Artist residencies at PlatteForum are competitively awarded, and give the recipient artist the time, space and support to create a new body of work and present it to the public.
Embody Encore Performance Dance/live cinema performance and new media exhibition Brigid McAuliffe, Amanda Bishop (Flamenco) 6pm and 7:30 pm in Suite 120
Brigid McAuliffe
culminates her two month residency with Embody, an exhibition/installation which uses percussive dance as a vehicle to explore
cultural identity, history, and empowerment in generations of women. The work,
a dynamic mix of projected images and sound, features a multi-channel
video/audio installation to showcase and integrate each woman's dance and dialogue. Audio
fluctuates between the sounds of dance and the dancer's voices, to create a
resonating pulse in the gallery. McAuliffe:"Embodiment is usually understood as
providing the ephemeral - a spirit, feeling, vision, or otherwise - with a tangible
or visual form. Embody explores the
complex meanings of this term to generations of female dancers who experience
embodiment of a certain spirit or feeling while dancing. They articulate this
feeling as being unique to dance: it is one that arises when they are wholly
immersed, mentally and physically in the flow of movement, performance or practice."
During
the process, McAuliffe interviewed female dancers who practice Spanish
Flamenco, Mexican Folklorico, West African, American Jazz Tap and Native
American dances (Northern Traditional, Jingle Dress, and Fancy Shawl). Although
very distinct from one another, these dances have some major elements in
common. They utilize the feet as a percussive element, share certain gender
dimensions, and speak to cultural identity and empowerment, history, tradition,
and change. Using these interviews as a starting point, McAuliffe created
a series of interwoven physical and time-based pieces that engulf the viewer's
senses and place them inside the flow.
McAuliffe worked with eight girls from Clear Lake
Middle School in a series of Learning Labs at
PlatteForum. Students interviewed the dancers about the cultural, personal and social significance of their practice and created flip-books and animated films about their experience. These works are displayed in the gallery.
About the Artist In
2008 McAuliffe was an artist in residence at el Levante in Rosario, Argentina where she
created a documentary and installation expressing the significance of the Tango
to a community of dancers in Rosario. Although this was the first time she
explored dance through a lens and through participants voices, she has always
had a deep interest in the powerful, ephemeral experience of music and dance. McAuliffe is also interested in the way cultural identity and personal histories are
preserved, evolve and become embodied in dance. Where sports and music are
often dominated by men, dance is often led by women. Dance is an art form (and
sport) where women can find empowerment through expression, physical strength
and the discovery of self Embodyis a project that incorporates all of these interests as well as a chance for her to share and create with a future generation of women. McAuliffe's solo and collaborative work has been shown nationally and internationally. She has studied and shown work in Castiglion Fiorentino, Italy. She was an artist-in-residence and exhibited twice in Rosario, Argentina. She is currently working on a collaborative, interactive audio/video installation at the Denver Art Museum, which will open in November. In addition to her visual work, she is also a musician, playing accordion, glockenspiel and singing in Denver's electro-folk quintet, Bela Karoli. She often composes and performs original scores to her video and live cinema performances. She is currently completing her MFA at the University of Denver in Electronic Media Arts Design.