Costa Rican
Ballerina, Valeria Arias in our first
Choreographic and
Artistic Collaboration together,
Teatro de La Danza, War Survivors. Body Motion.
Oftentimes as a dancer teacher
I have felt that my students come to dance class seeking a profound
transformation to become ballerinas. The students seek the proverbial
transformation from ugly duckling into the dancing swan. The artistic metamorphosis
to become the butterfly. They want to become the dancer.
Yet however this approach to dance training and education is
conceptually and philosophically flawed:
The student dancer does not dance to
become a ballerina.
Rather, the student dancer dances to
discover
the Ballerina that she is.
We do not dance to become dancers.
We dance because we are dancers.
Moreover, we do not dance to become
beautiful,
we dance because we are beautiful.
We dance as an expression of our unique beauty.
Dance by imitation is not true art. It is in transformative dance
that we find our unique voice and pure aesthetics. We find our
voice. The becoming of the dancer is through self-discovery, through a
raw struggle of the self - of honesty and the persistent refinement of physical
movement through the eternal balancing of self-critique and self-acceptance and
the unravelling and revealing of the vulnerable soul.
To dance is not a metamorphosis but a revelation, a transformative
process to become oneself. In the grandeur, imperfections and
vulnerability of the unique dancer: in the discovery of personal and
unrepeatable beauty and the manifestation of art in movement.
Reach: A Pedagogy for Transformative Dance -D r. Gaynell Sherrod
Marianella, this is such a wonderful blog and also so very true! Thank you for sharing!
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