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Other Ways of Seeing #2 Steve Paxton

Other Ways of Seeing #2 Steve Paxton

Tiago Cadete with Leonor Cabral

Other Ways of Seeing #2 Steve Paxton

Tiago Cadete with Leonor Cabral

How can we look at an exhibition? Is there just one way? Other Ways of Seeing is a performance that seeks to create a new relationship between the audience and the art objects of an exhibition.

By activating their bodies in the exhibition space, together with the aid of a manual, visitors are challenged to look at the exhibition by the artist Steve Paxton, Drafting Interior Techniques, in a different way.

Other Ways of Seeing pays tribute to the English art critic John Berger, who, in his book Ways of Seeing (1972), teaches us how to look at images in their context, revealing the importance of their various constituent parts.

© Stephen Petegorsky. Daniel Lepkoff and Steve Paxton performing at Merce Cunningham Studio, New York, October 1977.

20 MAR 2019
WED 10:30, 14:30

21 MAR 2019
THU 10:30, 14:30

22 MAR 2019
FRI 10:30, 14:30

Gallery
Schools 2€/ single price
Duration 40 min
M/6

About Steve Paxton cycle

American choreographer, dancer and improviser Steve Paxton, born in 1939, has been continuously shaping the face of dance over the last six decades. Having started his career in the 1950s, Paxton danced with José Limon and Merce Cunningham. He was one of the founders of the Judson Dance Theatre, the source of various collective creations that have laid the roots of postmodern dance. He was also a founding member of the New York-based improvisation collective Grand Union. He is the inventor of two techniques – Contact Improvisation and Material for the Spine – and has worked together with several visual artists (such as Robert Rauschenberg), also leaving his distinctive mark on the art world. Throughout his life, Paxton has been writing extensively about movement (he has produced more than 100 articles since 1970) and working tirelessly on performing improvised and choreographed works all over the world.

His work has influenced many choreographers and dancers, who have inherited the obsessions that characterize his work: the analysis and integration of everyday movements (such as walking), the importance of touch, weight and balance, and an openness to the non-technical body.

In Portugal, Steve Paxton and the Judson Dance Theatre’s way of thinking had a decisive influence on many of those taking part in the movement that has come to be known as the New Portuguese Dance, and, in various ways, shared their concerns about the relationship between art and everyday life.

Based on this perspective, Culturgest presents the Steve Paxton cycle, which has as its main axis an exhibition curated by João Fiadeiro and Romain Bigé and an evening of performances from the 1960's to present day. But the Paxton programme doesn’t end here. The transverse nature of his work is further expressed in a series of five talks (the first of them given by Paxton himself) and three workshops about Contact Improvisation and Material for the Spine, with the involvement of schools and the transformation of the exhibition space into a performative arena.

 

Relation with dance schools


In the frame of the Steve Paxton exhibition, Culturgest approached some dance schools and research centers in Lisbon in order to make sure that the body of work of one of the most influential thinkers-makers from dance history would not go unnoticed. This collaboration will start with a series of lecture-demonstrations that Romain Bigé and João Fiadeiro, curators of the exhibition, will give on Steve Paxton’s legacy in each of the associated schools/centers. Then it unfolds with an intensive and continuous presence of students and researchers in the exhibition space (with a free pass) so they can deepen their individual research on Paxton’s work. Finally, we have encouraged the schools/centers to temporary dislocate some of their classes and initiatives into the space of the exhibition so the space will be “occupied” by practitioners and art researchers. 

CREATED BY, INTERPRETATION

Tiago Cadete e Leonor Cabral

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