Writing about music, dancing about architecture

Waterside Contemporary, 2 Clunbury Street, London
Writing about music, dancing about architecture image
Ad
Event has ended
This event ended on Wednesday 18th of January 2017
Admission
Free
Venue Information
Waterside Contemporary
Clunbury Street, N1 6TT
Nearest Tube/Rail Stations
Hoxton 0.42 miles

Waterside contemporary is pleased to present Writing about music, dancing about architecture, with Marinella Senatore, anonymous, Kamen Stoyanov, Mounira Al Solh, Oreet Ashery, Iván Argote, Nick Hornby, Núria Güell, Nicoline van Harskamp, and Marianna Christofides.

Marinella Senatore's School of Narrative Dance, established by the artist in 2013, is a nomadic project that emoloys choreography and music to bring together communities, fostering emancipation of the student, and activating processes of individual self-improvement. The free school's projects - collaboratively-devised performances, parades and films - have involved thousands of people across the globe, inviting them to tell stories by other means. The Notebook from the school's first year, presented in the gallery and recording aspects of rehearsals, research and performances, including ballet, filmmaking and stargazing in Germany, Ecuador, USA, Spain and the UK amongst others, serves a rich narrative and allows for many others to begin anew.

Senatore's artistic practice is rooted in public participation, initiating dialogues between history, culture and social structures. Rethinking the role of the artist as author and the public as recipient, Senatore’s work merges forms of protest, learning theatre, oral histories, vernacular forms, protest dance and music, public ceremonies, civil rituals and mass events, reflecting on the political nature of collective formations and their impact on the social history of places and communities.

Image:
Marinella Senatore, The School of Narrative Dance: Little Chaos #1, 2013
Fine Art Print on Hahnemühle paper, framed
160 x 300 cm
Courtesy the artist and Laveronica arte contemporanea

Tags: Art

User Reviews

There are no user reviews