any focused attention around oneself is performance for me.. Being listened to while leading a situation. So as soon as I hold the space as the teacher( or person?) I am performing.

 

Malcolm:

It is a conscious choice to work as a teacher who is a identfying himself as the teacher who is performing. For example, from the experience of lecture demonstrations, I can get the audience to run around. They have learned to move, to get up and participate during my lecture.

 

All the skills of improvisation, the use of my voice, of attitude comes in as I teach and as a perform. I say things like you might have 13 ribs, 10 toes etc...” do not concentrate.”

By allowing the meaning of my language to shift, it does not have to be true, it is more important to encourage the experimentation of the expereince or lesson i am offering

 

So I am very clear I am performing....my teaching is a performance.

 

Kerstin:

When I teach I do not have to perform. I enjoy this. Imostly enjoy the the process of creating something but once it is on the stage I loose interest. Although, teaching has a performative quality which is holding the space. I can share my physical world. I see them and the space, they contribute to the teaching.They are somatically involved and we share this process together.

 

I like teaching more.the people in my class have a very different experience than a passive audience seeing a performance.Things come together, how I see what I see and this comes from the people in the class..unless one works with interactive performances. Then you have this interactive movement or moment hopefully happening.

 

Pia:

They( the audience) are sharing skills, knowledge from the performers performance.

My performances are almost like the same as when I teach class, because often there are so few people. I do a lot of site specific it is meeting somewhere public on the street or in the ministry of culture. I am using my skills as a performer to handle the situation. You can see the teacher in the performance. The teacher/ performer encourages or communicates with the audience interactively.

Asking people to answer my questions by moving, then they have to teach me the movements. I become a student in this moment of the performance and the roles change.

 

Steph:

One thing with performing, or of not wanting to perform or exclude my audience. I perform to teach people to be vulnerable, to take a risk in this abstract experience. This is the most clear way i see performance as a teacher. Showing this experience should inspire this possibility for the audience members.

 

 

 


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Comments:
user avatar
Eszter Gal Eligible Member // Teacher
2012.05.19
I really enjoy the listening and seeing the conversation on this topic. I wish to have a clearer sound, - question of quality - for later I guess -(Malcolm's voice seems to dissapear time to time... ) so perhaps it is a technical thing, where to be when talking to the camera...
also the image is a bit off from the sound -> is it something to consider?

My comment is also a try out as I am in London and at the moment working on the website, practicing uploading video and sound files...great to go back to Istanbul this way... Thanks! Eszter


user avatar
sidonie duret Eligible Member // Teacher
2014.07.30
I can't read the video but I enjoyed reading the notes on the topic. The different points of view and experiences give a lot to think about! Also I like the way you choose to talk about it by sharing a discussion! Thx


user avatar
(inactive user) Eligible Member // Teacher
2014.11.06
The last summer i was observing the laboratory of Lisa Nelson about Tuning scores gave to the Legacy project in Dusseldorf ( http://the-live-legacy-project.com/) After 2 days watching & swimming in the materiel she offered , I have said to myself : "each day is a performance in itself." I remember I was impress being moved in this way. My watching was engage, as an audience experience, I was tracking intention and attention of the teaching composition. Exacting discovering mystery, being patient for the next set up, try to guess the intention, let myself being moved by the flow…..I 've realized how much her teaching was a dance in itself in the sense that her on going process was opreared throughout the "cellular imagination" (Bonnie B Cohen reference http://www.idocde.net/idocs/1029 Extrait : “De l’un a l’autre” ) or throughout the activity of reading and listening the movement of attention in dialogue with the movement intention. As an audience I was involed in the feed back systeme loop where I can observe the room move the discovreing activities of rules of game / score and when the room is beeing moved by the game in itself.

Dear Malcolm so happy to rich you throught your word
sending you my love. p


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