DRAWING LIFE by fred hatt

2009/05/01

Blind Sight

Journey, 2009, still from video by Mana Hashimoto

Journey, 2009, still from video by Mana Hashimoto

I’ve collaborated with many dancers and performers over the past fifteen years or so, creating projected imagery and other visual elements to integrate with live performances.  Among all of them, my collaboration with dancer Mana Hashimoto has been unique.

Mana, who trained as a musician at the famous Berklee College of Music in Boston, lost her sight completely as a young adult.  Since that time she has pursued an international career as a solo dance artist, while raising a daughter as a single mother.  Despite all her challenges, Mana has a beatific smile and a funny laugh.  Her performances are personal journeys, often involving interactions with hard and awkward objects.  She also leads workshops on “Dance without Sight”, guiding her students to explore their own environment and to observe the movement of others through touch and the other non-visual senses.

I’ve collaborated with Mana on several performances.  Mana has a strong visual imagination and always has visual ideas for her pieces.  With other collaborators, I show them things and see what they think, working towards realizing their ideas.  With Mana I have to describe everything to her, trying to convey to her the total visual effect of the images I am providing in combination with her movement and presence on stage.

Mana’s newest piece, called Journey, is being presented at CRS in Manhattan tonight through Sunday (May 1-3).  It incorporates video that Mana shot during her travels last winter in Finland and Poland on a performance tour.  I edited the video and worked on integrating it with the performance.  (Marijke Eliasberg is presenting a separate piece in this program, a complex choreography that rearranges thirteen dancers into ever-changing combinations.)

Journey, 2009, still from video by Mana Hashimoto

Journey, 2009, still from video by Mana Hashimoto

Of course, Mana could not see what she was filming.  She had to show the video to others and have them describe the content.  But the images she provided are lovely, and it was amazing how easily they fell into place in the performance, and how well they go with the music and the movement.  A sighted person tends to frame the video around focal points of attention, but Mana’s video becomes an environment and lets her performance be the focal point.

I am, even more than usual, a visually oriented person, and my consciousness tends to rest right behind the eyes.  But there is much to be learned from closing the eyes.  Working with an artist who cannot see makes me see, and feel, in new ways.

2009/03/26

Emergence


Emergence from Fred Hatt on Vimeo.  2003, duration 13:45

Butoh dancers use breath and visualizations projected within and around the body to embody elemental forces and to explore pre-verbal sensations and experiences.  It’s a form of dance that arose in Japan in the ferment of experimental art and postwar radicalism starting in the late 1950’s.  You may find that this video tries your patience, but if you surrender to it, this kind of performance can alter your perception of time.

Emergence is an improvised performance by butoh dancers Corinna Brown and Craig Colorusso.  Corinna is a long time friend with whom I have collaborated many times, and you’re sure to see more of her here.  I videotaped this performance on May 31, 2003, at a performance at a Brooklyn loft party/art exhibit that was a fundraiser for oceanic ecology.  The recorded music is by Diving Bell, a duo consisting of Craig Colorusso, also seen dancing here, and Joel Westerdale.

There was supposed to be a special spot light for this performance.  I was to videotape, using Corinna’s old Sony Hi8 format camcorder.  But as the performance began, the spot light failed to work.  The space was almost completely dark.  I wasn’t getting anything on tape.  Thinking quickly, I switched the camera over to the NightShot mode, which records in monochrome in dark conditions, and pulled the Mini MagLite out of my back pocket.  This is one of the tiny AAA battery ones, not very bright, but bright enough for NightShot and bright enough to let the audience see the performance in the dark loft.  Holding the camera with the right hand and the light with the left, I used thumb and forefinger to change the focus of the light, causing a ring of brightness to expand and contract around the performers.

The look of this video is all thanks to an accident and a seat-of-the-pants solution.  The eerie greenish whiteness, the looming shadows and pulsing aura, would not have been part of this video had the intended lighting not malfunctioned.  And yet it’s perfect.  Not only does it stylistically fit the performance in the video, I think the dim and eerie hand-held light also enhanced the live performance.  The stage light would have separated the performers from the crowd and made people stand back, but the darkness drew people into it and made it more intimate.

Chaos is an artist.  When she emerges to collaborate with you, do not refuse her, but welcome her and answer her openly and freely, and she will impart something better than you could have conceived.

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