Reykjavík Grapevine


Reykjavík Grapevine - 16.06.2017, Síða 45

Reykjavík Grapevine - 16.06.2017, Síða 45
Art Find today's events in Iceland! Download our free listings app - APPENING on the Apple and Android stores Dance Dance Evolution The REAL Collective gets the dance scene moving Words: John Rogers Photo: Art Bicnick In late 2016, Iceland’s dance scene got a fresh addition when a group of LHÍ students decided to form the REAL Collective. Hav- ing been fascinated and inspired by an improv workshop from Is- raeli dancers Emma Rozgoni and Noam Carmeli, the aim of the group is to investigate and ex- press the possibilities of group improvisation, through research, workshops and performances. Selma Reynisdóttir, Yelena Ar- akelow and Erna Gunnarsdóttir are three of the founding mem- bers. “We’ve been dancing a lot to- gether, at school,” smiles Selma. “It’s like a funny, disrupted fam- ily.” Yelena adds: “You spent twelve o r f o u r t e e n hou rs together in a small stu- dio, body on body, going in and out of the shower.” Aware and connected This level of intimacy was perhaps a factor in forming the REAL aes- thetic. Along with the spontanei- ty and freedom of improvisation, they share an inter- est in developing a mindful style of si- lent communication. “We train a lot around awareness,” says Yelena. “How much awareness you have of yourself, your body, your move- ment, and what the group is doing. We found some k ind of magic in it… it’s like flocking, when a huge amount of birds move together. Sometimes you have a moment that’s mes- merising, like you start to develop a col- lective body. You take decisions to- gether that are suitable for every- one. And that’s a certain artistic message, for life—to be present.” “They’re plugged-in moments,” adds Erna, “when everyone is totally on board.” The group also host work- shops, at which the public are invited in their spontaneous, mindful and mutually supportive technique first hand. “It’s differ- ent every time,” says Yelena. “We judge what we do on the crowd, how used to moving they are and their age. We work on some trust exercises, and loosen up the bod- ies. Then we have an open session, where everything is allowed.” “The audience is responsi- ble for the space,” says Erna. “We give them some tools on how to approach it. Our workshops have been going well. It’s blossoming.” Jumping ahead The collective recently ran a suc- cessful campaign to raise money for a trip to Israel to further their studies, exceeding their €14,000 goal on the Karolina Fund crowd- funding platform. While there isn’t a huge amount of money around to fund dance projects, Selma explains that with that comes a certain sense of freedom. “People often say art is on the bottom of the budget—and dance is at the bottom of the arts,” she says. “So it doesn’t belong to a capital- istic wheel... so it can do whatever the fuck it wants. It’s a young scene here in Iceland, with a lot of inde- pendence. And it’s growing fast.” The audience for dance in Ice- land is also on the rise. “Dance is often linked to high culture, and people don’t feel like they understand it,” says Selma. “But there are so many things hap- pening, in Central Europe, and Swe- den. They’re chore- ographing book s, and asking, ‘What is choreography?’ And choreography is just organising things in time and space.” “People are getting more used to it and starting to under- stand it a bit more,” finishes Ye- lena. “Today, people are starting to understand that movement and dance aren’t connected to a specific genre like ballet. It’s jumping ahead, as an art form.” Flocking and wheeling at Breiðholt Festival gpv.is/art Share this + Archives “Sometimes you have a moment that’s mesmerising, like you start to develop a collective body” VISIT KÓPAVOGUR CULTURE HOUSES AND EXPERIENCE NATURAL HISTORY MUSEUM & ART MUSEUM & PUBLIC LIBRARY & CONCERT HALL & THERMAL POOL & MORE Gerðarsafn Kópavogur Art Museum Salurinn Concert Hall Náttúrufræðistofa Kópavogs Natural History Museum of Kópavogur Bókasafn Kópavogs Kópavogur Public Library Sundlaug Kópavogs Kopavogur Thermal Pool Kópavogskirkja Kopavogur Church Hamraborg 4–6 Kópavogur Bus 1, 2 & 4 i8 Gallery Tryggvagata 16 101 Reykjavík info@i8.is t: +354 551 3666 www.i8.is Stúdíó Ólafur Elíasson Marshallhúsið | Grandagarður 20 open Tuesday to Sunday 12-6pm, and Thursdays until 9pm I C E L A N D I C R E S T A U R A N T & B A R Tasty tapas and dr inks by the o ld harbour T a b l e r e s e r v a t i o n s : + 3 5 4 5 1 7 1 8 0 0 - w w w . f o r r e t t a b a r i n n . i s Certificate of Excellence ———— 2016 ————

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