Deborah Hay

Deborah Hay
Deborah Hay
Born 1941
Brooklyn
Nationality American
Field Performance art, Choreography, Dancing
Awards Guggenheim Fellowship

Deborah Hay is an experimental choreographer working in the field of postmodern dance.

Life and work

Deborah Hay was born in 1941 in Brooklyn. Her mother was her first dance teacher and directed her training until she was a teenager. Hay moved at age 19 to Downtown, Manhattan in the 1960s, where she continued her training with Merce Cunningham and Mia Slavenska. In 1964 Hay danced with the Cunningham Dance Company during a 6-month tour through Europe and Asia.[1]

Hay was a member of a group of artists that was deeply influenced by the work of Merce Cunningham and John Cage. The group, later known as the Judson Dance Theater, became one of the most radical and explosive postmodern 20th century art movements.

By 1967 Hay had already achieved a prominent status as a young choreographer, and her unique style began to emerge as a distinct voice within the aesthetics of Judson. Sharing with her colleagues the ideas that dance engage with other art forms, and that the artificial distinction between trained and untrained performers be challenged, she focused on large-scale dance projects involving untrained dancers, fragmented and choreographed music accompaniment, and the execution of ordinary movement patterns performed under stressful conditions.

In 1970 she left New York to live in a community in northern Vermont. Soon, she distanced herself from the performing arena, producing 10 “Circle Dances,” performed on 10 consecutive nights within a single community and no audience whatsoever. Thus began a long period of reflection about how dance is transmitted and presented. Her first book, "Moving Through the Universe in Bare Feet" (Swallow Press, 1975), is an early example of her distinctive memory/concept mode of choreographic record, and emphasizes the narratives underlining the process of her dance-making, rather than the technical specifications or notations of their form.

In 1976 Hay left Vermont and moved to Austin, Texas. Her attention focused on a set of practices ("playing awake") that engaged the performer on several levels of consciousness at once. While developing her concepts over the course of 15 years, she instituted a yearly four-month group workshop that culminated in large group public performances [2] and from these group pieces she distilled her solo dances. Her second book, "Lamb at the Altar: The Story of a Dance" (Duke University Press, 1994), documents the unique creative process that defined these works.

In the late 1990s Deborah Hay focused almost exclusively on rarified and enigmatic solo dances based on her new experimental choreographic method, such as "The Man Who Grew Common in Wisdom", "Voilà", "The Other Side of O", "Fire", "Boom Boom Boom", "Music", "Beauty", "The North Door" and "The Ridge, Room", performing them around the world and passing them on to noted performers in the US, Europe, and Australia. She also choreographed a duet for herself and Mikhail Baryshnikov, "Single Duet", which toured with the "Past/Forward" project in 2000.[3]

Her third book, "My Body, the Buddhist" (Wesleyan University Press, 2000) is an introspective series of reflections on the major lessons of life that she has learned from her body while dancing.

Hay’s work has now reached a new stage, where she redefines the inimitable choreographic method of her solo pieces in collaboration with highly trained dancers. In 2004 she received a NYC Bessie award for her choreography of the quartet "The Match", which toured in Austin, Houston, London, Nottingham, Montpellier, and Paris in 2005.

Deborah Hay has collaborated with many artists from different areas, such as composers Pauline Oliveros, Alvin Lucier, Richard Landry, Terry Riley, Ellen Fullman, artist Tina Girouard, and Australian actor/playwright/director Margaret Cameron, among others. She has been the recipient of several grants and fellowships, including a 1983 Guggenheim Fellowship in choreography, numerous National Endowment for the Arts Choreography Fellowships, and the Rockefeller Foundation Bellagio Fellowship in 1996.

Deborah Hay has received many awards and honors. In 2007 she received a BAXten Award. The award was presented with the following words: “Your experimental work has remained alive & contemporary over four decades, inspiring your colleagues and peers and now - new generations of choreographers & performers. Your sustained commitment and your willingness to change course provides an example for others. Your articulate writing on the body & dance has had a profound impact on the field.” In October 2009 the Theater Academy in Helsinki, Finland, will confer on Deborah Hay an Honorary Degree of Doctor of Dance at the Doctoral Degrees Graduation Ceremony.

External links

  • [2] official site of Deborah Hay Dance Company
  • [3] Deborah Hay Dance Theory Writings

Footnotes

  1. ^ [1] Hay Bio
  2. ^ Gus Solomons, Jr., "The Deborah Hay Dance Company" in Dance Magazine (May, 2004)
  3. ^ Claudia La Rocco, "A Mad Scientist of Dance Plays in the Lab" New York Times 1/22/2006

Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Нужно сделать НИР?

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Deborah Van Valkenburgh — Deborah Van Valkenburgh, 2008 Deborah Van Valkenburgh (* 29. August 1952 in Schenectady, New York, USA) ist eine US amerikanische Film und Theaterschauspielerin. Van Valkenburgh begann ihre Karriere am Broadway in der Mu …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Deborah Ombres — Nombre real Javier Díaz Blanco Nacimiento 3 de noviembre de 1975 (36 años) Valladolid, España Estatura 1,78 m[ …   Wikipedia Español

  • Deborah Loewenberg Ball — is an educational researcher noted for her work in mathematics instruction and the mathematical preparation of teachers. She currently is dean of the School of Education at the University of Michigan and William H. Payne Collegiate Professor. She …   Wikipedia

  • Hay Fever — is a comic play written by Noel Coward in 1924 and first produced in 1925 with Marie Tempest as the first Judith Bliss. Best described as a cross between high farce and a comedy of manners, the play is set in a British country house in the 1920s …   Wikipedia

  • David Gordon (choreographer) — For other people of the same name, see David Gordon (disambiguation). David Gordon Born July 14, 1936 (1936 07 14) (age 75)[1] Lower East Side Manhattan, New York City …   Wikipedia

  • New York School — For educational institutions in the state of New York, see education in New York. The New York School (synonymous with abstract expressionist painting) was an informal group of American poets, painters, dancers, and musicians active in the 1950s …   Wikipedia

  • Judson Dance Theater — is located at the Judson Memorial Church, New York. The group of artists that formed Judson Dance Theater are considered the founders of Postmodern dance. The theater grew out of a dance composition class taught by Robert Dunn, a musician who had …   Wikipedia

  • Judson Dance Theater — Le Judson Dance Theater était un groupe informel de danseurs qui donnait ses spectacles à la Judson Memorial Church de New York entre 1962 et 1964. Ce groupe est considéré comme un des fondateurs de la danse post moderne. Biographie Le Judson… …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Judson Dance Theatre — Judson Dance Theater Le Judson Dance Theater était un groupe informel de danseurs qui donnait ses spectacles à la Judson Memorial Church de New York entre 1962 et 1964. Ce groupe est considéré comme un des fondateurs de la danse post moderne.… …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Rude Mechanicals (a.k.a. Rude Mechs) — Rude Mechanicals (sometimes referred to as Rude Mechs) is a collaborative theater company operating out of Austin, Texas, USA. Founded in 1995, the company first reached notable success with the creation of their play , based on the book by Greil …   Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”