My Return to Dance

My major new year’s resolution for 2011 was to return to dance. I had been on a break since mid-July 2010 due to chronic lower back pain. My amazing chiropractor and fellow dancer, Dr. Chung, insisted a break would be good for me. It definitely was. As hard as it was to take myself out of the art form and community I long to establish myself in, I had to listen to my body. And it was saying, “Hey! We can’t dance the way we have been.” It was tough, but I had to acknowledge that I need a new approach. Specifically, I’m working on my core strength. I also just needed to take a deep breath, look around, allow some healing, and allow myself to actually sink into San Francisco a little more. Establish my roots. I should have done this when I first moved here, but I tend to rush headlong into things.

In December, Dr. Chung finally said, “Okay, I don’t need to see you anymore, unless YOU feel like you need it.” I waited until the rush of the holidays had died down and then I returned to class. I decided to take Chimene Pollard’s Mixed Contemporary class at ODC Dance.

It feels AMAZING to be back in class. And my body is happy, too. Besides normal aches and soreness, I notice no back pain! I am more attuned to when my back gets tired and I really have to focus on keeping my core active and supportive. I really concentrate on warming up well. I have this image of knitting together my abdominal muscles and my ribs – bringing everything together – like tying myself into a corset of strength. During class, I’m trying to find out how to draw power of energy out of my core to very ends of my body and beyond. Cooling down is another thing I have to pay attention to. I think as a young dancer, you get used to just being able to walk out of class, but now I know – I HAVE to take some time to stretch my muscles and let my body mellow out. Otherwise, I definitely pay for it.

Chimene’s class is great. She has a wonderful, positive, playful, energy and I love her approach to release. I think, like me, she understands the balance (sometimes, the struggle) between power and letting go. She talks about using momentum, “stacking the joints,” and I think this approach is perfect for me as I come back to dance. I can push or be gentle, as much as I need to. There are all types of bodies in our class and that everyone is happy dancing is a testament to Chimene’s approach and accessibility.

I’m also excited because I was hoping to get more hours with ODC’s Work Exchange program this month, to help with the expense of taking classes. I was thrilled at a great opportunity that showed up in my inbox: Starting this week, I’ll be helping out with the Youth Program, every Wednesday afternoon and evening, from February to May. I love working with young dancers and I hope this opportunity will allow me to do so. I’m also curious to learn more about ODC’s Youth Program.

I’m also trying some new physical activity. I finally organized and got to do something I’ve been wanting to do since starting work at the trampoline park. Last week, I attended my first Training Ground session at House of Air. Dave taught myself and 3 of my coworkers basic approaches and then we worked on front AND back flips! It was so much fun we’re doing it again this week! (Also, there’s an awesome TV spot featuring House of Air AND the Cartoon Art Museum, which I wrote about before.)

And last night I went to my first 2011 audition.

It was for ODC’s new Sandbox Series, a program they just received funding for. As Kimi Okada, the director of the ODC School, explained, the focus of the series was how to make the art of dance better. And their answer was to provide space and funding for choreographers to experiment – without the pressure of a performance or even showings. There are 4 choreographers and they each get a 1 month of weekly rehearsal time and space at ODC. The audition I attended was to meet their need for dancers for these experimental sessions.

The choreographers were Laura Arrington, Chris Black, Catherine Galasso, and Ann Carlson – and all 4 were a LOT of fun. They approached all 50+ of us auditioning dancers with positive spirits and I felt very comfortable in their presence. There was a lot of improv, fun, quirky choreography, connecting with other dancers, working in pairs, and play. It was 3 hours, but the time flew by. I really enjoyed all of the choreographers’ energy and ideas and would love the chance to work with all of them. Whether or not I’m selected for the Sandbox series, I was happy to meet the choreographers, see familiar faces, and just feel like I’m back in the dance community again.

Looking at the first month of 2011, I’m proud of myself for jumping back into dance, trying out new physical skills, and returning to the dance community. I have to remind myself to take things slow, too. I have to keep strength training and find ways to cross-train in ways that help my body. I also have to remember to rest and allow myself down time.

This year, I want to address how to balance life, dance, relationships, and all of my artistic interests. How can I make art & dance not just a hobby, but a way of life that supports and sustains me?

A Humble Tribute to Comics I Love

Last week I went to my friend and role model Amy Martin’s reception at the Cartoon Art Museum here in SF. I’ve been meaning to check out this museum since I moved here, and it was a great occasion to do so. It was awesome to see Amy’s originals and really great to see the museum’s collection. I was actually teared up when I saw an original Bill Watterson Calvin and Hobbes.

There’s just something about seeing the originals that really hits me. Seeing the faint traces of the sketch lines still visible, appreciating the quality of the ink on paper in the way that only the naked eye can, and witnessing something of the artist’s process in those aspects.

And what is it about comics that I love so much? I think that simple things are often the best and comics are SIMPLY AWESOME. Comics are art that tell narratives and how they do it – what characters and worlds comic artists create – seems limitless. I think comics are an incredible testimony to human imagination and skill. In high school I fell in love with Japanese manga, even more so than anime at times, because the personality of the artist really showed through in the styles of drawing and characters. Even as technology, media, and the publishing world change dramatically, comic artists inspire me because they create work by hand, and are more and more self-published. Some of my favorite comics are now online, but owning them in book form is incredibly important to me.

I am definitely pretty low on the the comic nerd spectrum compared to some of my friends, and I actually wish I knew a lot more about comics. I recently tried my hand at creating my very own comic and I want to do more!

Here is a list of my all time favorite comics & manga, new and old!

Calvin & Hobbes
Doonesbury
Sailor Moon
Battle Angel Alita
Trigun
Ghost in the Shell
Gunnerkrigg Court
Amy Martin Comics
Questionable Content
Girls with Slingshots
Tiny Kitten Teeth

An Artist’s Apology

“This is a man’s sport… You can’t go in there with doubts. You can’t accept failure, and you certainly can’t go into a situation thinking, ‘Oh, gosh, what’s going to happen?’ You make what’s going to happen. This game isn’t for negative emotions, or being scared.” – Brian Wilson, San Francisco Giants pitcher, as quoted in the SF Chronicle

Mr. Wilson is talking about baseball, of course, but this quote really struck a chord with me.

My disclaimers: Sports and Dance are close cousins. I think professional dancers and athletes share physical ferocity, grace, and attitudes. And isn’t this world STILL “a man’s sport”? Isn’t the art world, too? It definitely feels like it sometimes.

My other disclaimer: What follows is by no means a finished or polished manifesto or artist statement. But it’s probably better that way. It’s just a continuing discussion.

DONE WITH DISCLAIMERS! Onward…

Lately, I’ve been struggling with my confidence in many areas of my life – work, dance, art, love. I find myself constantly wondering, “What is my direction?” What is my focus? What am I striving for? Why am I always pushing myself and doing what others consider to be “too much.” Is it too much? Why do I stretch myself over several arenas of art instead of staying in just one?

The answer is is that I can’t help myself. I love art. And I have a wide-spectrum understanding of all that the word “art” may encompass. Above all, I love creating, so I don’t feel the need to limit myself to one medium. And here’s the thing – I’ve begun to realize that the art, and the things that I make – choose me.

Recently, I started a new dance for camera project. I really felt stuck at some points in the process. I haven’t even looked at the footage yet, but I have this underlying fear that nothing I shot was worthwhile. But time limits my ability to re-shoot. I know I’ll have to work with what I’ve got. At one point in the process, I wondered, “Why am I doing this? I have so much going on – why can’t I just set this aside? Maybe even – dare I say it – give up on it?”

There are projects like that, I know – where you have to just understand that maybe now is not the time for it to happen. But this was not one of those projects. I know because as soon as I had that thought, my next thoughts turned to how many people I had talked to about this project, how long I had been thinking about it, the band who had agreed to contribute the music to it, even the nameless, voiceless, subjects of inspiration – this project was for them now. It’s not about me.

This is how art and dance and creating takes on spiritual connotations for me at times. I know what I’m making is good and true and solid when it feels pulled out of me – like I’m a channel for something bigger than me.

I constantly return to a quote from one of my favorite novels – Sabriel, by Garth Nix: “Does the Walker choose the Path, or the Path the Walker?” The way I rephrase it when it comes to my work is: “Does the Artist choose the Art, or the Art the Artist?”

This new dance for camera project has many themes, but the main one – and perhaps the one that I return to in most of my work – is mystery. I am drawn to mystery. Maybe this is why I feel at home in modern dance, which is an abstract art form. For me, the question is always more intriguing than the answer. In my pieces, I try to ask good questions rather than preachy answers. Of course my work is imbued with my “answers”  – my perspective, opinions, background, socio-economic status, etc. I know that I only have so little control over that aspect. But I hope in a dedication to mystery, my work becomes accessible to my audience. (There is always the danger that they are not interested in the questions being posed, but that’s another factor I have little control over that.)

What I’ve learned in making dance and art is that no matter what I plan, how I budget, what I think the piece will look like when finished, the facts remain: The project will ALWAYS take longer than I think, the process NEVER goes according to plan, and the product USUALLY surprises me when finished. (At least I can proudly say, I’ve always been on budget.)
And I am often frustrated by what seems like a lack over control over my own process, but I realize how much making art is an interaction with mystery. Who’s in control here? Again, the Artist or the Art? The vision that I start with is only the seed for the garden that grows over time. We’re not surprised when bare dirt becomes a forest – how can I be surprised when the art that emerges in the end looks very little like what I started with?

This is not to say that I shouldn’t plan or budget or be fully invested in working hard in the process. It’s a balance of that and trusting what’s happening in the moment with the process and knowing that whatever the outcome, that’s what the piece IS. As one of my university mentors, the choreographer Michelle Ellsworth, said, “Listen to your art – what does the PIECE want?”

I hope I’m making sense here. I’m realizing more and more that my thoughts and statements about art really do approach a spiritual confession for me. Heretical, probably, but again, art is more than a hobby or even my passion – it’s my interaction with the Universe.

This thought is helpful to me when I return to that question of why am I striving and pushing so hard? I never feel like what I’m doing is enough. I struggle with the desire and idea of becoming a “professional artist.” What does that even mean? Why do I have certain expectations and images associated with that, that I think I have to adhere to?

My path will not look like anyone else’s.
I make what’s going to happen. But I can trust in the act of making, I am not in control.
I can’t own my art, since it was never mine to begin with – but I can trust my deep underlying drive at being a creator and feeling at one with the Universe when I create.
There’s no room for fear or doubt – only the love of the work.

Oh geez, SFZF is only 3 weeks away!!!

In 3 glorious weeks, my BFF from CO, the righteous MQ, will be in SF and we will be getting our DIY on at the SFZF or San Francisco Zine Fest (that’s a lot of initials/acronyms in one sentence)! And this weekend felt like a Zine Fest preview weekend for me.

Yesterday, Saturday, I took a walk and checked out the Market SF artist fair at the Blue Macaw in the Mission and met some lovely artists. Melinda Mae and I gushed about how much we love the physical textures of fabrics and how we can’t resist touching them! We also discussed the best places to buy fabrics (Japan & NYC are at the top of the list, just in case you’re curious. I learned later that LA is also great). I really wish I could buy Melinda’s handbags – they’re so beautiful! Hopefully one day soon.

I also lusted after Creek Van Houten’s amazing steampunk jewelry and trinkets. Leyna Lightman gave me a cookie and told me about dyeing lace and the lace she bought in Turkey. I bought fun envelopes from Meleta Buckstaff and I LOVE her bracelet cuffs made from old men’s ties. Brilliant! I didn’t get to talk with them, but I really liked Monkey and Seal’s crafts too! Lastly, I spent a long time talking with Stephanie Cortes of nerdJerk whose blog I’ve just started to read, but whom I already have an ENORMOUS craft crush on. She’s also a member of the SF Bay Area Etsy Street Team. I bought her zine and she gave me a button. Huzzah! There were lots of other lovely artists at the fair, but unfortunately I didn’t get to talk with them all.

Today, Sunday, I took an early morning bike ride through the Mission to Ocean Beach. On the way back through Golden Gate Park, I stopped at the County Fair Building (the same venue as the SFZF) and checked out the Vintage Paper Expo. I had no idea people were so hardcore about vintage paper goods! I’ve also never seen so many boxes of postcards in one place. In order not to get overwhelmed/spend any money I didn’t spend a ton of time there, but I looked lots and I did buy a couple vintage postcards for friends. I want to save my pennies and hopefully buy some original, turn of the century fashion plates next year!

And to top it all off, I visited a friend who went to Comic Con in San Diego this year and brought back a little present for me – a signed copy of Amy Martin’s The Girls are Mighty Fine, which I was planning on buying at SFZF! Oh, glory!

So I’m all inspired and close to getting my own projects finished for the SFZF in a few short weeks! I’m putting out a collection of 10 years of my poetry, and my first ever comic book! I couldn’t be more excited. I’m also stoked to work on my Etsy shop and make it better.

Don’t forget, kids! Come to the San Francisco Zine Fest! Sept. 4 & 5 at the County Fair Building in Golden Gate Park!

Featured Project #4: Coworker Portraits

There are several projects I’ve completed over the last couple months that I’d like to showcase. So I’ve decided to write about one every day for the rest of the week until they’re all up.

When I was working at Currents, on Valencia, I wanted to make something for my coworkers because they have inspired me so much in the business of arts and crafts. I’ve also been wanting to start painting again, but didn’t have a lot of money or materials to work with. The project I decided on was to do portraits of my coworkers on cardboard. I took photos of my coworkers when we were at work together to have images to work from.

The first portrait I did was of my coworker friend who was leaving for a long stay in Japan. That portrait I painted with coffee and wine, which was really fun, and I did accents with pens. Unfortunately I didn’t get any photos of it because I had to finish it in a hurry. Hopefully when she comes back at the end of the month I can get some photos of it.

My other two coworker friends’ portraits I finished before I left Currents and gave them during my last couple days there. I used cardboard again, but this time my new roommate B let me use his tempera paints. It’s funny, I didn’t have a lot of colors on hand, but it worked out perfectly, as I wanted to paint the portraits using my friends’ favorite colors, and that’s what I ended up having! Sometimes, I really think having the challenge of limits actually makes art better. As scary as some of my limitations can seem right now, I have to embrace them as a chance to grow.

Here are the visuals!

My friends are artists, too – please check out their sites! You can see why I’m so inspired…

Chelsey Dyer

Rachel, aka Kokoro Kara

<3

Transitions

A year ago, I was starting a major transition in my life. I was living in Japan, getting ready for a trip to Thailand before my move back to the United States. In September 2009, I moved to San Francisco to pursue dance as my professional career.

Now, almost August 2010 and a year anniversary with San Francisco fast approaching, I am in the midst of another transition. I’m on a break from dancing to heal a chronic lower back condition. I have quit one of my part time jobs to the tune:

“I am an artist! It’s time to LIVE it. BE what I am, what I feel I’ve been training for my whole life. No longer will I put art in the background as a ‘hobby,’ I want it to be my way of life. I want to be a professional artist.”

I have lots of ideas of how to make that happen, but I’m not going to lie: I’m a little nervous.

The week following my last day at the little shop where I was working has actually been incredibly stressful. This isn’t vacation. Now I start working for myself and that means working harder than ever. It’s a time of true dedication and discipline.

One of the tasks I’ve set up for myself is the reconstruction of this website, and in general my entire online presence. This too feels scarier than it should. I have to remind myself that it’s not complete reinvention, it’s the process of continuing to discover who I want to be, who I am, and how I present myself and interact with the world.

I’ve been online apart of various communities since high school, yet sometimes I feel very lost in a cloud of my own creation. But as I grow up, it’s important to remember that life, and the Internet, is an experiment. So my LiveJournal account is almost 9 years old – if it’s no longer really reflecting me, then it’s time to try something new! If I’m unhappy with Facebook, what I can I do to make it work for me? Online social etworks are a tool and they should work for me, not feel like they’re taking over my life. I want to present my creative life in a manner that is professional, focused, but still ME: down to earth, quirky, rambling, poetic, vibrant, dancing through life in various ways and mediums…

I’ve always loved writing, journaling, drawing, moving, photography, art, poetry… so many forms and ways of expressions. Instead of trying to define and categorize them, this next step in my Internet experiment is to simply showcase each project as they are born and develop. Blog and portfolio, growing together.

As always, this is first and foremost for my family and family of friends, to share my life with them across distances.