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kimberleigh a holman

  • Home
  • About
    • Bio
    • Artist Statement
  • Work
    • What's on the line...
    • Common Circus
    • Contradictions + Casual Self Loathing
    • rabbit hole cycles
    • Between Words & Space
    • Clay Installation
    • Roadtrip Dances
    • Garden
    • The Last Days of Summer
    • Getting There is Half the Battle
    • Chronology of Concert Dance Works
    • Theatre | Design | Commercial
  • Press
  • Blog
  • Luminarium

Roadtrip Dances: Florida and on to Georgia (2)

After the airport dance and a far too brief overnight stay with a pair of my alternate parents (thanks, Audrey & Paul), my traveling companion Caty and I hit the road at 7am with the intention of covering Florida and Georgia before stopping in Charleston, SC. I say intention because we didn't even make it out of the driveway before needing to jumpstart the car and charge the battery a bit. We ignored the potential bad omen. Eventually we got our act together, hopped in the car full of Caty's classroom supplies and my miscellaneous collection of things that seemed important to take on an art road trip, and found the highway.

Our first day on the road was a disguised exercise in mindfulness. All of my pre-trip fears about the worst part of long-distance car travel being sitting and confinement were somewhat validated but also the experience wasn't quite as torturous as I'd anticipated. Nine hours of Florida and Georgia highway was a considerable amount of sitting and monotony. We didn’t stop for the first few hours which consisted of mile after mile of the thin grey line that is the Floridian highway system. I know many parts of my reflection on the trip will appear to be generalization, and I do have memories from some beautiful beaches in Florida and family theme park extravaganzas, trips that made me realize not all of America is arctic in winter months, but Florida highways are incredibly uninspiring. I spent the first hour of the drive trying to hold on to some of the novelty of the landscape; imagine roads that are simply straight, no curves or changes in elevation for as long as you can drive with a border of trees on either side obstructing the possibility of a view. It was amusing, as lack of curve and elevation might be to a New Englander, but amusement quickly turned into a sense of doom when the horizon just didn’t change. I had a notebook at the ready to record my findings but I simply ended up repetitively affirming my intrigue in palm trees, the superior cloud formations in the sky, the fact that trash is made into mountains, and a recurring billboard for divorcemenonly.com. Also the prevalence of truck drivers and the general impatience of our neighboring vehicles.

I completed my first dance at a rest stop because it was simultaneously something new, respite, but it was also set directly off the same rigid path we were fated to endlessly follow. Like ourselves, everyone at the utilitarian rest stop looked tired, bored and sticky. I took interest in a random grove of five palm trees, definitely not natural to the ground they were rooted in, growing upwards with the same straightness as the road, and made a movement sketch to match. No one really seemed to watch or care and at that stage that was ok with me. We ventured on, past many more of the aforementioned divorcemenonly.com billboards, enduring a continuation of the grade school lesson in perspective as the straight highway shrunk into the distance. There were tall buildings in Jacksonville, an exciting shift in environment that quickly flattened back out to our day’s norm. There wasn’t much change at the Georgia border, besides the proud declaration of PEACHES! and PECANS! every time we would hit the mile marker, the introduction of something called Huddle House, and an influx of churches. There wasn’t enough time to do justice to Georgia, besides some in-car miniature movement sketches likely observed by no one. Sorry, Georgia. The South Carolina border was an exciting milestone, but also one where our surroundings felt decidedly southern. A long day.

For video click here. 

An excerpt from a Florida rest stop dance... After you pass beachy So. FL things get really linear, flat, straight for about a billion miles. No elevation, no curves, not much to see off the highway. 🙀 The people at the rest stop directly to the left of the screen were mostly not amused by my moves, even though I'd expect they'd never seen some nut making a dance for the straight/boringness of the Floridian highway and the rigidity of palm trees. #basic #palmtrees #highway #reststop #roadtrip #sorrynotsorry #blueskies #flat #boring #florida #dancelife #danceeverywhere #roadtripdances

See this Instagram video by @kholman * 21 likes

tags: roadtrip dances, road trip, florida, georgia, improv, improvisation, performing, performance, mindfulness, highway
categories: Roadtrip Dances
Wednesday 08.31.16
Posted by Kimberleigh Holman
 

Roadtrip Dances: Why and a False Start (1)

There were many reasons why I decided to take on a series of road trip dances up the East coast beyond the fact that I needed a practicum project for grad school and that a close friend needed to get her car up to Boston. There is so much of this country that I haven't observed with my own eyes and as a US-based artist making work that speaks to our culture I felt this was important. As a human being, too, art-aside if one can separate, I wanted to have a chance to examine the coast I live on; how do various aspects of the South compare to my lovely little pocket of the Northeast, would I feel a distinct shift in attitude, behaviors, reception, architecture - hell - fast food chains? Being quite curious about the consumption of art and the various shades of willingness to participate I wondered who would stop to view my tiny performances and how would they view and possibly engage.  Finally, I struggle with the idea of myself as a performing body. I love to dance and to explore my physicality, constantly am immersed in making work to set on others, enjoy the discreetly performative act of teaching, and yet I have only recently passed the point of 'hating' the act of performance. Could I complete a project based on the caveat that I had to publicly demonstrate something I haven't quite figured out?

Slightly anxious about the latter reason, having arrived in Southern Florida, I found it difficult to let go of the marginal amount of stress surrounding the performative goals I had set for myself. Funny, because there was no pressure to 'make something' - not that that's ever really a stressor - I'd decided to move in an improvisational and perhaps site-influenced manner. It was the act of being watched with no safety net of others around me; if there was any sort of audience it would be a deliberate audience, choosing to watch yours truly as likely the only person doing strange things in public at the time.

Considering the fact that people probably watch me do very weird things every day (I've got a number of odd habits and methods and tendencies), I gave in a bit, giving myself permission to do just one invisible dance while sitting in the airport waiting for a ride. An excerpt of it is below. I was passed by a family, an airport worker driving a woman through the terminal, a flight crew, and a horde of businesspeople and no one was wise to what I was doing. The fact that it was a secret was exciting. While this was completely not the purpose of my trip, a false start of sorts, it gave me just enough momentum and amusement to combat my silly worries and carry on with the project.

Also, while not opposed to nudity in performance, a copious application of spandex (aka bike shorts) was adhered to in each of these videos. Dance is just crotchy. Get over it. 

For video click here. 

Excerpt from an attempt at a completely anonymous/invisible/overlookable (even headless) performance at an airport in Florida, pre road-trip, exactly one week ago. Also, don't worry: bike shorts. Also-also, excuse my lumpy knees. This was me allowing myself not to be seen in front of random people before an entire trip of busting a move in public. #airport #danceeverywhere #invisible #anonymous #headless #roadtrip #hands #shhh #backgroundnoise #comfortzone #dancelife #roadtripdances

See this Instagram video by @kholman * 16 likes

tags: dance, airport, improv, improvisation, road trip, roadtrip dances, knees, invisible, performing
categories: Roadtrip Dances
Wednesday 08.24.16
Posted by Kimberleigh Holman