Report for Society for Dance Research from Dance in the Age
of Forgetfulness Conference
A horizontal navigation: between remembering and
forgetting, between knowledge and life Keynote by Dr Efrosini Protopapa
Written by Siรขn
Goldby
It has been over a month since I attended SDR’s Dance in the
Age of Forgetfulness conference, and I can feel that time has already started
to shape my memory of what I experienced over the three days in Egham.
Peripheral details have ebbed away, and my memory of the conference has been
sifted and shaped, like a pebble that has been smoothed over time by the tide.
Therefore, in this report I will try to offer an essence of the experience; a
snapshot of sense-data, images and captions, which have been compacted and embedded through the multi-layering of
time. Please accept my jar of keynote pickle to compliment the other
no-doubt delicious titbits that form this newsletter.
Through the process of writing this report I hope to
re-cover, re-view, re-member some of the finer details of Dr Efrosini
Protopapa’s key note. I’m sure the process will help to unearth information that
has since been forgotten, but my mapping will no doubt leave gaps.
I have to admit, I have cheated a little bit. In order to
avoid too much of a bare-bones account, this report has been bolstered by
information gathered some weeks after the event. I became aware that what I
remembered had particular relevance for me and my own personal canon, names
that I had heard of, things that made me laugh, works or performances that I
had seen previously. So, this
report in some way resembles the gentle balance between knowledge and life as
Efrosini’s title suggests, but in a bid to offer a more complete account I have
added footnotes for further information, including things that I had forgotten.
As we enter the theatre space, the floor strewn with blank
pieces of A4 paper, we are invited to arrange ourselves around the edges. Efrosini
welcomes us, encouraging us to move as we feel comfortable. She steps onto a page
reading ‘START’, throws a stone and moves to the piece of paper that it lands
on. On picking up the paper, she reads from the other side, replaces it and promptly
leaves the room[1].
On her return, she uncovers a second piece of paper, and
begins to read aloud. Nietzsche is quoted[2]. The
lecture progresses in this way, as Efrosini chooses pieces of paper at random
(it seems) and proceeds to read from most of them. She begins to lay parts of
her body across the paper, negotiating the pieces as if they are
stepping-stones. This journey seems to leave traces within her body, through her
own personal timeline; traces of what has been before, what is yet to come. She
is performing a kind of two-way archaeological process; a simultaneous self-archiving
and rediscovery within each layer of lived experience. Every re-remembering
forms a new link to the present, a new map which is enmeshed through horizontal
time and experience. It becomes apparent that she has done this before, as she
shows us an image of herself, doing this before[3].
Trio A[4]
makes an appearance as the last dance that she learnt[5]; a
ripple of recognition and familiarity sweeps the space. There’s Adrian
Heathfield, Aby Warburg[6]
and Efrosini’s collaborations with Siobhan Davies and Susanna Recchia. Lying flat on her
stomach, she admits that she forgot her costume of ‘ordinary clothes’ and thus
had to wear a different set of ‘ordinary clothes’[7].
At this point the ‘game’ has become apparent, however
without most of the audience being able to read the other side of the paper, we
really have no idea what is going to come next! A piece of paper is ripped,
rolled, pinned to her hair[8]
and remains in place until the lecture draws to a close.
Efrosini’s key note was followed by a response from Dr
Susanne Foellmer, who describes the lecture as a form of ‘choreo-reading’; the
word ‘choreography’ being derived from the Greek word for noting down. She
speaks of a ‘dialectic relation’ of the interplay between remembering and
forgetting, and of letting the ‘images migrate’. I can imagine the images as
they forge their own passage through time as new objects, relating to and
referencing the original time and space from which they were derived, but
continually existing and regenerating endlessly through history’s time-warp. Picking
her way through this minefield of ‘past interferences’ Efrosini gives us a
sense of the awkwardness of trying to embody the present moment. In performing
this constantly evolving history, moments appear and disappear, and immediately
cease to exist as they once were.
I am left with a resounding sense of the elasticity and
boundlessness of time and memory, and I am considering whether the traces which
remain when knowledge slips through the net of forgetting are gathered
elsewhere. Having popped the airtight lid of this delicious keynote condiment, I
am sure there is more to discover in its syrupy depths. Over time perhaps they
will rise to the surface, or maybe the traces will line the jar for future culinary
creations.
[2] QUOTE
As it turns out there are quite a few Nietzsche quotes written on the papers that could have been chosen. Each one a variation on the theme that time exerts its cyclical force on memory and forgetfulness in such a way that identifying the present moment is a near impossibility. Throughout many lifetimes, the multiple dialogues between remembering and forgetting are inescapably intertwined and reliant on one another.
As it turns out there are quite a few Nietzsche quotes written on the papers that could have been chosen. Each one a variation on the theme that time exerts its cyclical force on memory and forgetfulness in such a way that identifying the present moment is a near impossibility. Throughout many lifetimes, the multiple dialogues between remembering and forgetting are inescapably intertwined and reliant on one another.
[3] IMAGE of Efrosini doing
it before.
[4] IMAGE of Trio A credits
[5] ASK A QUESTION
[6] IMAGE from Aby Warburg’s Mnemosyne Atlas.
His research involved collecting the recurrence of images and symbolic gestures
in western civilization through the passage of time.
Change
something in your appearance.