Sehend schreiben, schreibend sehen

Die Dokumentation des Arbeits- und Probenprozesses zu The Bosch Experience II der Wiener Gruppe M. A. P. ‒ Vienna Movement Art Programmes unter der künstlerischen Leitung des Choreografen und Tänzers Georg Blaschke, für die ich zwischen Dezember 2014 bis Dezember 2015 verantwortlich zeichnete, gestaltete sich in Hinblick auf eine Reihe von Aspekten als herausragend und lehrreich: Ausgehend von der Fragestellung, inwieweit sich die rein schriftliche Dokumentation eines Research- und Choreografie-Prozesses zu einem gegebenen Material ‒ in diesem Falle: Hiernoymus Boschs Weltgerichtstriptychon (1485‒1505) ‒ als Wort/Sprache/Schrift zu anderen Formen der projektbegleitenden Dokumentation, etwa Video, Respondenz oder (undokumentiertes) Gespräch verhält, wurde schon rasch klar, dass eine dokumentarische Begleitung dieser Art zugleich neue Möglichkeiten des künstlerischen Prozesses eröffnet wie auch Grenzen in sich birgt, denen man sich relativ rasch bewusst wurde und die in der Folge auch Teil dieser Begleitprozesses werden sollten/mussten. Dazu zählten u. a. Fragen nach der eigenen Sprache und nach der eigenen Geschwindigkeit oder der Aspekt der Weiterarbeit über den eigentlichen Prozess hinaus (Lesen, Sehen, Sprechen …).

  1. Sprache

Einer der wesentlichsten Aspekte war für mich von Beginn an die Frage der Methode und Form der Formulierung meiner Beobachtungen. Was sollte ich in welcher Form, d. h. in welcher syntaktischen, schriftsprachlichen Form ebenso wie in welcher Form einer “künstlerischen”, dem Projekt adäquaten “Sprache” als Schrift festhalten? Die ersten Probentage, die in den von Elio Gervasi zur Verfügung gestellten Proberäumen (Raum 33) stattfanden, waren für mich ein erstes In-den-Prozess-Einsteigen, und das hieß für mich auch: einen persönlichen Einstieg finden in den Beobachtungs-, Schreib- und (virtuellen wie realen) Sprech-Prozess. Fragen eröffneten sich etwa danach, wie ich das, was ich auf der Probe sah, in Worte fassen würde: ganz Sätze oder syntaktische Teile; “O-Töne” der Beteiligten “über” den Prozess oder nur das von mir Beobachtete; Benennung der Objekte bzw. dessen, was aus den Objekten im Zuge des Prozesses, also des Zerlegens, neu Montierens und erneuten Auflösens “entstand”.

Relikt oder Zitat?

Ein weiterer Punkt war die Frage, ob ich in meiner eigenen “Begrifflichkeit” bleiben sollte, d. h. das, was ich sah, auch in der Weise sprachlich beschreiben sollte, oder vielmehr versuchen sollte, die Begriffe des Choreografen beziehungsweise der PerformerInnen aufzunehmen. Ich entschied mich im Wesentlichen dafür, meine eigenen Begriffe für die Laufzeit des Prozesses beizubehalten, wobei ich dennoch versuchte, etwa durch die Dokumentation von Gesprächen und Feedback-Sessions, die Zugangsweise der beteiligten KünstlerInnen punktuell in meine Dokumentation einfließen zu lassen.

Georg Blaschke spricht NICHT HÖRBAR mit Georg Blaschke

Dies gestaltete sich insbesondere für die Begleitung von Projektphasen zum Solo The Bosch Experience III als schwieriger, da es sich hier um ein Solo von Georg Blaschke handelte, d. h. der choreografierende (sprechende) und der tanzende Künstler eine Person waren, d. h. der Diskurs zwischen den “beiden” in eine Person fiel und somit für mich tatsächlich kein “hörbarer” Diskurs der beiden Ebenen Choreografie und Tanz vorhanden war. Die Dokumentation dieses Teil-Prozesses innerhalb des Jahresprojekts war für mich insofern zugleich eine der spannendsten Phasen wie auch einer der herausforderndsten Momente, der für mich die Grenzen einer möglichen schriftlichen, d. h. in Schriftsprache gebrachten Dokumentation noch einmal neu deutlich machte.

  1. Geschwindigkeit

Einer der zugleich spannendsten wie zeitweise schmerzhaftesten Erfahrungen war die Erkenntnis, dass das Medium Schrift resp. das eigene Schreiben ‒ mein Schreiben ‒ einer Reihe von physischen wie kognitiven Grenzen ausgesetzt ist. Zum einen ist dies die Frage der Geschwindigkeit, in der ich rein physisch einen künstlerischen Prozess wie den gegebenen als Schrift (am PC) dokumentieren kann. Hier wurde mir im Laufe des Projekts klar, dass umso “weiter” ein künstlerischer Prozess ist, d. h. umso “fertiger” eine choreografische Arbeit, eine ästhetische Setzung in einem konkreten Raum ist, umso unmöglich die “adäquate” Begleitung durch ein paralleles Schreiben wird. Die Choreografie ist schlichtweg “schneller” als das Auge bzw. die Hände des schriftlichen dokumentierenden Menschen. Dies ist in meinen Augen ein großer Unterschied etwa zum Medium Film/Video, dessen Möglichkeiten sich quasi dem Geschehenden, d. h. auch dem zu Sehenden “anpassen”: Egal was passiert, “alles” wird vom “Standpunkt” des Videos/der Kamera im Medium Film/Video aufgezeichnet. Der/Die schreibende Dokumentationsperson ähnelt dem Medium Film/Video insofern, als auch sie/er von nur einer Perspektive aus das Geschehen beobachtet und medial dokumentiert (d. h. auch: mehrere Kameras aus unterschiedlichen Positionen würden mehreren schreibenden beobachtenden Personen entsprechen). Es unterscheidet sich aber existenziell darin, wie viel dokumentiert werden kann. So erweist sich nicht nur die Möglichkeit, “alles” zu dokumentieren von Beginn an als unmöglich. Auch wird klar, dass, wie oben bereits erwähnt, umso “fertiger” ein Prozess (in Hinblick auf dessen Ende, auf die “Performance”/Vorstellung) ist, umso “perfekter” eine Choreografie wird, umso unmöglicher deren Dokumentation durch Auge-Hand-Schrift-Medium wird.

Ebenso wurde deutlich, dass das Moment der Müdigkeit an Bedeutung zunimmt: Umso länger ein Probenprozess dauerte, etwa durch die Wiederholung (Durchlauf) einzelner Sequenzen oder gegen Ende hin ganzer choreografischer Abläufe, umso schwieriger wurde der Dokumentationsvorgang für mich, da auch hier ein rein physische Beschränkungen auftraten, die in dieser Form selten bis nie thematisiert oder/und im Kontext künstlerischer Arbeitsprozesse dokumentiert werden (Grenzen von Augen, Ohren, Händen).

  1. Erweiterte Diskursebenen

Als einen letzten wichtigen Punkt möchte ich die Frage der erweiterten Diskursebenen ansprechen, die sich für mich im Laufe der Arbeit dieses Jahres ergaben: Dazu zähle ich unter anderem den Besuch der Gemäldegalerie der Akademie der bildenden Künste zu Beginn des Projekts und als Teil meiner Arbeit, um mir Boschs Weltgerichtstriptychon im Original anzusehen, die Erfahrungen der Außenproben in Oberösterreich im Kontext der Zusammenarbeit mit der Salzburger Gruppe lawine torrèn im Jänner 2015 oder die Lektüre theoretischer und philosophischer Texte, die über den reinen Beobachtungs- und Schreibprozess hinausgingen. Inwieweit beeinflussen sie die schriftlichen Beobachtungen und verändern etwa Begriffe oder Verständnis- und Wahrnehmungszusammenhänge? Dieser Punkt war für mich insbesondere für die Begleitung der Soloarbeit von großer Wichtigkeit, da hier die Auseinandersetzung mit diesen erweiterten Formen der Projektbegleitung eine Art weitere Diskurs-Ebene eröffneten, die wir durch die nicht sprachliche Kommunikation zwischen Choreograf/Tänzer und mir, etwa während der Probenwoche in Pinkafeld/Dance.ID, bewusst ausschlossen. In einer Reihe von Fällen habe ich versucht, während des Schreibens, d. h. im Moment der Beobachtung der Proben, diese Ebenen mit einzubauen, also zugleich das (auf der Probe-/Bühne) Beobachtete zu dokumentieren und das vorab oder versuchsweise sogar parallel zu Lesende im Schreiben mit zu dokumentieren und damit direkt zu kontextualisieren.

Neben diesen drei genannten Aspekten tauchten im Zuge des einjährigen Prozesses immer wieder neue Fragen auf, die die Arbeit zugleich um neue Themen erweiterten wie auch “hemmten” und problematisierten. etwa die Frage, was passiert, wenn ein Performer aus einem Projekt aussteigt und ein anderer dessen Arbeit (“Part”) quasi übernimmt und fortsetzt, zugleich aber völlig andere Methoden der Formulierung (körperlich, sprachlich) in den Prozess einbringt. Oder die Frage, inwieweit im Laufe der Dokumentation die eigene schriftlich festgehaltene Beobachtung sich zu einer sehr persönlichen Haltung, Meinung, ja ästhetischen “Beurteilung” verändert, z. B. im Verhältnis zu Musik, Sound oder Kostüm ‒ soll, darf man “beurteilen”? Wie unterscheiden sich Dokumentation und Urteil? Geschieht diese Veränderung schleichend im Laufe der Zeit, weil sich ein “Naheverhältnis” zwischen Gesehenem und Dokumentierenden, und das heißt auch: zwischen KünstlerInnen und Dokumentator/in entwickelt? Ist dokumentarisches Schreiben überhaupt ohne “Urteil” möglich, und ist dies etwa ein wesentliches Unterscheidungsmerkmal zur Dokumentation als Video? (Wer “urteilt” im Video?)

Sind Langsamkeit, Müdigkeit, Erschöpfung, aber auch persönliche Haltungen ein “Handicap” oder als eigene Qualitäten in einem solchen Prozess zu werten?

Zusammenfassend lässt sich für mich aus dieser einjährigen künstlerisch-theoretischen Zusammenarbeit festhalten, dass die Fragestellungen sich für mich im Laufe der Zeit wesentlich erweitert haben, dass die Arbeit zugleich komplexer wie schwieriger wurde, insofern als ich die je neuen Themen, Aspekte, Probleme u. a. immer auch in den folgenden Schreibprozess aufzunehmen versucht habe, und dass der Prozess in seiner Fülle eine Reihe von Fragestellungen und Diskursfeldern eröffnet hat, denen ich mir zu Beginn des Prozesses nicht bewusst gewesen war.

So “begrenzt” ich letzten Endes meine persönlichen Möglichkeiten für die Dokumentation eines derart komplexen künstlerisch-choreografischen Prozesses kritisch formulieren würde, so spannend und außergewöhnlich erkenne ich die durch einen Prozess wie diesen eröffneten neuen Fragestellungen für eine zukunftweisende und innovative Form künstlerischer Arbeitsprozesse zwischen unterschiedlichen ästhetischen wie theoretischen Feldern, wie etwa Tanz, Performance, Research, bildender Kunst, Musik, Dokumentation, Philosophie und Theorie.

A Conversation with Georg Blaschke

A Conversation with Georg Blaschke about the application of the Feldenkrais Method to choreography, movement research and performance.

This conversation is part of the Bachelor work of Petr Ochvat, dancer, performer and former student at the Anton Bruckner Privatuniversität Linz / Austria.

 As this chapter inquires into the use of the Feldenkrais Method in choreographic practices, it occurs relevant to begin with relating my interview of Vienna based choreographer, dancer and teacher Georg Blaschke. Georg first introduced me to the Feldenkrais Method as a tool to approach and investigate the connection between body and mind during the making process of two pieces of his in which I performed, Jetzt Bist Du Dran. (2008) and In Case Of Loss (2010). Both works were premiered in Vienna.

Therefore I experienced somehow directly the way he researches and questions the intertwining of the method with his creative practice and this, from the very beginning of the process, going through the preparation of the body and the establishment of a methodology to devise choreographic material, until the final performance of the work. I asked Georg to talk a little more extensively about his approach. How does he perceive the method in relation to the process of choreographing and performing? His article “A possible somatic approach to a Performance and Research Practice” also inspired my questions. It was written as an introduction of his work process for students of the Department for Contemporary Dance at the Konservatorium Wien Privatuniversität.

This interview was recorded on Saturday, the 5th of September 2010.

 

How long have you been practicing the Feldenkrais Method?

I have been practicing Feldenkrais since 2004, so no longer than six years altogether. I had had a first experience of it seventeen years ago, but it did not provoke in me much enthusiasm then. I seriously began to get into it when my partner form the Feldenkrais Method, Sascha Krausneker, was studying to become a certified Practitioner. Through him I have started to practice more continuously.

How does the Feldenkrais Method influence the way you create your choreographies?

First of all, it is simply a method which prepares my body. It helps me to balance the challenges of being a dancer and performer throughout the aging process. So the Feldenkrais Method for me is primarily an approach aimed at my own benefit, my own well-being. At the beginning, my collaboration with Sascha was based on exploring the potential interrelationship between dance and the Feldenkrais Method, there was no real artistic intention per se, all that developed progressively over time. We initially were interested in finding out about the possible complex applications that this method may have. In the last couple of years, there have been many different ways in which I was able to apply it. At first it was not so direct, the connection was not so close as it is now. In practice, this means that the performers with whom I worked and myself, took the ATM / Awareness Through Movement classes as a preparation for the body, after which we were able to approach tasks that were given by me during the artistic process with more ease and openess. Nowadays the connection between the Feldenkrais Method and how I work with performers and also students is more direct. I really feel the straightforward implications that the method has in the artistic and aesthetic outcome.

On the one hand, what I have been researching a lot and what I have been trying out in my projects is to extend the essential elements of the method such as self-awareness, organisation of the skeleton, mobility, articulation etc. In order to extend these somewhat basic terms, we would connect with the Feldenkrais Method and consecutively ask the performers to go towards a format of representation in space. I am also very interested in how performers enter into contact with one another. The Feldenkrais Method is not only a method aiming at working by your self. It is also a method provoking or motivating contact with other people, not only through the hands, but also through the whole body and through the space and through the ground. All the implications of a moving structure in gravity, negotiating with a surface or with another moving structure really are connected to the method and have an artistic and aesthetic importance to me. I am still researching a lot about this. Recently the partnering issue in dance has become increasingly important to me. How to get in contact with each other as articulated bodies? So I work a lot with the possible influence of the Feldenkrais Method on physical contact, on partnering, on lifting, as well as on rather elaborate complex partner constellations and on the manner in which these are placed in space.

On the other hand there is the choreographic issue. Here one could speak generally about this so-called somatic approach, we all know that it is a rather vague term, but I use it. It is in a way a common term within certain realms of actual dance practises. Of course there are a few other somatic approaches and traditions, but I mainly practice the Feldenkrais Method beside Body Mind Centering or certain Release Techniques as they offer approaches that operate from the inside to the outside. The inner awareness is the main starting point for observing the organisation and the efficiency of movement, in other terms the effortlessness of movement. This “from the inside to the outside” process approached through improvisation or through a group process in space, provokes patterns. For me these are choreographic patterns that occur as a consequence, as a result because of the traces that bodies have left in space and time.

How would it work the other way around? I mean from the outside to the inside. What would be the difference?

I do not have an answer to this question … However the difference could be, that you would rather start by — I would not say copying — but by learning forms that are given through a certain dance language, or by studying choreography that is given already by its notation or concept form the outside. And this would be for me the other end of the spectrum. However, I feel strongly drawn into structuring choreography that prerequisites an inside awareness as a starting point or perhaps a concern in the structure, articulation and in the choreography within one’s own body.

What is for you fascinating about the Feldenkrais Method?

Everything I have said until now. What is fascinating about it, is that the Feldenkrais Method is not about movement itself as far as I know it. I consider myself to be a student. I am not a Feldenkrais Practitioner yet, so strictly speaking I practice it as a curious student and as an interested artist. The fascinating thing is that it is a method from which can be drawn general principles about learning processes. As a matter of fact it extends also into life itself because the comprehensiveness of its fundamentals is such that it can have a great number of applications, which do not have to be exclusively focused on the body, or on art practice or on whatever … It can be applied broadly in different ways: on human behaviour, on human evolution, on the animal evolution. This establishes a system, which remains always open. It is not a system with fixed rules. Feldenkrais Practitioners always say that there are no exercises. There is not really something one should rehearse and exercise. It is much more about self-awareness. The Method, I think could be used rather like a fundament for other movement and dance skills. It is for me a tool that can be used in order to develop technique, and that is quite fascinating.

In “A possible ‘somatic’ approach to a Performance and Research Practice” you wrote: “The point of stillness after complexity, which has been gone through.” — What exactly do you mean by the term “complexity”?

So first of all I am interested in the stillness of movement and in what it could mean. What echo or resonance can the body have when it moves and comes to stillness? This interests me. This is why I would say that I am interested in movement, but also in the moment when movement ends and why and how it ends. The question I have concerns the decipherment of movements, of systems or of complex combinations of movements, which have actually been carried through until the point where stillness has been reached. It is interesting to me to observe, but also to experience processes and their complexity. To my eyes every movement is complex. It is sometimes enough to observe how the articulation of a little finger can have a high impact on the rest of the body. As we notice it from the practice of the Feldenkrais Method, everything is connected. It can have a really deep and very complex resonance in the entire anatomical architecture of the body that would be visible from the outside. As I look at it with a choreographer’s eye, movement itself might appear simple but can have a very complex implication or context.

When it comes to partner work, to a system extended to two or more bodies, the whole complex of sensing and understanding one self gets shifted onto another level. The connection between mind and body that we are talking about here engenders a special kind of presence. I would say this it is complex but not complicated. “Complex” appears to be a more appropriate word for me in that context. I feel as an observer, when I hear the leaves, I can absorb and also enjoy a complex situation of life. Moving in space includes sound, light, smell etc. If sometimes there is stillness it has a resonance, a recollection of what took place previously. And then I can more accurately understand, in a deeper sense the complexity of it. Within that lies for me the connection to stillness once again. If conscious movement would only go on and on and on without moments of stillnes, maybe I would not be able to distinguish and worship the moments when a complex situation comes up anew.

How does the Feldenkrais Method influence the way you are performing?

As I said in the beginning, I practice for myself and for my body, for my own understanding and my own awareness of myself, Georg, throughout the years. It has become a method or a tool to integrate the body in its own process of aging, of going through pain, of recovering from pain, of coping with stress and with my motivations to do something new. It is also for me a tool to integrate what we are doing as dancers, for example stretching, extending joints and all the things we have been training … So I want to integrate those memories and re-new them or re-define them as a personal equipment in my own life. It helped me a lot to stay flexible and also to keep regenerating and being interested in exploring new movements, in reinvesting myself in dance over and over again.

What is the connection between the Feldenkrais Method and the act of performing in itself for you? I mean, what happens on stage, in front of the people? What is happening inside … ?

The main issue concerns presence. When we embrace more bodily the general question of performing, this topic of presence rejoins the truly big issue tied to the core of Feldenkrais. It influenced me in this way, I would say … I like to approach the possibility of an open presence where the mind can shift from the inside to the outside and invites both states. It does not exclude anything. This is also considerably connected with vision and listening. You can listen and look inwardly, you can listen and watch outwardly and this concerns the space that surrounds you, the partners with whom you perform and also the audience members. The outside space becomes potentially a half-transparent space. To play with the states of awareness, to notice where the eyes wander, to invite your presence to perceive and to accept as well as to give back is for me what the Feldenkrais Method essentially relates to dance and performance.

How do you understand the term “Efficient Movement”?

I would say, when the muscular effort is as little as necessary. Movement is efficient when the skeleton is used properly, in a connected way in order to articulate, also to stabilize the posture, and when this connectedness and alignment can successfully be maintained in complex situations including lifts, partnering work and more dynamic phrases. It includes the importance of understanding of how the effect of gravity through the skeleton is being noticed and balanced. I think, it is about awareness, because right now I do not know any rules that could define what an efficient movement is or is not. I would say to sense freedom in your movement in the context of your own body and the reality of your own limits can be called efficiency. This is also a very important notion coming from the Feldenkrais Method into the dance, this idea about constraint or restriction of movement. We have always some limitations. We have the limitation gravity implies, and therefore we have the limitations of space and architecture. We have our own joints and constraints given by them referring to the articulation of our gestures. When I was younger, I confronted these boundaries with will power and discipline in order to overcome them, to engage the will to be stronger or better in the process. Now, through the method, through the application of pleasure, comfort and effortlessness, I have learned a lot about how to approach effortlessness and efficiency. More importantly how do I practice it with people, students, colleagues? Why should we lose the notion of pleasure along the way?

Is there, according to you, something like an “Efficient Mind”?

Maybe when you synchronize it with the body, it might be efficient …

In the context of the body, it is clear when we say that we do not need to exceedingly tense our muscles, but what does efficiency mean in the context of the mind? What is unnecessary for the mind while we are moving/dancing?

This is a good question. For me mind and body are not terms to be considered as disconnected from each other. I believe that if the mind allows the body to be efficient then it understates that the mind is already efficient too. The method operates through the means of worldly suggestions (in the form of ATMs). It is based on a mode of interactive communication that engages language, thought, imagination, our senses, feelings and the whole neuromuscular response that leads to the execution of a motion. This definitely is a mind-body-connection, might it be efficient, synchronized, or not. I personally think that to approach awareness through movement is one possibility, but that we eventually could also approach awareness through the analysis of our thoughts and of how they do function. This seems to be a way in which we can work with the Feldenkrais Method as well. If there was no gap between thought and action, then action might be efficient … ?

You keep exploring movement on stage live, during the performance, why is this important for you?

It is simply pleasant and it keeps the form that we have alive. I am interested in choreography as well and that implies the existence of an outside form that establishes the piece, the product. Researching and improvising on stage is for me very important because it allows me to feel the form in which we find ourselves, in its liveliness and with the inclusion of our daily existence even with the inclusion of the moment of the performance, of the spirit and presence of the public as well as the colours of space and smells … This is an enormous source of inspiration, but also a set of rather complex discoveries that we have at our disposal, even within structure, choreography or patterns. This is about life, about joy and about giving permission to the mind to be set free as much as possible through movement.

Does the Feldenkrais Method enable you to say what you want to say in your performances?

I don’t know. I leave this to the audience to judge. I hope so. I think so, but we are not for ourselves, we exist in an open system of representation and perception. Therefore it is always relative. The way we feel helps us in our approach to convince ourselves but how the public does perceive and interpret our work escapes our control. I strongly believe in that connection and this influence, if not, it would not keep me on with so much inspiration. In a way there are complex results, which do not only concern me but also other people and students I work with. It is being proved through the work itself. Such an open system invites different points of view to discuss, to engage, to explore. For all these reasons, I think it works for me.

Has the Feldenkrais Method influenced the way you work with time and space?

Yes. Everything influences how you work with time and space.

Can you mention any concrete example?

I think, through processes that sensitize our awareness, both inwardly and outwardly and if listening and seeing takes place both ways between performers and audience, then naturally the perception of time and space will change the components of our action. I do not practice in order to change this relationship but it changes me by itself along the process.

Does the Feldenkrais Method support your motivation and curiosity? How is it possible that you are not bored yet?

Yes, because as we said, it is such an open system of learning. It is not fixed on physical practice or technique. It is about learning and self-reflection of learning itself. How do we learn to learn? Is it applicable to all the processes we go through in life? It is based on movement, but not on the body itself. What is your own potential for creativity, for maintaining curiosity? I am not afraid of being bored because maybe through that method I am able to open my senses, thus to facilitate new inspiration to come innately so to speak. So it is like some kind of an universal connection to life if you wish. It is almost similar to a spiritual approach that would spontaneously open new doors, for new inspiration and new resources to be taken into account and brought along for the next step of our development. And this is precisely the reason why it is impossible in this mindset to get bored.

Thank you for the conversation.

Other Projects between 1995 and 2008

Action Poems I–III about Pier Paolo Pasolini
Schlafen ohne Ort
Kafka – The metamorphosis. Danced.
Viecher
space dervish
SiriusSteps
Mycenae: A Dance Poem.
Choreos – A Dance Odyssey
59, 58 angels at my gate – rent an angel
Fingerdisco with Pauline – rent an angel
Günter Marinelli meets Georg Blaschke – a dialogue on two swings
Lehmanns Adressen – Mis-Guide – Stadtverführungen in Wien
MindMapping 1020 / pathways of memory and today