Peter Dimuro: November 2006 Archives
We're about to share videos from recent rehearsals and I wanted to set some context for this whole gallery of clips we'll be posting to our blog. What you are about to see are the beginnings of our exploration, the generative period, in creating enough movement material, thought material and text material to find out what the language is of this piece - the movement vocabulary.
You can listen to following audio podcast to learn more about this generative process and also continue reading below:
Click this link to listen to audio podcast (MP3 format)
So none of the upcoming clips have been crafted more than through improvisations. And some of clips are total experiments to find ways to the next level and are not intended for performance.
Having said that, I love the rare surprise that comes through when you start improvising and you try to capture that again for performance because it is spot on.
To learn more about this process, you can visit the Liz Lerman Dance Exchange Toolbox, which is based on our exploration, over 30 year period, of how to generate movement.
As we continue to develop Funny Uncles, we'll start to craft these disparate experiments into a full work. But for now, you're about to see some of these experimentations which I find very interesting and fascinating, which I hope you do too.
I wanted to talk about why you might be interested in contributing written word, recorded word, images and videos to this blog. There's a real necessity for other voices to be heard in this work that address the themes of this piece that revolve around what is a normal family and who is normal in any family. In upcoming posts, Doug and I will write about the specifics of how you can contribute your stories and movements to this website.
I wanted to introduce myself and this "Funny Uncles" project My name is Peter DiMuro and I'm the producing artistic director of Liz Lerman Dance Exchange and I'm the artistic director of a new work that the company is creating called "Funny Uncles."
You can click on the following audio link in which I offer background about the origins of Funny Uncles and the themes we will be exploring in our upcoming performances.
