Video: Kriss Ravetto-Biagioli on 'Dancing with and within the Digital Domain'

Kriss Ravetto-Biagioli introduces her Body & Society article 'Dancing with and within the Digital Domain'

Abstract

Digital cameras and motion capture technologies that document and share creative practices have transformed the way we think about dance as an embodied knowledge as well as the way we experience it bodily. Computational media, which not only records and archives but also calculates, analyses and models dance, further complicates its ontological status. This move to document and inscribe dance in a tangible medium marks a shift from understanding dance as an ungraspable event towards conceiving of dance as a tangible process that can be collected, transmitted, repeated and packaged or archived as an object. I look at two dance works – Matthias Sperling’s Loop Atlas and Siobhan Davies and Anri Sala’s Solo in the Doldrums – that trouble conventional notions of embodiment and its relationship to both presence and absence, at the same time they challenge how computational media fixates on figures and gestures that can be traced, mapped and calibrated.

Previous
Previous

Review: Rosi Braidotti, ‘Posthuman Knowledge’

Next
Next

Video: Alison Downham Moore on 'Foucault’s 1960s Lectures on Sexuality'