Mind Map : My Dance Journey
My
dance story begins when I was very young. My mother told me that as a
child living in England my father took me to my first dance class and returned
embarrassed claiming that I had truly misbehaved in class. My mother
still laughs at this anecdote. She says that apparently when all the
children were dutifuly following class, I explored the open space and danced
freely claiming that what my teacher and classmates were doing was not
dancing. I suppose that I believed that my bouncing about was true dancing.
Now looking back on my dance journey and mapping my professional and formative
experience, I find that this anecdote is the starting point of my story.
Here, many years later, I still dance to understand, explore and discover what
dance is. In the privacy of intimate moments I still find that
dance is an exploration and delicate balance between structure and freedom.
Today I am many miles away from my starting point, I
am living and working in Costa Rica. My dance students are extraordinary
young ladies. Reflecting on my dance formation, it was rigorous and
traditional. I received classes from a number of international dance
institutions and culminated dancing in a young professionally tracked programme
of the Washington School of Ballet in Washington DC. I took ballet class
every day with a combination of courses that included intensive pointe work,
contemporary dance, repetoire work, etc. My students have not received
such a formation, but rather some started dance relatively late and they combined
their dance studies so that ballet is not the dominant genre in their
formation. Some of my students take Jazz, Hip Hop, Contemporary Dance,
Tap, Musical Theatre, etc. I see my students twice a week, some of them
three times a week. However, despite the great differences in my dance
formation that of my students, our differences end there. My dance
students are as passionate as I was as a dance student. They do want to
dance as beautifully as possible. They have the possibility to dance
onstage twice a year. Each performance of theirs is filled with effort
and passion.
We work under extreme pressure to maximize their time
during training. Classwork is based on extensive conditioning and
floor work exercises. Barre work includes heavy pointe preparation and
strengthening work. On Saturdays we work on choreography and movement
exploration. The concept is to have my students dance in original works
that I choreograph for them to award them the possibility to participate in the
creative choreographic process and to create a piece that suits their technical
and artistic capabilities.
I celebrate my students' successes every class.
As they are mature students, their understanding of dance technique and theory
is more acute than that of younger students. It allows for in depth
discussion and analysis prior to physical execution. These discussions
are perhaps the most rewarding part of the didactic process with my students.
I have discovered that the sharing of my own anecdotal
experience from both my professional life and pre-professional dance training
is of great value to my students. We compare and contrast the differences
in classroom work approach between the Cuban, Russian, British, and American
approaches as I experienced them and as we analyze in class. We celebrate
too the great similarities and appreciation for the aesthetic as we reflect on
the universality of beauty despite the many different approaches.
It is this experential learning that has proved to be
the greatest challenge and reward in my latest professional work.
Challenging because I had to tear down the traditional dance methodology that I
had been trained in and trained to teach, and replace with more time effective
methods and personalized practices. Rewarding because the dance training
itself has a great personal, artistic and physical impact in my students, and a
transformative process in my own professional practice as a teacher.
Thank you for your blog. it is lovely reading about your early life and so important in the shaping of who we are. I do believe the finest artistes come out of challenge and struggle, this is what drives us to seek the need to connect with others, emotionally and through the body in a very personal way. I do believe every relationship with each student changes us and impacts our lives as much as we do theirs. Dance must be for everyone, and can change lives more than just in the world of dance. There are some important life lessons going on in class. It can be a life saver for some. Speak next time and good luck x
ReplyDeleteThank you so much for your beautifully worded and generous comments.
Delete