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Still Life

Research output: Exhibits, objects and web-based outputsPerformance

Published

Standard

Still Life. Stewart, Nigel (Other); Wilson, Louise Ann (Performer). 2008. Far Arnside, Silverdale.

Research output: Exhibits, objects and web-based outputsPerformance

Harvard

Stewart, N & Wilson, LA, Still Life, 2008, Performance, Far Arnside, Silverdale. <https://louiseannwilson.com/projects/still-life>

APA

Stewart, N. (Other), & Wilson, L. A. (Performer). (2008). Still Life. Performance, . https://louiseannwilson.com/projects/still-life

Vancouver

Stewart N (Other), Wilson LA (Performer). Still Life Far Arnside, Silverdale: . 2008.

Author

Stewart, Nigel (Other) ; Wilson, Louise Ann (Performer). / Still Life. [Performance].

Bibtex

@misc{99f22e5655294ad191de3d80dd2693eb,
title = "Still Life",
abstract = "A coastline dance and live art performance work about how we frame nature and the forces that lie beyond the frame. Taking place at Far Arnside in 2008, and Silverdale, Lancashire in 2009, small audience groups were led by a guide from cliff top to sandy shore, over limestone rock and salt-marsh grass. Installations made from objects discovered along the way provided trails for the audience to follow. Along these trails, spectators came across digital recordings, verbal descriptions, cardboard frames placed over natural and man-made objects, and photographs of objects no longer present (such as a dead gull and the sea at high tide). As they walked, a story unfolded concerning a woman from the past whom they witnessed out on the sands, and a weathered washed-up man from the present they beheld dancing on rocks.Still Life was co-directed and performed by Nigel Stewart and Louise Ann Wilson. A film version of the show was created in 2010. The project is also a case study in {"}The Weathering Body: Composition and Decomposition in Environmental Dance and Site-Specific Live Art”, an essay by Nigel Stewart published in the book The Dynamic Body in Space: Developing Rudolf Laban's Ideas for the 21st Century.Produced by Sap Dance and the Louise Ann Wilson Company, the project was supported by funds from the Landscape & Environment Programme of the Arts and Humanities Research Council (2008), and the Research & Enterprise Fund of the Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences of Lancaster University (2009).",
keywords = "Dance and Nature, Dance and Nature, Film, Performance art. Performance. V{\'i}deo-arte.",
author = "Nigel Stewart and Wilson, {Louise Ann}",
note = "Stewart, Nigel (2010) “The Weathering Body: Composition and Decomposition in Environmental Dance and Site-Specific Live Art”, in Lesley Anne Sayers (ed.) The Dynamic Body in Space: Developing Rudolf Laban's Ideas for the 21st Century, London: Dance Books. ISBN: 1 85273 138 9 / 978 1 852 73138 0. ",
year = "2008",
month = sep,
day = "25",
language = "English",

}

RIS

TY - ADVS

T1 - Still Life

A2 - Stewart, Nigel

A2 - Wilson, Louise Ann

N1 - Stewart, Nigel (2010) “The Weathering Body: Composition and Decomposition in Environmental Dance and Site-Specific Live Art”, in Lesley Anne Sayers (ed.) The Dynamic Body in Space: Developing Rudolf Laban's Ideas for the 21st Century, London: Dance Books. ISBN: 1 85273 138 9 / 978 1 852 73138 0.

PY - 2008/9/25

Y1 - 2008/9/25

N2 - A coastline dance and live art performance work about how we frame nature and the forces that lie beyond the frame. Taking place at Far Arnside in 2008, and Silverdale, Lancashire in 2009, small audience groups were led by a guide from cliff top to sandy shore, over limestone rock and salt-marsh grass. Installations made from objects discovered along the way provided trails for the audience to follow. Along these trails, spectators came across digital recordings, verbal descriptions, cardboard frames placed over natural and man-made objects, and photographs of objects no longer present (such as a dead gull and the sea at high tide). As they walked, a story unfolded concerning a woman from the past whom they witnessed out on the sands, and a weathered washed-up man from the present they beheld dancing on rocks.Still Life was co-directed and performed by Nigel Stewart and Louise Ann Wilson. A film version of the show was created in 2010. The project is also a case study in "The Weathering Body: Composition and Decomposition in Environmental Dance and Site-Specific Live Art”, an essay by Nigel Stewart published in the book The Dynamic Body in Space: Developing Rudolf Laban's Ideas for the 21st Century.Produced by Sap Dance and the Louise Ann Wilson Company, the project was supported by funds from the Landscape & Environment Programme of the Arts and Humanities Research Council (2008), and the Research & Enterprise Fund of the Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences of Lancaster University (2009).

AB - A coastline dance and live art performance work about how we frame nature and the forces that lie beyond the frame. Taking place at Far Arnside in 2008, and Silverdale, Lancashire in 2009, small audience groups were led by a guide from cliff top to sandy shore, over limestone rock and salt-marsh grass. Installations made from objects discovered along the way provided trails for the audience to follow. Along these trails, spectators came across digital recordings, verbal descriptions, cardboard frames placed over natural and man-made objects, and photographs of objects no longer present (such as a dead gull and the sea at high tide). As they walked, a story unfolded concerning a woman from the past whom they witnessed out on the sands, and a weathered washed-up man from the present they beheld dancing on rocks.Still Life was co-directed and performed by Nigel Stewart and Louise Ann Wilson. A film version of the show was created in 2010. The project is also a case study in "The Weathering Body: Composition and Decomposition in Environmental Dance and Site-Specific Live Art”, an essay by Nigel Stewart published in the book The Dynamic Body in Space: Developing Rudolf Laban's Ideas for the 21st Century.Produced by Sap Dance and the Louise Ann Wilson Company, the project was supported by funds from the Landscape & Environment Programme of the Arts and Humanities Research Council (2008), and the Research & Enterprise Fund of the Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences of Lancaster University (2009).

KW - Dance and Nature

KW - Dance and Nature, Film

KW - Performance art. Performance. Vídeo-arte.

M3 - Performance

CY - Far Arnside, Silverdale

ER -