For over a decade I taught martial arts, and one of the hardest things is communicating to a novice how to correctly move a particular body part through 3D space. What I always dreamt of was to cover them in sensors, like that guy who played Gollum, so that they could "draw" glowing lines in space with their joints, providing a visible basis for corrections.
Teaching kung fu via hologram is probably a ways off, but performance artist Heather Hansen is doing something that reminded me of the concept: "Emptied Gestures," as she calls it.
Using her body, charcoal, and a large sheet of paper, Hansen "draws" beautiful, Rorschach-like shapes by performing a series of yoga- and calisthenics-like movements while dragging the charcoal across the paper, tracing the exact position of her hands. As the lines are built up, the other parts of her body that come into contact with the loose charcoal powder provide incidental shading and gradations.
"Emptied Gestures is an experiment in kinetic drawing," Hansen writes. "In this series I am searching for ways to download my movement directly onto paper, emptying gestures from one form to another."
While the resultant drawings are beautiful in their own right, "Emptied Gestures" is a performance piece meant to be viewed in time and space. This video shot by director Brian Tarnowski is the next best thing to being there:
Via My Modern Met
Create a Core77 Account
Already have an account? Sign In
By creating a Core77 account you confirm that you accept the Terms of Use
Please enter your email and we will send an email to reset your password.
Comments
http://www.designboom.com/art/tony-orrico-performance-drawings/
Perhaps innovation in Art not as prized as in the field of Design?