A2 Group Choreography
As part of
my A level practical exam I had to create a group choreography based on one of
four questions given to us by the examining board. The question that I chose was
to create a dance based on the features of a Japanese Tea Garden. I researched
into this concept and what I found was that the style of garden takes its name
from the Roji, or path to the teahouse, which is supposed to inspire the
visitor to meditation to prepare them for a ceremony. There is an outer garden
with a gate and covered arbour where guests wait for an invitation from the
leader to enter. They pass through the gates to the inner garden where they
wash their hands and rinse their mouth and face as they would before entering a
shrine or in this case the teahouse itself. The path is always kept moist and
green so it will look like a remote mountain path. There are no bright flowers
or colours in the garden which might distract the visitor from any meditation.
An idea
which I wish to also include is Japanese fortune cookies which are said to be
given in rituals. Japanese fortune cookies are said to be a bit bigger than
others such as American and Chinese. Makoto Hagiwara is said to be the first
person to serve the modern Japanese cookies in a Japanese Tea garden in 1890’s.
When it came
to choreographing it there were certain features that I wanted to include, for
example the entering of the gardens, the invitations, the purifying ritual of
washing hands and mouth, representation of stepping stones leading to the
house, an intimate unison section of people coming together, the giving of
cookies, dancers interpretation of found fortune cookies statements, crossing
of bridges, admiring flowers and personal meditation.
These ideas
can all be seen in the choreography through interpretation I have made through
my movement choices. I have instructed the dancers to show physically them
performing hand gestures and wiping the mouth to indicate a purifying ritual. I
have included the dancers to help one dancer cross over their backs to create
the look and interpretation of a bridge. I have also created a stepping pattern
for the dancers to perform around the space as if travelling across stepping
stones in a garden. All of these points including more are very literal and can
be seen very clearly in the interpretation of the dance. My music choice is a
traditional dance piece which compliments the dance well as it is Japanese.
There are climax moments to the music which also enhances the dance quality.
I have 4
dancers, 3 girls who are entering the tea garden and being invited in to admire
and meditate, and there is also another dancer who is the leader of the ritual
in the tea gardens.
Costume
choice I have decided on plain black bottoms – harem pants/leggings/tights and
short and a plain white top. The reasoning behind these choices is that they
are plain and white is a pure and clean colour. It states there are no bright
colours in the garden because otherwise it is distracting for the people
meditating in the garden.
Choreographic
devices that I have used include repetition – Different arm gestures in a
unison arm section are repeated as I feel these movements give an oriental feel
to the piece
Fragmentation
– The dancers when lead by the leader to go off onto their own stepping stone
pathways they perform arm and hand gestures in different orders which are seen
through the dance.
Levels: levels are seen as I have a staging block at
the back of the stage where the leader is to sit and perform, there are times
where the leader is stood on the block and the other dancers are dancing on the
floor or even lower doing floor work.
I have a
contrast in the piece as well as there are moments where there is a build in
the content where the dancers perform in unison and in contrast to that there
is then the end meditation section which is very calming and mellow in
comparison.
I have
moments of unison and cannon in the dance.
Here is
video of my choreography showing all these points. I feel as a whole dance it
really shows the themes I have identified and is clear in showing the details
and features of the Japanese Tea Garden.