Posts Tagged ‘twitter’
Up-coming Screendance Events in Boulder, Helsinki, and NYC
Here are few screendance events in September that we recommend if you happen to be in these parts of the world.
In New York City:
White Box
by Noémie Lafrance/Sens Productions
The site-specific choreographic phenom, Noémie Lafrance is back with a new production, this time set inside the confines of a white gallery space. Over the course of three weeks, the performance will “evolve” and “mutate” based on audience responses during and after each show. Revolving around the social interplay between the audience and the performers, Lafrance takes the concept of site-specific to a whole new level. Oh, and each performance will also be followed by screenings of select dance films by Lafrance and her collaborators.
Dates
Gallery Opening: ‘White Box’ performance Teaser
Friday, Sept. 9 @ 7:00-9:00pm (free)
Performance: ‘The White Box Project’
Saturday, Sept. 10, 17 & 24 @ 4:30, 5:30, 6:30pm
Screening: Selected Dance Films by Noémie Lafrance
Saturday, Sept. 10, 17 & 24th @ 8:00pm (free)
Site
Black & White Gallery
483 Driggs Avenue, Brooklyn NY 11211
In Finland and on Twitter:
Alone or Not
Social Improvisation through Twitter.
Organized by Susan Kozel
13 September – 4 October 2011
www.aloneornot.org
Anyone can take part in this event in which participants send short SMS messages or tweets about their movement, actions and perceptions to each other to create a social network of bodily movement. The project will be documented as a shared choreography on Twitter. Check out the project website to learn how to participate. SMS is only available to people with Finnish mobile phones.
In Boulder, Colorado:

Sans Souci Festival of Dance Cinema
From their humble beginnings in a trailer park screening local dance videos, Sans Souci Festival has evolved into a world class film festival with a strong curatorial vision. The line up for this year’s festival includes work by the aforementioned Noémie Lafrance (Melt), Alla Kovgan (New London Calling), Marta Renzi (Year, Make & Model), and Mitchell Rose (Advance). This is a great festival if you love highly kinetic dance film shorts (as I do).
Dates
Boulder Public Library
Mondays, October 3 & 10
Wednesdays, October 5 & 12
Share Videodances using Twitter
WHY CHOREOGRAPHERS SHOULD TWITTER
By Lisa Niedermeyer
I AM ADDICTED TO TWITTER AND HAVE BEEN TRYING TO FIGURE OUT WHY. It came to me at 2:30 A.M.
I am a choreographer, therefore when it comes to structure that can be experimented with, in seemingly infinite ways…sign me up.
Choreographers who understand the value of SELF-IMPOSED LIMITATIONS will appreciate Twitter’s “micro-blogging” limit of 140 characters. It is a fascinating challenge to communicate something potent, funny or informative in a sentence or less.
A definite factor in my addiction is the ability to track (instantly) responses to my posts. We don’t get that as choreographers very often. With bit.ly (a tool that allows you to “shorten, share, and track your links”) I am able to see which posts are duds and which are viral. I’m not saying I want an audience member to immediately tell me if my work engaged them or not, but in this format it is definitely an absorbing factor.
The Twitter community is world wide. I want a vast range of people to discover my posts about the work I am doing as a choreographer and (hopefully) be interested. Each word inside a twitter post is searchable. You can also utilize keywords by “hashing” in front of them. For example #videodance #nonprofit #freetickets. The challenge is to create multiple posts around a specific “theme” using variations of words and keywords to optimize many different people discovering your feed.
DIFFERING ENTRY POINTS.
Installations, site specific work, and performances that cycle are often playing with differing entry points for the audience into choreography. Twitter feeds are never static, the order of your posts is continuously affected by your community’s simultaneous posts.
Recently I posted an entire dance review in Twitter-bite-sized pieces spread out over the course of 24 hrs, with an active link to the full article in each tweet. For the sake of experimentation I created many pieces of something seemingly out of order/context to see if it engaged one to look for the larger picture.
NEW TOOLS.
Since Twitter has reached critical mass new tools are continously being created for the platform. Perhaps most intriguing is relative newcomer Twiddeo, video for twitter.
NEW LANGUAGE. Choreographers are dedicated to experimenting with movement language and are often adept at learning new movement languages thru improvisation (rather than just instruction). To “cyber civilians” Twitter feeds can look like a Wall Street ticker tape or the coding for the Matrix. Don’t let this intimidate you, once you jump in and start improvising, observing, testing the language, you will be confident in no time (or right about 2:30 am after your first Twitter marathon).
Are you a choreographer or media artist? Have you been experimenting with structure on Twitter? What has been successful or interesting for you? We’d love to hear about your experiences and success stories promoting dance through video on Twitter.
Do you share your original dance videos on twitter?
Share your original dance videos on twitter with us @MovementMediaNY and we’ll Re-tweet (RT)!
Movement Media wants to help increase your online viewing audience by promoting your work. Feel free to nominate the work of others on Twitter, and we’ll also RT those videos.
If you don’t have videos on Twitter, but you would like to view more video dances, you can follow Movement Media on Twitter to stay current with the artists and videos we feature.
Follow MovementMediaNY on Twitter and stay up-to-date on events such as Movement Media’s screenings, festivals, workshops, and webinars. You can also stay up-to-date on the weekly videodances and artists we feature on our new Video Dance Channel on YouTube in our FilmingDance4web Playlists!
As many artists feature their work on YouTube, Movement Media promotes artist videos on our YouTube channel as well. Contact us to let us know about YouTube videos that we could feature for you. Share your own dance promo videos, your videodances, or nominate other videodances you’ve seen on YouTube to share with our online audience.
On FilmingDance4web, we feature dancers, dance companies, choreographers, film directors, video artists, and animation in our playlists. Playlists inlcude Movement Media’s Favorite Videodances, Featured Artists, Featured Countries, Cheap Digital Recorder Art, Cell Phone Videodances, Aerial Dance, Gymnastics & Acrobatics, Trampoline, Fire performers, and more. We celebrate all forms of dance and videodances. Tune in and enjoy!
We look forward to sharing your videos through Retweets and showcasing your work on our YouTube Video Dance Channel, FilmingDance4web.
Videodance brought directly to your iphone!
by DAWN PAAP
Use the BOXCAR application on your iphone and receive a Tweet ‘reminder’ about Movement Media’s UMOVE Online Videodance Festival on October 1st! This way you can view the Film Festival easily on your iphone.
Watch the official selections for UMOVE Touring Festival and enjoy other submissions by Video Artists and Dancers. After viewing the videos, share a comment with us, and let us know what you think of these Dance Film shorts. We’d love to hear your feedback!
To follow us on Twitter go to: http://twitter.com/MovementMediaNY
Want a reminder about the UMOVE networking party and fundraiser happening this Sunday evening -or- want to invite someone you know to attend? You can receive a Tweet invitation & RSVP to attend our UMOVE Launch Party in NYC! For details, go to: http://tinyurl.com/mjkdrk.
Launch Party, Sunday, October 4th, offers 2 screenings (7:30 & 9:30pm), electronic music & video mixing, live dance performances, and networking for video artists, film makers, composers, and dancers!
Be a part of Movement Media’s Fundraising Party to support dance film makers. Come and meet a network of professionals who can help you create your own videodances and dance promo videos!
To RSVP to event now, go to: http://tinyurl.com/mjkdrk.
We look forward to seeing you there!
Two NYC Choreographers Making Innovative Use of the Web
This week I was struck by two interesting initiatives for web audiences by NYC dance artists.
First, on Sunday December 14th at 8pm EST, Misnomer Dance Theater will have a live webcast of the final NYC performance of their premiere piece, Being Together choreographed by Chris Elam. Anyone with a computer and internet connection can tune in by going to their website: http://www.misnomer.org/live. In addition, online audiences can ask questions and interact during the show through a live moderated chat. According to their press, this is the first ever live webcast of a downtown dance show, and it could greatly expand the potential of the audience/choreographer relationship. I think it will be interesting to see if the webcam footage will be compelling enough to sit through a whole performance. As anyone who has watched a video of a dance show knows, the seeing the video is generally pretty inferior to sitting in the theater and viewing show live. The inclusion of live chat may make a big difference though, because you can “talk” during the performance and the interaction among the audience members may make the web-viewing experience more interesting. This is an experiment, and I look forward to seeing how it works out. Unfortunately I can only go to the Sunday show in person, so I won’t be able to observe the live online webcast. Hopefully there will be extensive follow-up on the Misnomer blog.
The second initiative worth noting is a new duet by Yanira Castro that is being choreographed, in part, on Twitter. The piece entitled Dark Horse/Black Forest is a private performance that can booked for a limited time through PS 122. According to the PS122 e-newletter, the piece is an “intensely performed love story in the most intimate of spaces: your bathroom.” This alone is pretty interesting, especially when ponders a dance piece taking place in your NYC apartment bathroom that is so small you can barely sit on the toilet… But the other interesting twist is how they are marketing the shows. Yanira Castro & Company has created two profiles on Twitter for the two characters in the show, written by Rozalia Jovanic, and their feeds are a blow by blow account of what each character is thinking with each move they make and word they say. The result is a disembodied conversation, part inner monologues, part dance duet, part reality. As those of you who Twitter know, you can only write comments of up to 140 characters on your feed, so the descriptions are short, pithy, and intense. Here is a sample of their two Twitter feeds
![]() |
doghebitedme She prevents my hand opening the door. Let me see your neck, I say and remove her scarf. I fill her mouth with my tongue muscle.
|
|
![]() |
doghebitedme She comes into the bathroom where I am and shuts the door. I can see her in the mirror. I piss. She puts on lipstick. More, she says, More.
|
|
![]() |
doghebitedme ‘Smolensk, Suzdal, Vitsebsk, Tver,’ I say. Those are words. A word is a container, empty or full, or half-full or clouded or spluttering
|
|
![]() |
darkbloom8 His eyebrows lifted as in ‘knowing something.’ I follow him down the hall. His foot drags behind. ‘You don’t tell me anything,’ I say.
|
|
![]() |
darkbloom8 What is popular is useful, a tool to jerk something with, ‘What do you mean?’ I say. ‘Your words?’ I realize how little know him.
|
If you want to follow the piece on Twitter, here’s how:
- Twitter is a free service and is easy to join. Go to Twitter.com and sign up.
- Click on each of the following two links, and from their profile pages click the “follow” button:
twitter.com/doghebitme
twitter.com/darkbloom8
You will now be able to follow their conversations from your home page on Twitter.
To be even more immersed: receive tweets on the go and instantaneously by connecting your cell phone to Twitter. (Twitter doesn’t charge anything for this, but be sure to know what your text plan looks like with your wireless carrier.)
- Go to Settings. Go to Devices. Add your cell phone number.
- You will be given a number to text to activate your phone.3. Then go to Profile. Click on “following” above Updates. Turn the device updates on for doghebitedme and darkbloom8.
For more information on how to book the show for your bathroom, email darkhorse@ps122.org for reservations and more information.
Post Script
Here is a follow-up post by Maria from A Time To Dance blog about her experience watching Misnomer’s show on UStream.
….and here is a link to Misnomer’s video archive of the stream: http://www.misnomer.org/live/archive.




