TY - BOOK AU - Boulegue,Franck AU - Hayes,Marisa C. AU - Baumel,Philippe AU - Walon,Sophie AU - Kappenberg,Claudia AU - Amprimoz,Clotilde AU - Glenn,Tim AU - Herfeld,Stéphanie AU - Carrot,Marion AU - Ruiz Carballido,Paulina AU - Allen,June AU - Gaál,Mariann AU - Tropia,Gabriela ED - International Screendance Conference. TI - Art in motion: current research in screendance = Art en mouvement : recherches actuelles en ciné-danse SN - 9781443874137 : AV - GV1779 .A78 2015 PY - 2015/// CY - Newcastle upon Tyne, England PB - Cambridge Scholars Publishing KW - Dance in motion pictures, television, etc KW - Choreography N1 - Includes bibliographical references; Foreword / Philippe Baumel -- Acknowledgments -- Introduction / Franck Boulègue and Marisa C. Hayes -- I: Analysis and Discussion: Screendance Sensations / Sophie Walon -- The Politics of Discourse in Hybrid Art Forms / Claudia Kappenberg -- Is Death in the Moving Image Choreographic? / Clotilde Amprimoz -- II: The Somatic Camera: Performance Techniques Behind the Lens / Tim Glenn -- Seeing Moving: The Performance of Marie Menken's Images / Stéphanie Herfeld -- III: Heritage: Perpetual Becoming / Marion Carrot -- The Screen as Choreographic Space / Paulina Ruiz Carballido -- IV: Artist Perspectives on Practice and Teaching: Danced Abandon / June Allen -- Minimalism in Video Dance / Mariann Gaál -- Learning and Teaching Video Dance: Developing a Pedagogy / Gabriela Tropia -- Conference Screening Summary: Sacre/ilège(s) -- Contributors N2 - "Composed of papers originally presented during the International Screendance Conference at the Festival International de Vidéo Danse de Bourgogne, 'Art in motion' considers the choreography of moving images from a variety of angles, including somatic camera work, aesthetic and gestural analysis, and historical research that delves into cinema's earliest depictions of dance, as well as perspectives from contemporary screendance artists. The geographic diversity of the contributors, many of whom are translated in English for the first time this volume, reflects the growing number of screendance scholars and artists around the world, providing valuable insights from France, the United Kingdom, Mexico, Brazil, Hungary, and the United States. 'Art in motion' adopts a broad definition of screendance that explores movement on-screen and with the camera in many forms, while citing parallels between other artistic movements and practices that raise important questions about the role of screendance in moving image and choreographic cultures today."--From jacket ER -