Re: money = ability

Nick Rothwell (nick@cassiel.com)
9 Jan 1998 10:30:09 -0000

> So do you mean "common" more in the sense of "not exposed to (familiar
> with) more exotic or unusual" dance forms ?

Precisely.

> I don't have the impression that technological novelty is attractive in a
> long term sense; it might get people in for one performance, but the
> novelty wears off (as it did with most crappy holographic art, the medium
> apparently not yet having brought anyone to tears).

Quite so! The hard thing, of course, is using technology in a manner
*other* than as a novelty.

But this leads to another (semi-rhetorical) question for discussion:
why do funding organisations have schemes in place for performers to
experiment with new technology? Won't this always lead to the use of
technology as novelty? If a practitioner has something important or
artistic to say anyway, then they'll use technology as and when they
see fit, and won't need to be persuaded.

Such targetted, categorised, ring-fenced schemes aren't going to
benefit the technological toys themselves. Are they intended to
benefit the performers? Or the audiences? And if so, how?

-- 
         Nick Rothwell, CASSIEL        contemporary dance projects
         http://www.cassiel.com        music synthesis and control

years, passing by, VCO, VCF, and again, and again