It's not even May, but... Well, any final words? Thematic Material LIVELY (From Freda Miller’s Record for Dance) Discuss “Live...

Creative Work and Research

It's not even May, but... Well, any final words?
Thematic Material
LIVELY
(From Freda Miller’s Record for Dance)

Discuss “Lively”: like acids bubbling and effervescing, excitement and joy, quick, light, shorts-lived-good news, entertainments, clowns, jugglers, acrobats, quaint movements, and unbelievableness. Entertainments, clowns, jugglers, acrobats, capriciousness, irregularities.

In a Toy Shop. A Circus. The Zoo Story. 
(Suggestions by the Class for Group Study of a Toy Shop)

Popular Characters: Golliwogs, bears, puppets, fairy dolls, ballerina dolls, rag dolls, Spanish dancers, stuffed animals, mechanical toys. Toy soldiers, Charleston dolls, acrobats. A monkey playing a drum. A snake charmer and snake. An animal band. A rocking horse. 

There is also something of the feeling of the Gailliard in the lively tunes of Freda Miller’s Album. According to Louis Horst’s lectures on composition in pre-classic forms the themes of good news, holiday, frolic, caprice, laughter, exuberance, heyday, mischief are composed in the style of Gailliard. The characteristics of such would be bouncy, gay, quick, hopping, with rhythmic variety-little jumps, gallop-quick and sudden.

The zoo story has a combination of the qualities of the Gailliard and secular Midieval dance study.

Devise a study: Snakes, tree, crocodiles, palings of the enclosure, keeper, tourists, two grown-ups and little boy, variety of animals, Characteristics of animals – mimetic movements of monkeys, slither of crocodiles, heavy awkwardness of bears, sinuous twisting of snakes, teasing of boy, elegant display of lyre-bird.

There should be an element of surprise – contrast when boy in snapped at by crocodiles and is eaten!

A TOYSHOP
(COMPOSED BY A GROUP OF YEAR SEVEN GIRLS)

SETTING: Toyshop.

MAIN CHARACTERS: Golliwog, rag doll, fairy doll, two wooden soldiers.
 

SCENE I

Everything is quiet in the shop. The toys look miserable. Suddenly the golliwog springs to life and he starts to move about. He runs over to the rag doll and winds her up. He winds up the fairy doll who sees the wooden soldiers lying stiffly in their boxes. She waves her wand over them.

The Soldiers stiffly and disjointedly start to rise and march around the toyshop. All the toys play, the rag doll is lively and is jealous of the beautiful fairy doll who flirts with the toy soldiers.

Gradually they wind down and fall in a heap on the floor. SAND-GAME, Kerry’s interpretation of lively.

The penguins are gradually strolling up on to the sand and rocks from the water. At first they stroll about and play executing little step. They roll in the sand and play in groups. There is great excitement. One sees a fish thrown up on to the sand and goes to claim it. Then the penguins are joined by a second and the playful curiosity over the fish turns into a fight. The other penguins join in as they also want part of the fish-there is great movement and a big struggle ensues. As they struggle a huge sea creature approaches and claims them one by one-some struggle to escape, some die of shock and some are eaten by the monster.

MYSTERIOUS
(Suggestion from Freda Miller’s album for dance)

Let us discuss the connotation of Mysterious.

The dictionary says mysterious is applied to “that which excites curiosity, wonder, but is impossible or difficult to explain or solve. That is inscrutable which is completely mysterious and is altogether incapable of being searched out. A novel, a story, or a play involving an event-anything or everything that remains so secret or obscure as to excite curiosity.”

The word mysterious has as its noun mystery and can be applied to secret rites and religious doctrines.

Class definition from year seven:


“Mysterious is something that is hard to understand-secretive.”

“It makes you feel creepy.” 

“It is like a mist creeping slowly over you.”

“Do you like mystery?”

“Yes because it excites me.”

“When night comes I feel that there are mysterious happenings.”

“Mysterious reminds me of strange paintings-and colors that have secrets.”

“Night is mysterious because it is dark and there are sounds which you sometimes can’t recognize. Sometimes I am frightened.”

“What colors are mysterious?”

“Murky colors-dirty colors.”

“Blackish browns.” “Greenish greys.” “Dark purple.”

“Strange blacks and even pale grey-white.”

“Trees look ghostly and mysterious at night.”

“Sometimes women look mysterious if they have painted faces and you see them under a street light.”

“The cat is a mysterious creature.” 


"What kind of movements will you make?"

“Weak movements."


“Slinky and creepy movements.”

“We will not move a great deal.”

“We might make twisted and tortured and strange designs.”

“A seething mass of shapes.”

The children will consciously subject themselves to their idea of mysterious-they will fiercely express their interpretation and their study should take on strange overtones which will be reflected in their shapes. There will be discord in their work and all their movements will be dissonant-an unharmonious movement or combination of movements. 


IMAGE
I have asked for an image, a picture of something that has meaning for the pupils; to present their idea in words, and to extend the image pattern into paint. When the poem and painting are reviewed and we know what the poem is arriving at then alter its medium and translate the image into movement.

The poetic imagination can be translated into the dance through the language of movement-the child must be sympathetic with the images and develop a state of mind when she capable of seeing “the uncertainties, mysteries, doubts without any irritable reaching after fact and reason.

In her poem “The Sea” Susan expressed the savagery of the sea and illustrated its feeling of power in painting of dark blue and greyish white abstraction :

A hungry monster crashing on sand,
Devouring ships and man; 

Demanding the fear of all that lives, 
On water, air or land. 
The monster roars and swirls and breaks, 
And threatens all things alike; 
For it is the ruler of all our liver; 
And leaves disaster its wake.
 

In “Faces of Fear ” Helen represented her desolate and bleak images by a painting in greys, white, red and black. A stranger shape, it resembled a primitive mask, grotesque, weird, and with a hint of loneliness in its expression:

What is fear?
Fear is the yearly examination
Fear is the monsters in a young 

Child’s bedroom at night. 
Fear is being blind and without sight. 
Fear is not being loved. 
Fear is a negro in America. 
Fear is not being wanted. 
Fear is being not when your heart Is troubled and the black pools of night wait to swallow you up. 
Fear is death and not having flowers From loved ones on your grave.

A kind of freakish gaiety echoed through the colorful movement combinations in “The Sparks” – pinks and orange, greens and blue.
 

The Sparks
(Lynn – 12 years)

O artist of the greatest degree, 
Draw your finest picture for me, 
Make it move, make it dance, 
Let the world be entranced, 
Up it goes and down it comes, 
Moving sideward, shaping shadows 
Tell your story let it live to its glory 
Then when your tale has been told 
Bid you fade away to die.

The type of dance material selected for “The Sparks” was based on variations of the run, leap and jump using acceleration and staccato to communicate expectant and arresting aliveness. Lively clapping and stamping suggested a joyous, carnival-like atmosphere. The insistent rhythms by feet and hand were strong and precise. This rhythmic movement phrase recurred at certain intervals after the introduction of other livery and spontaneous movement, as in a rondo form.


The texture of this dance study was sharp and broken, a geometric abstraction of angular shapes, all parts moving in a synthesis of angles and lines to the accompaniment of tactile and vocal sounds to stress fragmentation – and nervous tension.


Masks enhanced the subject matter of Helen’s poem “Faces of Fear”. The students made fantastic mask-shapes of reds and blues so that the effects were somber and tortured. Some wanted to hide their identity completely – they did this by draping themselves with material – to give a haunting mysterious dignity to their movements. The movement line and quality was in twisted and distorted combinations of taut angles of bodily movements and overall shapes to give emotional distortion, brutality, and fear. Impressionistic “Leaves” was a collection of real leaves in different shapes and color patterns. From the beginning of one image or word picture, several poetic images emerged. There were dark and light images and we had to find the natural creative relationship between them and imaginative movement. The child’s mind needs to be free to awaken the fears and fantasies of the dream world – probing the creative imagination and so capturing the images and projecting it into dance movement.

Seeing Things around Us. True Story. They really are. Seeing Things around Us Once, we decided to look outside the gymnasium and ...

Creative Experiences

Seeing Things around Us. True Story. They really are.
Seeing Things around Us
Once, we decided to look outside the gymnasium and see the variety of architecture-Colonial, Victorian, Conventional; and the Contemporary glass-walled buildings of our time.
May I suggest that you begin your class with a discussion of shapes around you; oval, rectangular, square, pyramidal, cylindrical, and how these shapes in the sky line affect our scenery and scenes- be aware of how differently each of us reacts to our surroundings.
More awareness! Of structures, textures and materials; of styles of architecture; of the living environment; a search for growing things; color, shape, and form of human, animal and plant life.
Intensify learning, feeling and enjoyment of the world we live in.

Judith’s Group—Average age 12 years—Year Seven
“The buildings seem to express a child’s creation made from building block. The domes of the Observatory give the impression of buildings seen in the future. The twisted and gnarled branches of the tree create the feeling of Andromeda chained to the rock. The roots of the trees look like giant claws reaching out awards one.”

Wendy’s Group
“I see wide wires that look like string expanding in different directions, interruption by factory stacks. I see cars going towards a huge bulge (Sydney Harbor Bridge). This bulge swallows them and they never return.  I see millions of colored squares which remind me of patterns that we draw, but they turn out to be roofs of houses. There is a tree extending to the sky and it has twisting stems that look like snakes.”

Marilyn’s Group
“The I.B.M. Buildings looks like a Japanese house. There is yellow dahlia opening like a ballerina in the dance. Signs jutting out like coat hangers. I see a ship which looks like a great white giant on a calm green sea—ferry boats are gliding silently."

Jeanette’s Group
“A crane; like a daddy-longlegs reaching over its prey. Ants on the ground remind me of rolling beads. A new building just going up looks as if it is made from matches. The Observatory looks like eggs in egg cup. An unfinished building looks like a honeycomb. The school is a sea serpent appearing on land to die. The wall without windows or doors is frightening. It has no face. The I.B.M. building reminds me of a curious madman. The rusty steel fence blocks us from the outer world.”


We did not confine these creative experiences to observation of architecture, but to many scenes in the area. We observed the skyline, contours of the terrain, hills steps, slopes of grassy areas, windows, roof-tops, doorways. The shape and rhythms of the street-people walking or standing idle, in conversation, at work. An accident-converging to the focal point, excitement, discord-drama-moods, atmosphere, character, subways, boxes, umbrellas, the wharves. 
We record our impressions of what we see around us-the patterns og people and the environment that co-exist. Extend the creative experience in as many ways as possible-natural and man-made. All odor-sweet, pungent, evil, unpleasant. The sensation of touch. Heat and cold-color-sky clouds and sun-weather. All sounds from the dry click of a leaf falling to the metallic whine of a jet plane.
We had many sessions in the space outside; the environment and the landscape became a source of ideas-we found many starting points for creative movement themes. Atmosphere, shapes, relationship were woven into movement fantasy during the lessons on the green slopes of “the hill” (Observation Hill). Students twisted their bodies into imaginary beings around protruding tree roots. Hollow shapes hid in the corrugations of massive tree trunks.

Find a precipitous slope-run, leap, roll-no obstacles-just free expansive energetic action. Struggle upward to the top of the hill. Twist, crawl, pull yourself along. Walk gently among the long grasses-climb and swing from the trees-watch the movement of the branches. Make flower chains and garland yourself-festoon your wrists, neck, head and ankles. Go to the sea. Feel the poetry of the water and breezes-create a movement study with sound, rocks and water. Use your body and parts of the body in different ways-imagine that they are your partner-Interpret their texture and form. Relax in a rock pool-move your fingers and toes like a sea creature-whirl across the sand- curl up among the rocks in shell formation.

0 respon:

"What is creativity?" "Have you ever created anything?" "Do you make things – if so in what medium?" ...

ELEMENTARY CREATIVE TECHNIQUES

"What is creativity?"

"Have you ever created anything?"

"Do you make things – if so in what medium?"

"Do you use your imagination, or make things with your hands?"

"Are you interested in nature – do you ever watch an ant, or butterfly or leaf?"


What is Creativity and What Does it Mean to Me?


The followings are opinions expressed by year seven schoolgirls at Fort Street Girls’ High School, average age twelve

Susan: “Creativity is something made up by your mind. Design and inventions are all part of creations.”

Margaret: “Creativity means a considerable amount to me as I have an interest in art and designing. I love doing art with the brightest colors and strangest shapes.”

Susanne: “To create is to make things with your hands or imagination like making patterns with shells. A dream is creating something. Creating can be anything you make up yourself.”

Camille: “To create is to concentrate on something by closing your eyes and expressing what you feel.”

Lynne: “Creativity means to me to be able to let yourself go and use your imagination, for instance as a ‘witch’ or a ‘seaweed floating in water’.”

Kay : “You must have ideas and feelings.”

Elizabeth: “Dancers create dances. Creativity comes from the soul. You can’t really see it at first, it just emerges.”

Joan: “Creativity doesn’t really mean anything to me because I haven’t really time to create anything.”

Poppy: “Creativity is a wonderful thing. You can shut your eyes and think of something that you like and try to be it or design it on mud or sand. Many times the design might be hard to draw but it would be fun trying to be it. Creativity is not a set subject but it’s your own imagination.”

0 respon:

Okay, everyone. Today I would like to post some materials from a book which some chapters I've translated to Indonesian. However, this i...

Dancing: A Starting Point of a Theme

Okay, everyone. Today I would like to post some materials from a book which some chapters I've translated to Indonesian. However, this is the English version. I'd also like to post the Indonesian version in the future. This book is about dance. The author appeared to be some kind of teacher who was into the concept of creativity in dancing. They also have interviewed some students related to the concept. So here we go.

Dancing: A Starting Point of a Theme

The color, shape, texture and movement centered around plant life can be a source of ideas visualized in terms of physical movement – every child will interpret in her own way. Record the movement of flowers and the patterns of leaves and branches – the rhythmic clusters of light and shade. Study the structure of growing things – the interpretation of plant life.

Is the space enclosed or is it expansive – opening out – a tight area – circular or radiating outwards from the center? Are lines thrown out in a linear projection? Expanding or contrasting? Is the design stretched and tall or hanging – (as in the weeping variety of trees) – twisting and turning (as in the curling willow)?

Light or heave in appearance. Surfaces – connected. Flowing, uneven, disjointed, sticky, lumpy, cold, warn, smooth, tough, fragile. Colors – muted, translucent, brilliant, opalescent.

From one of our creative experiences in seeing things around us on Observatory Hill, we produced a piece of creative work. The roots of the giant Moreton Bay Fig Trees had risen above the ground. They were so large and rough, with deep, gnarled, indentations – creating an appearance of figures twisted in tortuous shapes. One of the students devised a study about Andromeda – the figure in Greek mythology who was chained to the rock and later rescued by Perseus.

The integration of the bare contours of tree from and the sculptural human shapes, in pulling, resisting, writhing, hanging, twisting, and falling movements with the emotional implication of being chained, reflected dramatic visual interest, and originality of the idea.

We have used our own method of approach in the way in which we have interpreted the themes. Should you wish to develop your own imagination and confidence in what you want to say and how you want to express your ideas then try to evolve your own distinctive approach, “Those teachers who from first to last have the task of caring and feeding creativity in young minds” help the individual to discover themselves as a person. As you draw out from the child what he or she is capable of giving you will find yourself becoming concerned with motivation, stimulation, drive, curiosity, hard work, tenacity, conviction; all requirements for creative achievements.

I have often been asked, ”What led you to the dance?” as a school pupil, I saw a performance by the Bodenwieser Dance Group. They visited our school to perform for the students. This was part of our cultural education to acquaint us with the performing arts. This inspiring group made such an impact on me that I was determined to study if ever the opportunity presented itself and to my great joy, eventually I was able to do so.

I hope that our approach to the creative endeavor outlined here, which has been so enlivening to us at Fort Street Girls’ High School, during our times of working together, will stimulate those who are concerned with providing an environment in the classroom for our future painters, writers, dramatists, poets, dancers, inventors and scientists, setting up an even more independent and unique approach to “making-up”.

0 respon:

CLOUD Vol 1 adalah sebuah promotional book dan DVD yang dirilis Square Enix di akhir tahun 2007 silam. Walaupun secara garis besar buku ...

CLOUD Vol 1 & CLOUD message



CLOUD Vol 1 adalah sebuah promotional book dan DVD yang dirilis Square Enix di akhir tahun 2007 silam. Walaupun secara garis besar buku ini berisi tentang protagonis Final Fantasy VII, Cloud Strife, dan Compilation of Final Fantasy VII, buku ini juga membahas Fabula Nova Crystallis dan Dissidia Final Fantasy. Buku ini mempunyai 122 halaman. Sementara itu, DVD-nya berisi trailer-trailer mengenai produk-produk Square Enix. Sayangnya, CLOUD Vol 1 ini tidak pernah dirilis di luar Jepang. Begitu pula dengan sekuelnya, CLOUD message.

CLOUD message adalah sebuah promotional book yang dirilis oleh Square Enix pada bulan Desember 10th, 2008, dengan cover Cloud Strife, protagonist Final Fantasy VII. Buku ini adalah sekuel dari promotional book/DVD yang dirilis sekitar setahun lebih awal yang berjudul CLOUD Vol 1. Seperti pendahulunya, buku ini membahas produk-produk Square Enix di dalam dan di luar Final Fantasy series. Di buku ini Fabula Nova Crystallis dibahas secara lebih ekstensif daripada di buku sebelumnya.

References
http://finalfantasy.wikia.com/wiki/CLOUD_Vol_1
http://finalfantasy.wikia.com/wiki/CLOUD_message

0 respon:

Buat penggemar Soekarno, atau yang tertarik denger cerita sejarah dari berbagai perspektif, mungkin kalian perlu baca buku ini, lol. ...

SIAPA MENABUR ANGIN AKAN MENUAI BADAI


http://static.ekiosku.com/images/product/large/33380-1.jpg
Buat penggemar Soekarno, atau yang tertarik denger cerita sejarah dari berbagai perspektif, mungkin kalian perlu baca buku ini, lol.

Menurut Marx, "Revolusi dalam negeri tidak boleh berdiri sendiri. Tidak boleh hanya secara kebetulan atau spontanitas. Ia harus bekerja sama dengan negara-negara lain se-ideologi, berdasarkan suatu masterplan. Jadi harus dipersiapkan puluhan tahun sebelumnya, kalau perlu".

Judul Buku: "SIAPA MENABUR ANGIN AKAN MENUAI BADAI"
(G 30 S PKI dan Peran Bung Karno)
Penulis: Soegiarso Soerojo.
Kategori: Buku
Sub Kategori: Non-Fiksi
Berat Kemasan: 350 Gr
Ukuran Kemasan: 25 x 2 x 20 Cm
Penerbit: Antar Kota
Edisi Saku September 1989.

Beli

0 respon:

"Final Fantasy Ryukishi Dan - Knights" adalah sebuah guidebook Final Fantasy series yang dipublish pada bulan Agustus 1992 d...

Final Fantasy Ryukishi Dan - Knights




"Final Fantasy Ryukishi Dan - Knights" adalah sebuah guidebook Final Fantasy series yang dipublish pada bulan Agustus 1992 di Jepang oleh Hippon Super. Buku ini berisi artwork, puzzle, daftar buku, sedikit anekdot yang dibuat oleh fans dan merchandise yang dirilis pada saat itu serta interview spesial dengan Hironobu Sakaguchi. Selain itu, buku ini juga banyak membahas tentang SaGa series.

Game-game yang dibahas di buku ini antara lain:

1. Final Fantasy
2. Final Fantasy II
3. Final Fantasy III
4. Final Fantasy IV
5. Final Fantasy V
6. Final Fantasy Adventure
7. The Final Fantasy Legend
8. Final Fantasy Legend II
9. Final Fantasy Legend III
10. Romancing SaGa

Reference
http://finalfantasy.wikia.com/wiki/Final_Fantasy_Ry%C5%ABkishi_Dan_-_Knights

0 respon: