This blog explores the act of walking and its ancient connection to philosophical thought. It will reflect on the process of Walking Piece, a project where 50 people will come together in South London to create a performance around the everyday movement.

More widely, these findings from the blog will also attempt to answer questions surrounding the impact of the Arts on those involved and those who are not, looking particularly at participatory dance.

Watch this space for interviews, photos, articles and other materials that we find in our wanderings.

Wednesday 13 June 2012

Interviews with Walking Piece Performers: Jo Bailey


What is it about Walking Piece that draws your interest?
The opportunity to be part of a collaborative movement piece for untrained dancers, conceived and led by an experienced dance artist. To explore my own practice within the context of a piece that will perform. To push the boundaries of what I think I can do and the validity of that.
Have you take part in similar projects like this before? If so, why?
I was involved in Rosemary Lee's Square Dances in 2011. I was drawn by the reasons above and by the ambitious scale of the project. Also having knowledge of some of Rosemary's body of work and being excited to work with her.
What are your expectations for this project at this stage?
That we will cohere as a group (which I think is already happening) and bring into being a piece of work that is interesting and satisfying to both to performers and audience. That we will all enjoy the process of exploring and playing with the lines of the piece and discover things about ourselves and our relationship to our environment that we didn't know previously.

Interviews with Walking Piece Performers: Philip Cowell


What is it about Walking Piece that draws your interest?

I was drawn to Walking Piece for a different reason from why it now draws my interest. Initially I thought it would involve a whole load of people walking non-stop around a building. “Walking” walking, you know, walking proper like. I thought that would be a very interesting thing to do in its own right! But as soon as you meet our choreographer, Matthias, you know things will never be Quite What They Seem From This Day Forth, and so what we’re actually engaged in is an experiment with encounter. We’re walking, yes, in as much as we’re lifting our two feet to move in a forward direction, but in truth we’re playing, or playing with walking. And it's serious play at that. We’re facilitating enquiry through our feet! The great thing about Walking Piece is: it’s got nothing to do with walking.
Have you taken part in similar projects like this before? If so, why?

I’ve done a few bits and bobs like this – what might be called community arts projects, I guess: some oral history work, a bibliomancy project, some clown training. But this feels like a bit of a first for me. I wanted to take part in this project because it spoke to so many interests of mine at the moment. I made a commitment to myself this year to examine what it was like to be and have a body. We can go along in automatic pilot far too easily. So far I’ve done some circus skills training (trapeze, tightwire walking, juggling), I take an early morning dance class at CityLit (street dance at 8am!), I've taken up swimming again, started to walk the Capital Ring (all 88 miles) around London, and I’m part way through a mindfulness course, which is helping me through body scans and kind curiousity. Walking Piece brings so much of this together – playfulness, mindfulness, feetfulness, heartfulness! - and so the final July date – half way through the year – feels like a great opportunity for me to take stock of my body project. For me personally, then, it will be a milestone, and milestones have always been useful for walkers.
What are your expectations for this project at this stage?

I’m trying to be mindful about expectations at this stage. I turn up to the rehearsals and try and expect very little. So much happens as a result! I think the final piece will be great to watch, to bear witness to, and to engage with. I hope lots of people from across London will come along and join us.
Thanks Philip! Check out his website here! www.philipcowell.co.uk