Welcome back! Last month we discussed the difference between dance education and dance training as a means for deciphering private studio and K-12 curriculum; so you can cultivate cohesive programs within your businesses. This month, in our last article of the Dance Education in K-12 series, we are going tofocus on lesson plan ideas using interdisciplinary academic subjects as prompts for student choreography.
There has always been much emphasis placed on creative movement within K-12 dance education. However, the concept of integrating formal, more sophisticated improvisation and choreography-composition classes within the private sector has often been overlooked. As someone who just finished her thesis on the choreographic process of technically advanced dancers during late adolescence/young adulthood, it is important to mention the growing trend of technically-trained adolescent dancers who are finding choreography as their true calling and are often not experiencing these courses until they reach higher education dance programs. What is even more interesting is that the works of some of these young dancemakers are the most refreshing, thought-provoking and promising works I have seen throughout my time as a choreography teacher.
If this is an area that interests you as a studio owner, there are many interdisciplinary subjects you can incorporate into a choreography curriculum to spark the creative process. Furthermore, providing a variety of sources will allow your dancer-choreographers to find their own niche, find what inspires them most and challenge them to work with academic stimuli as well as the emotional and physical.
Adolescent choreographers will often already be creatively inspired by music, popular trends, technique vernacular, their current life experiences, relationships, emotions and the desire to assert an individual voice. However, when given interdisciplinary prompts to spark choreography, it is interesting to see their interpretations when thematic concepts are encouraged. One subject area that I have always found to be an excellent source of movement inspiration is visual art. Dancers learn to not only discuss their feelings and criticisms of artwork, but also to deconstruct the principles of design, including harmony, balance, sequence, repetition, contrast, variety, unison, transition, proportion, etc., and translate that into movement. Visual art is also a wonderful prompt for choreography in terms of looking at line and shape, levels, pathways, mood and more. By providing each student a copy of a print of artwork, students can either work on solos (encouraged for beginning composition classes) or develop group scores based on their interpretations. Here are some of my favorite pieces of art that have worked well for students:
Renaissance-Realism Period
Da Vinci: Vetruvian Man, Mona Lisa
Botticelli: The Birth of Venus
Fragonard, The Swing
French Impressionist Period
Monet: Water Lilies, Rouen Cathedral, Poppies
Degas: Woman Combing her Hair, L’etoile Le Danseuse sur la Scene, Rehearsal
Mary Cassatt: The Bath
Manet: Luncheon on the Grass
Renoir: Dance at Bouvigal, Dance at the Moulin de la Galette
Seurat: Sunday Afternoon on the Island on La Grande Jatte
Modern Masters
Matisse: Le Danse 1, Danseuse dans le Fauteuil, Icarus
Van Gogh: Starry Night, Cut Sunflowers, Church at Auvers-sur-Oise
Chagall: La Mariee, David et Bethsabeé
Gauguin: Near the Sea
Cubism and Surrealism
Picasso: Tête de Femme, Girl Before Mirror, La Reve
Dali: Persistance of Time
Kahlo: Self Portrait
Modern and Abstract
Jackson Pollock: Composition Yellow, Gray, Black
Roy Lichtenstein:Moonscape, CRAK, Finger Pointing
Andy Warhol: 100 Cans
Wassily Kandinsky: Yellow, Red and Blue
Jean-Michel Basquiat: Lite, Life Doesn’t Frighten Me
Literature, specifically poetry is another concept idea for prompting a student’s creative process. Here, the same principles of design we used in visual art and within choreographic structure can now be applied to written word. Students will learn to deconstruct the meaning of poems, and also come to understand what resonates most with them. Dancer-choreographers will also learn how they can translate their interpretations into moving works of art. Some of the most successful prompts I have used with students when building choreography have been:
Maya Angelou: I Know Why the Cage Bird Sings
Longfellow: Evangeline
Emily Dickinson: There is Another Sky, The World is Not Conclusion, Fame is a Bee
Richard Wilbur: Love Calls us to the Things of This World
Langston Hughes: Dream Variations, Still Here
Edgar Allen Poe: Romance
Pablo Neruda: Clenched Soul, Always
These suggestions are just a sample of the vast resources you can use within improvisation and choreography classes in your studio. Further ideas include personally written poetry, photography, nature and music from different eras to coincide with choreographic structure and design.
While the K-12 setting has integrated these ideas more as a means for using dance as the vehicle to understand mandated academic curriculums, visual art and poetry can open up new possibilities for movement exploration and produce substantial, provocative choreography developed by your students.