charlbury UK 2011

charlbury UK 2011
day one
The studio is called Finstock Hall.  It was previously used for making gloves and now it is the town hall and meeting place for Finstock.  It is wonderful to be inside of because it is made of wood.  It has an A frame and its small and spacious and is elevated slightly at the far end of the room  where there is a small stage.
 
The first thing Miranda does is open the front and back doors so we can see and feel the outside landscape.  The draft is cool and is a reminder of something.  And so
I am thinking about wind, … and beginnings …  and the word window.
 
We warm up as all dancers do.  This is the time before we begin; each of us in our own specific way gather energy and warm up the body.
I am extremely happy to be here in this room with Guy and Miranda.  They have really just met.
·      Guy does Yoga Nidra and he walks and sounds in a circle.
·      Miranda does Tai Chi
·      Lin does Zikr dance with some chi gong and rolls around on the wooden floor
 
Guy and I then perform Repeating Distance for Miranda
 
Lin explains the history of Repeating Distance to Miranda, and so Guy begins and Lin witnesses.
 
It is very spacious performance.
 There are stories
…of gloves
…of hands
…of movie screens
…of stairs
…of wind
 
 
She, Miranda, is a bit overwhelmed when she realizes our offer is for her to join us.
 
We then re-begin with Miranda in the first ever practice of Rewriting Distance.
 
Miranda begins dancing
Lin witnesses
Guy is the audience
 
We then rotate this form twice through
 
The stories that emerge are stories about
religion
hierarchy
risk
stair sculptures
sweeping the floor with body
a field sideways
buildings … up … down
 
“she gave us our feet”   This is what I remember Guy saying referring to Miranda’s participation. It feels good to write this down.
 
Miranda was intrigued by the duet form and working on it more … (this is always something Guy and I are interested in) and she suggests the witness speak, and not the mover.
 
This is what we will do tomorrow.
 
In the evening we go for a huge long walk. Miranda mentions it will take an hour and a half and it takes three! We walk through the grounds of Blenheim Palace.  The huge old oak trees are majestic and look a bit like old craggy relatives; spirited and confined somehow to strange and elegant postures.
 
It is an adventure like much of the work we do in the studio.  There is a magical element that one feels when walking with her.  She brings everything alive by how expansive her vision is.  She sees many things.
 
day two
 
We began with a suggestion from Miranda. The exploration addresses the space as a partner in what we are doing.
 
You begin by closing eyes, to disorient yourself a bit, and then open them and choose something in the room that attracts your attention. Then approach what you have chosen and spend some time looking at it and letting images well up around it.  Repeat this three times.
Then you gather together and describe to your partners what you have observed.  We walk around the space together showing each other what we have discovered. Each person does this in turn.
Then you return to one of the spots you chose, and re-observe this place and write about it. Then you read to your partners what you have written.
I read this
 
A Kitchen Window
 
window light arrives
by the door,
this frame of morning
spills gently onto the
smoothness of the wooden floor,
walking directly into the patch
of  sunlit gentleness,
it nudges my eyes
my whole body
to turn and face the window.
my whole body focuses
on the moving leaves
the trees
the other gentleness
the wind
shows the light green blind
is a quarter of the way down
on the kitchen window,
I am standing in front of a kitchen window,
and as I stand longer my memory
nudges to the
gentleness of a mother
her gaze out from so
many kitchen windows
 her attention framed
by her busy day,
a morning
an afternoon
an evening.
In this kitchen
there is a microwave underneath
the window,
beside that a sign that says
Finstock Toddlers 2009
and again,
the memory
of  toddlers
floods the room with
the music of constant toddling,
On the sign I now see
there are tiny handprints
clapping into the lines of
coloured paint and announcing
even now
their spirited markings into space.
 
We begin with Rewriting Distance practice.
 
Mover
Witness
Audience
 
The big change is around the questions Miranda has been asking about the duet.
We determine that the Witness can move into the Mover’s space which changes things quite a bit … a subtle and dynamic change.
 
Then the original mover leaves,  and then the Audience moves into the witness chair and the cycle repeats.
 
It is fascinating to watch Miranda’s way of entering from the witness chair.  She has a zany quality … and her curiousity in our duets together are full of musicality and trust.
 
Images
 
-finding a feather
-writing with it on Guy’s back
-singing while Miranda played the piano
-moving and making noise
-abrupt fallings and precarious balances
-the snail with stairs
-Guy with piano blanket wrapped around him and Miranda approaching gently from       behind
-Guy going up and down the little wooden stairs, speaking about his home, how climbing stairs reminds him of home
-the beautiful wood studio, how friendly it is to the body
 
day three
 
We begin the work and including writing
 
There is
 
a table … ( Guy found an amazing card table at a thrift shop in Chipping Norton)
a sheet of paper
a pen
 
We do the trio form and the writing paper and place is available as a way to be in a duet, it becomes another way to be in relationship, another way to be in a duet.
 
Our first run is inspired. We immediately do a second run.
We make some rules.
Audience: only watches
Mover: able to write/move/speak
Witness: able to write/move/speak
 
It is a beautiful sunny day, Guy turns the chair to face the other end of the room.
The door is open to the outside, to the sun, to the valley.
 
 
Second run
 
I begin by walking straightaway outside of Finstock Hall to face the valley and
for the whole morning the wind was playing the doors of the studio like an instrument, blowing open and closing the doors at unexpected and surprising moments, the doors became gateways to sun, sound, light, breeze and green, always
with an incredible sense of timing … the wind and the room have something of their
own that we cannot control … how lovely. This room is alive and well with weather and breath … makes me realize how easy it can be to ignore a room … not this one!
 
We all sit down and write together after performing together.
 
This is what I wrote.
 
Somehow Arriving
 
this room so full of activity now,
of moving,
this scribe,
these lines are tracing and re-erasing
the sliding scales of time
 
the movie screen becoming a snowstorm
I am on the other side
my hand writing her words
and then
the wind
the wind
the wind
whirling
whirling
whirling
 
a plastic bag and
Guy called it a snowflake as his
hands reminded me of the gloves
the doves
the loves
of the dream of marriage as she approached
the portrait rolling
into this room
this room of wood
(why the constant buzzing of a cutting machine today?)
 
 
The doors of this room
like ears
the smooth brown floor
a skin with freckles
knots of wood
a constellation
a rearranged portrait
and how really important the floor is
softly greeting our feet
these floors
gloves for our souls
as we watch from so many perspectives
these dancing stories.
 
Oh
I write
Oh
she reads
and he too
Oh my the little kite
is in the air as he steps up on the wooden staircase
and crosses through a field
and goes up and around and through
a lifeline portrait …
 
She said grave and he said dead fox
he loved to dance in velvet and blindly she too
slow dancing until the place of paper
was found
 
A card table
Jack-of-All-Trades
and the Queen of Hearts
I bet, yes I just bet they like to dance too
ashes to ashes
and dusting, she was sweeping up … D.I.Y.
DO IT YOURSELF
and of course
why not remember how
she walked slowly up behind him
the piano cape a perfect envelope for his editing and her arriving
together so many times,
they made the most fragile bridge towards and away,
 a small second, minute hour,
in these entrances and exits of writing
of dancing,
of witnessing,
of suspending
(just about at the end of my rope with the aggressive buzzing sound)
 
This room like an aquarium
reflecting back the air of outside,
watering our voices,
the valley, the Evenlode, the community, the kitchen,
the memory of mother looking out over her life and family,
her love
her timing
and her gentle way of listening,
 
This room is full of heart.
So much activity and finally now,
so much silence.
(the buzzing has stopped)
Birdsong arrives,
a room
like a microphone
amplifying intimacy
and hilarity,
love the room,
Bless you.
 
Thoughts a week later at a small coffee shop in Charlbury.
 
In the Finstock Hall Studio
Miranda opened the front and the back doors
the front door opened onto the Valley of the Evenlode
and the backdoor opened
onto lots of leaves and their sunlit shadows …
 
Because she opened the doors,
the wind played through the
studio, the whole time
we were working … like an instrument,
the breath of the day blowing through and capturing
curtains, swinging doors, and papers and keeping our skin
alive with its surprising touches.
 
More than once, I thought about this breathing …
its wondrous surprises, its sighs ….
the precocious nature of its life that kept us all on our toes.
 
Lin Snelling