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Dance, and Gestural Encounters in Ritual in Transfigured Time
by Erin Brannigan
SNYDER: No. Well, I take that back, because we don't really know. There was another woman named Loie Fuller, fifty years before Maya, who in her later years was doing experimental films in Europe (Clark, Hodson & Neiman, 288) This quote, taken from a 1977 interview with Maya Deren friend and dance scholar, Allegra Fuller Snyder, locates the films of Deren within a specific genealogy: the history of film utilising choreographic content and form. Snyder is referring to the work of turn-of-the-century American dancer, Loie Fuller, who pre-dates Isadora Duncan regarding the elevation of the female dance soloist, working outside the institution of ballet, to the status of 'artist'. Fuller began her performance career as an actress, received international acclaim for her 'serpentine dances' and was filmed by the Lumiére brothers. She went on to direct her own screen work including the feature film, Le Lys de la Vie (1920), of which only an excerpt remains. Fuller is the logical precursor of Deren in relation to this particular history for several reasons. She was the first artist, male or female, to claim credit as both director and choreographer for her films (1) (Sommer, 53). While Deren never credits herself as 'choreographer', she shares a general credit with Talley Beatty for A Study in Choreography for Camera (1945) and a 'choreographic collaboration' credit is given to Frank Westbrook for Ritual in Transfigured Time (1945-46). Deren certainly compared her process to that of a choreographer, stating for example that Ritual is a dance and talking about the choreography of the whole (Clark, Hodson & Neiman, 629). Like Deren, Fuller embraced contemporary technologies making them part of the aesthetic fabric of her work. Fuller's stage performances utilised electric lighting, coloured gels, magic lanterns, shadow-play and projections to create spectacular onstage effects, making her experiments with film a logical development of her art. Deren also utilised the full technological scope of her medium in exploring what she saw as its distinguishing elements: its condition as a space and time art form. Multiple exposures, jump cuts, slow-motion, negative film sequences, superimposition, freeze-frame and angled cameras are just a few of the cinematic effects utilised by Deren. Finally, both Fuller and Deren pioneered radical aesthetic roles for the human body in motion, placing it at the centre of their aesthetic and technological explorations (2). What is also of note regarding Snyder's quote is the gap between the two artists: Fuller's fame emerging out of fin-de-siècle Paris and Deren at the beginning of a new, modern era of avant-garde filmmaking. This latter period would produce generations of directors working with dance and film including Charles Atlas, Shirley Clarke, Yvonne Rainer, Amy Greenfield, Dawn Kramer, Norman McLaren and Hilary Harris, right up to today with artists like David Hinton, Wendy Houstoun, Philippe Decouflé, Isaac Julian and Clara van Gool. The question of dance and the influence it had on Deren's radical film aesthetic is one that has been generally avoided, perhaps due to the challenges presented by interdisciplinary work (3) (Franko in Nichols, 131). That dance had a special significance and aesthetic function for Deren is clear. Having migrated to America from Russia with her parents at age 5, Deren graduated from Smith College with an MA in literature in 1939 and in the same year became secretary to Katherine Dunham. Dunham was a commercially successful African-American female choreographer and anthropological researcher of Caribbean dance. Her fieldwork and writing on Haitian dance obviously had a strong impact on Deren who went on to pursue her own research in Haiti. In the recent documentary, In the Mirror of Maya Deren (Douglas Wolfsberger, 2001), Dunham describes Deren performing at a company party, dancing wildly to drumming music, and there are other references to Deren's aspirations as a dancer in accounts of her time with the Dunham company (4). This history prior to her first completed film project in 1943, Meshes of the Afternoon, clearly informs Deren's work, not least of all her collaborations with Dunham dancers, Talley Beatty and Rita Christiani. Five of Deren's films contain explicit dance content: A Study in Choreography for Camera, Ritual in Transfigured Time, Meditation on Violence (1948), The Very Eye of Night (1952-55, released 1959) and Divine Horsemen (a posthumously assembled montage of Haitian footage shot between 1947 and 1954). But a choreographic sensibility regarding cinematic production, an attention to the articulations of the performing body and the use of movements and gestures outside the familiar, are all elements that can be found across Deren's oeuvre. Deren and Cinematic Performance In his introduction to the new book of collected essays on Deren, Maya Deren and the American Avant-Garde, Bill Nichols sees the filmmaker's preoccupation with dance, play, games and ritual as being connected to the concept of 'depersonalization' Deren describes in her essay, An Anagram of Ideas on Art, Form and Film: This brings us to Deren's notion of verticality in film. In a 1953 symposium on Poetry and the Film (7), Deren describes a model of cinema that reveals her insight into contemporary conventions of filmic structure. She describes horizontal film structure as affiliated with drama, one circumstance one action leading to another, and how this develops and delineates characterisation in film. Alternatively, vertical film structure, or poetic structure
In her writing, Deren also suggests that the interiority inherent in the novel form, when applied to the screen, led to the development of 'symptom-action' gestural clichés or 'visual clichés' that summarise, through a reductive physical action, emotions or responses which would be developed over pages in a novel. According to Deren, such clichés mask the effort of transcription for an audience familiar with this mode of screen performance by standing-in for, or symbolising, the literary terms in which the film is actually conceived (Nichols, 40-1). Deren also writes of the use of gesture in everyday life and the uneasy transition to the dance stage or screen: Paul Valéry, writing in 1936, provides a useful definition of dance in relation to more familiar bodily movement: Ritual in Transfigured Time as Staging Gestural Play In Maya Deren's Ritual in Transfigured Time we have gestures that invite us to move into step with them, abandoning the comfort of the known and giving ourselves over to so many strange partners. This silent short begins in a domestic environment, moves to a party scene, and ends with modern dance performed in an outdoor setting. The film's continuity is established by an emphasis on gesture and/or dance throughout. The 'party' scene in this film is a climax of beckoning gestures that are repeated, stylised and transferred among the close crush of the crowd. An extended arm comes into frame again and again, finds its mark, drawing someone in, moving on. The welcoming, ingratiating, engaging movements are so familiar and so much what a gesture is thought to be: sociable, functional, meaningful. They represent what we could call an invitation to a 'call and response' encounter. Like Gene Kelly's typical open armed finishing pose, both sending out and hauling us into his gestural world, an extended arm in any context is a gesture calling for a response. In Ritual in Transfigured Time, we are 'lead into' the party scene through a series of gestures in a domestic environment that shift between conforming to and abandoning this definable context, thus initiating our passage into the unexpected. A woman can be seen through a doorway; she is seated and feeding a hank of yarn to someone out of sight. Another woman sees her and raises an arm as if to attract her attention, but then we see she is directing this gesture elsewhere. There is no response and she moves toward the seated woman through a different doorway, arm still raised, the awkward gesture shot from several angles and slipping away, almost between shots, from any determined function. There is a cut to the seated woman who is frozen in position and who consequently proceeds with her gestures of labour, now in slow motion and under the pressure of a strong wind that blows the last wool from her hands. She is then held for a long time in a gesture of release, her arms up and eyes closed as if in surrender. So, we know we are not in Kansas now and are prepared, to a degree, for what is to come. These opening gestures both present themselves in and across the space-time of the film and call attention to themselves in the way they inhabit the same. The duration given them, the different perspectives, the temporal distortions applied to them and the way they are performed emphasize their non-functional nature and establish the gestures' place at the centre of the action. If we really attend to these movements, our labour discovers in the repetition of these gestures a constant productivity that sets up its own circuit of expression, operating outside any systems that would contain or explicate them. And this is not produced through performance alone. The repetition of the shots that make up this scene and the constant fluidity within and between those shots, play their part in the attention drawn to the gestures. It is through the filmic treatment that these familiar gestures of engagement move away from any obvious meaning; the filmic treatment is an intrinsic part of the gestural work of the film. These are gestures that pursue their mark but never realise an impact the performers draw each other near as if to speak or embrace, only to meet face to face and move on without resolution. The movement of the gestures through space and time overwhelms the moments of proximity that defuse and transform into new trajectories. As spectators, we enter into the dance through a lack of resistance, foregoing an accumulation of results for an indulgence in proximity or contact with the unknown. Maya Deren is most commonly discussed in relation to the history of avant-garde filmmaking and the significance of her role as a woman working in a male dominated industry (9). Examining Deren's work in light of her connections with, and interest in, dance, foregrounds aspects thus far overlooked in critical approaches, such as corporeal performance in her films, the privileged role given to the moving body, and the influence of choreographed performance on the techniques, aesthetic and overall structure of her films. Beyond this, the gestural operations at work in a film like Ritual can be read as a dancerly exchange between the on-screen figures that open up the action to the spectator, drawing us into the dance.
© Erin Brannigan, September 2002 Endnotes:
Clark, A. VèVè, Hodson, Millicent and Neiman, Catrina, eds, The Legend of Maya Deren: A Documentary Biography and Collected Works. Volume 1 Part Two: Chambers (1942-47), Anthology Film Archives, New York City, 1988: Interview with Allegra Fuller Snyder by Allegra Fuller Snyder Copeland, Roger and Cohen, Marshall, eds, What is Dance? Readings in Theory and Criticism, Oxford Universal Press, 1983: Philosophy of the Dance by Paul Valéry Deleuze, Gilles, Cinema 1: The Movement-Image, trans. Hugh Tomlinson & Barbara Habberjam, University of Minnesota Press, 1986
Deleuze, Gilles, Cinema 2: The Time-Image, trans. Hugh Tomlinson & Barbara Habberjam, University of Minnesota Press, 1989
Nichols, Bill, ed., Maya Deren and the American Avant-Garde, University of California Press, Berkeley, 2001: Introduction by Bill Nichols, An Anagram of Ideas on Art, Form and Film by Maya Deren and Aesthetic Agencies in Flux by Mark Franko.
Sitney, P. Adams, ed, The Film Culture Reader, Prager Publishers Inc., New York, 1970
Sommer, Sally, Loie Fuller, The Drama Review, Vol. 19, No.1, March 1975
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