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Dance
LABEL_RESOURCE_EDITORS
LABEL_RESOURCE_PUBINFO
London 2012
LABEL_RESOURCE_PUBLISHER
Whitechapel Gallery
LABEL_RESOURCE_COPYRIGHTYEAR
2012
LABEL_RESOURCE_SIZE
238 p.
LABEL_RESOURCE_ISBN
978-0-85488-203-8
LABEL_RESOURCE_SHELFMARK
004023
LABEL_RESOURCE_DESCRIPTION

This collection surveys the choreographic turn in the artistic imagination from the 1950s onwards, and in doing so outlines the philosophies of movement instrumental to the development of experimental dance. By introducing and discussing the concepts of embodiment and corporeality, choreopolitics, and the notion of dance in an expanded field, Dance establishes the aesthetics and politics of dance as a major impetus in contemporary culture. It offers testimonies and writings by influential visual artists whose work has taken inspiration from dance and choreography.

Dance--because of its ephemerality, corporeality, precariousness, scoring, and performativity--is arguably the art form that most clearly engages the politics of aesthetics in contemporary culture. Dance’s ephemerality suggests the possibility of an escape from the regimes of commodification and fetishization in the arts.

Its corporeality can embody critiques of representation inscribed in bodies and subjects. Its precariousness underlines the fragility of contemporary states of being. Scoring links it with conceptual art, as language becomes the articulator for possible as well as impossible modes of action. Finally, because dance always establishes a contract, or promise, between its choreographic planning and its actualization in movement, it reveals an essential performativity in its aesthetic project--a central concern for both art and critical thought in our time.

LABEL_RESOURCE_PARTS
Introduction: Dance as a Practice of Contemporaneity
Space, Time and Dance, 1952
2 Pages, 122 Words on Music and Dance, 1957
Ballet: a Visual Experience, 1959
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LABEL_RESOURCE_PARTS
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