Kokoro Dance: Life

Photo: Chris Randle
http://www.kokoro.ca

I had the opportunity to attend the October 12, 2013 performance of Life by Vancouver's Kokoro Dance company at the Roundhouse Performance Centre. Very inspiring! This was the first time I attended a butoh-inspired performance.

Barbara Bourget, Jay Hirabashi and the five other dancers gave a memorable interpretation of life "from the moment of birth to the instant of our passing."

Choreography by Barbara and Jay; set design by Kai Chan; music by Lee Pui Ming; costumes by Tsuneko Kokubo; lighting by Gerald King. All these elements meshed seamlessly to provide the audience with a captivating show!

Phoenix unfurling


phoenix hatching
body curling
wings unfurling

Haptic visuality

The very essence of the lived experience is moulded by hapticity and peripheral unfocused vision. Focused vision confronts us with the world whereas peripheral vision envelops us in the flesh of the world. 
 - Juhani Pallasmaa, 2005
The hands want to see, the eyes want to caress.
- Johann Wolfgang von Goethe 
In contrast to optical visuality (a seeing which masters and represents), haptic visuality is tactile, kinaesthetic and functions like organs of touch.
- Laura Marks, 2002 

Shimmerings in the shadows


The ambient interplay of light and shadow attracts me. Though we most often assume the presence of light in the act of seeing in our day-to-day, real world activities, the absence of light conjures up the viewing of things most often associated with another world. In a sense, the absence of full light, such as shadow or chiaroscuro, accentuates properties of existing objects, all the while revealing more hidden properties in the shadows. Night or darkness can be considered as a lived space where things we experience in the outside world are subdued while inner, more affective things surface.
Iridescence and opalescence seem to imply a melding or superposition of states, and the simultaneous presence of both states at once, an effect that can be described as ‘shimmering’. The moment of transition between the projection of two static images, or the effect obtained when a lenticular image is moved, revealing another image, shows states in transition; they are not either/or, they are both. The notion of an ontological oscillation between worlds or states through shimmering, iridescence and opalescence, can apply to the folds and imagery of the ‘sensate skins’ installation. Through responsivity, the engagents (both human and non-human) are also in a constant state of vacillation, of input-output, within the folds of an intercorporeal engagement. The oscillation from a real or physical world, to a created or imagined world, evokes states of shimmering reciprocity or alternance.
Shimmerings and other interplays of light and shadow evoke as well those intermingling states residing within undulating folds, where liminal elements are first hidden, then revealed, and again hidden, as in the pulsating luminescence of the firefly.
In the design of the ‘sensate skins’ haptic installation, I explored the visual qualities of haptic visuality, chiaroscuro and shimmering. The installation’s fabric folds flutter, alternatively hiding and revealing different folded layers. Visually, the glimmering fabric panel’s folds evoke the metaphor of shimmering. Likewise, the metamorphic videos (from tree to human) allude to this shimmering effect, to alternative states; the slowly transitioning iridescent fold imagery shows alternating states, leaving traces of images, memories of the past and impressions of the future onto the skin of other semi-transparent panels that it traverses. A sense of ambiguity persists, since we are never sure which state is the one we should be witnessing, which one is “on”. Textural, slightly unfocused images of a tree and a male body were projected onto fabric skins. Since the skin installation was made up of several layers of semi-transparent folds, the image was further distorted and unfocused, penetrating the porous membranes, light and images leaking onto others. Fugitive images of a genderless body enfolded in a shimmering, opalescent fabric offered ephemeral glimpses of the subject, outlining fleeting shapes stretching and pressing against a chrysalis membrane, then lost again within its inner folds.

Experiences of perception


We seek the same feeling from a psychologically immersive experience that we do from a plunge in the ocean or swimming pool: the sensation of being surrounded by a completely other reality, as different as water is from air, that takes all of our attention, our whole perceptual apparatus.
- Janet Murray, 1998 
Art does not render the invisible, but makes visible […] it suffices to provide the appearance for one sense to produce the illusion that the whole thing [is] there in flesh and blood […] the rendering of a part does not fail to suggest the presence of the whole.
- Stefan Beyst, 2005 
How would the painter or poet express anything other than his encounter with the world?
- Maurice Merleau-Ponty, as cited in David Michael Levin, 1993

Lived experience

The qualities of hapticity, visuality and cross-modality permeate the folds of sensuality, eroticism and mystery. These qualities, like swirling incense, cross the folds of our lived, phenomenological experience, caress our psychic folds and intermingle. They stimulate our senses, awaken our inner pulsions, and evoke unspoken memories and hopes of passion, making them rise to the surface. It is in this way that we experience our worlds, real and imagined, through our senses and ourselves.

Sound and colour


What would be truly surprising would be to find that sound could not suggest colour, that colours could not evoke the idea of a melody, and that sound and colour were unsuitable for the translation of ideas, seeing that things have always found their expression through a system of reciprocal analogy.
- Charles Beaudelaire, 1964

The baroque


The Baroque refers not to an essence but rather to an operative function, to a trait. It endlessly twists and turns its folds, pushing them to infinity, fold over fold, one upon the other. The Baroque fold unfurls all the way to infinity. 
- Gilles Deleuze, 199
 
Rather than a continuing series of folds, differentials and modulations comprising the world as a folding, the baroque is actualized as a smoothing out of creases through accord, harmonization and the reintegration of fragments.
- Anna Munster, 2006

Lexicon of skin and decay



Skins or layers show transparencies and porosities, as well as change and transformation. Decay can also take on many of these characteristics—especially when associated with aging.

Here are the beginnings of a lexicon of skins, change and decay that can be used to help describe what my photo composites might evoke:
blistered wrinkled pleated fringed feathered decayed peeled ravaged distressed decomposed degenerated destroyed deteriorated dying changed renewed reborn transformed surfacing skin pellicle flesh encounters interrelated intertwined co-responsive intercalated folds layers crossovers interminglings (in)visible transparencies translucency superimposed porosities veils strata resonance (inter)connectedness liminality intercorporeity

Uchiwa fan

I made a uchiwa fan for B by pasting a printout of a photo encaustic (wood nymph 2) on a bamboo fan frame, then added cord, a stick and pine cone scales. A short kodama poem alludes to her being trapped inside a tree.

Encaustic

I attended a 3-day Photo Encaustic and Mixed Media workshop in Victoria led by Leah Macdonald, a well-known artist-photographer from Philadelphia. It was very inspiring since it involved playing with, exploring and discovering techniques for using beeswax over photographic prints, mounting on wood, Masonite or other substrates. It was an opportunity to meet other artists from BC and explore various media along with the molten wax: oil sticks, acrylics, natural and man-made objects.

In the Buddha piece above, rubbing, scratching, scoring, stamping and other techniques were used to enhance the initial image printed with pigment ink on unryu washi paper which was mounted on thin plywood. This is the kind of work I am aiming for since it allows me to get my hands dirty again and create a unique work.

Mobileography exhibition at the PhotoHaus Gallery


Five photos taken with my iPhone or iPad were selected for the show.

Flow




I saw interesting moving camo patterns on the surface of a pool of water.

Eros exhibition at the PhotoHaus Gallery

One of my photos was selected for the show.

Fléché


From the Cibachrome series, an earlier set of photographs that explored body projections.


manikins

Towards Terra Verde

I've been working on a "manikins" series of photographs since Andro moved in. I was interested in trying out image projections as well as superimposition of images onto the body. The theme for the series is that these entities abandon their current planet of habitation (whether forced to because of some cataclysm or by personal choice) and migrate to another world that will hopefully be better... some nirvana. During the voyage, they come across new worlds, experiencing feelings of nostalgia and anticipation. New vistas are projected onto their bodies — they are but an expression of the external. 

This exploration also brings up interesting questions about the make gaze, since the manikins evoke a certain degree of sensuality. Does the theory of the male gaze (the photographer's) apply to an object (the manikin)? Can an object be subjectified — in this case, is the object assuming traits similar to those of a human? Interesting... Isn't it spelled "mannequin"? Well, it seems that "manikin" is an accepted alternative spelling, which I have adopted for this series.

You may also be interested in searching the Web for Eugène Atget and Lee Friedlander, two photographers who have taken photographs of mannequins in shop window displays. Also, an introductory video to Season 5 of Mad Men, "What Is There to Love If Not the Enigma?" provides insight into the life and artwork of metaphysical artist Giorgio de Chiricho who expressed his own interested in the mannequin.

Andros

Andros, unpacked and assembled
Androgynous android