Avatâra Ayuso - November 2014 — www.senanu.com
Transcripción
Avatâra Ayuso - November 2014 — www.senanu.com
Avatâra Ayuso - November 2014 — www.senanu.com INTERVIEWS http://www.senanu.com/avatara-ayuso ABOUT C O N TA C T SIGN UP AVA TÂ R A A Y U S O, C H O R EO G R A P H E R , AVA DA N C E CO M PA N Y Today we are in London, speaking with Avatâra Ayuso, 33, creator of the AVA Dance Company which is putting on the Provisional Landscapes premiere on 24 and 25 November 2014 at the Lilian Baylis Studio, Sadler’s Wells, London. Tickets are available here and please visit the AVA Dance Company website for more information. PHOTO BY ARNAU STEPHENSON 1 of 10 25/01/2015 15:38 Avatâra Ayuso - November 2014 — www.senanu.com http://www.senanu.com/avatara-ayuso W h e r e a r e yo u f r o m a n d w h at i s yo u r p r ofe s s i o n a l background? I was born in Madrid but grew up in Mallorca. I trained in ballet at the Conservatorio Profesional de Danza de Mallorca and completed a BA and MA in Linguistics in the Universidad Complutense de Madrid. In 2004 I moved to London where I obtained a Certificate in Higher Education at the London Contemporary Dance School. After one year here in London I got into the D.A.N.C.E. programme which took me to France, Belgium and Germany over the course of two years. I came back to London in 2007 and have been based here, working regularly with Shobana Jeyasingh Dance (UK). As an individual and culturally I am Spanish but as an artist I would describe myself as English; the way I understand art and dance is very English. You need resources like mentorship, government support and funding to become a dance artist and these are all things that are available here in England. W h y d i d y o u c h o o s e t o s t u d y L i n g u i s t i c s? I love language, literature and history so I thought if I study Linguistics I can study history and language together. During my university degree I was not auditioning for jobs as a professional dancer but I did continue my dance training. Every day I had six hours of university classes in the morning and then four hours of dance classes in the afternoon. It was extremely demanding but I loved it; going to dance helped me forget about my problems at university and going to university helped me forget my problems in dance. 2 of 10 25/01/2015 15:38 Avatâra Ayuso - November 2014 — www.senanu.com http://www.senanu.com/avatara-ayuso PHOTO BY ANA GARCÍA SEGURA Do your Linguistics studies influence your choreography? Through my studies I learned how to research and as a result the way I approach choreography now, before even going into the dance studio, is all about researching, reading and watching documentaries. My degree also showed me how to pay attention to detail; I learned to analyse every single thing and pull apart information so now when I am choreographing details are very important in my work. Do you consider yourself a dancer or a choreographer or b o t h? It took me a few years to begin to define myself and in fact it was the English language that gave me the words to describe myself: I am a dance artist. A dance artist is someone who does different activities related to dance; you could be a dancer, teacher, choreographer, researcher or journalist. In my case I am a dancer, choreographer and teacher. 3 of 10 25/01/2015 15:38 Avatâra Ayuso - November 2014 — www.senanu.com http://www.senanu.com/avatara-ayuso Ho w d i d y o u m a k e t h e l e a p f r o m b e i n g a d a n c e r t o a c h o r e o g r a p h e r o r w a s i t a g r a d u a l p r o c e s s? I began my ballet degree when I was seven years old and completed it at 18, my world was ballet and neoclassical dance. Then when I was 19, I had a major injury, I had had many stress fractures in my tibia and it was about to break, as a result my body began to create more bone to try and repair itself causing a tumour in my tibia. That stopped me dancing for a whole year which was a great shock for me at the time because I wasn't sure what to do with my life. I asked myself what other style of dance do I like and, after spending a couple of years dancing tango which I loved, I decided to go into contemporary dance. I am a big-boned woman and I no longer wanted to make the physical sacrifices that ballet required, it was going against my natural body type. I had a classical dance mentality because of my ballet training but the tumour forced me to do something else. Now I love contemporary dance but it was hard at the beginning because my body couldn't do some of the things that contemporary dance required. PHOTO BY PAU ROSS 4 of 10 25/01/2015 15:38 Avatâra Ayuso - November 2014 — www.senanu.com http://www.senanu.com/avatara-ayuso Te l l u s a b o u t Pr o v i s i o n a l L a n d s c a p e s . In December 2013 I decided that I wanted to showcase my work for the dance community in London. There are four pieces: first, a short-dance film "Tokyo Tokyo" which leads the audience through the magic of unfolding mystery. Second, a highly physical duet "OneSquareMeter" which is about crowded cities and how certain characters need to change themselves in order to fit into a certain environment. Third, the solo "Balikbayan" which is an atmospheric work inspired by a Philippine woman and her story of migration. Fourth, the quintet "Provisional Landscapes" which centres on characters who are strangers and they find themselves in a looped landscape which changes but always comes back to the same point. The four pieces can be performed independently but they share a common theme which is the idea of migrating, changing and finding yourself in a new context. Ho w m u c h d o t h e d a n c e r s i n fo r m y o u r c h o r e o g r a p hy ? I give the dancers a task, they and I will each interpret that task differently and perform it, I will then select the movements that fit with the idea in my head. Sometimes I tell the dancers when I have a half formed idea in mind and we explore movements and ideas together and see where it takes us. It's a bit like playing a game, I'm an only child and when I was younger I was always developing new games in my head. Sometimes there was an element of frustration because I would know the game I wanted to play but couldn't quite find the rules; it's the same with choreography, sometimes I have an idea of where the piece needs to go but I can't always find the way there. Do you want the audience to go away with a certain i n t e r p r e t a t i o n o f t h e p i e c e s? 5 of 10 25/01/2015 15:38 Avatâra Ayuso - November 2014 — www.senanu.com http://www.senanu.com/avatara-ayuso I don't want them only to see my interpretation, in fact, I hope that they will put their own spin on it. I have to make sure that my team and I have our own story that we are developing but if the audience reads it in a different way then that's great. Sometimes when people come to see contemporary dance they feel that they need to understand the story and I always say no, the story is within yourself. We have created our story but feel free to find and interpret your own story. I wish people would be more open and free; of course it depends on each individual but often I find that people have a fear of letting themselves go to be free to understand whatever they wish from what they are seeing. PHOTO BY ARNAU STEPHENSON W h y w a s i t i m p o r t a n t t o y o u t o h a v e a s h o w i n L o n d o n? It was important for me to put on Provisional Landscapes because the dance sector in the UK knows me just as a dancer and not as a choreographer but I strongly believe in what I do and I want the sector to see this other side of me. I'm happy that the show is going ahead, it has been a lot of work and I sincerely hope that this is going to change something in my career. 6 of 10 25/01/2015 15:38 Avatâra Ayuso - November 2014 — www.senanu.com http://www.senanu.com/avatara-ayuso Why are so many of the well known choreographers m a l e? There are many reasons, not all of which I agree with, some people say women are not as pushy or committed as men, which I think is silly, you just live your life and if you want something you go for it, it doesn't matter if you are a man or a woman. Some people say that it is because women get pregnant, which again, I think is nonsense. You don't need to dance to choreograph; you just need to use your brain, it should not make a difference if you are pregnant. My feeling is that those that direct the institutions don't do proper research to find female choreographers and many directors just support men. What keeps me pushing on in this immensely competitive industry is that I still believe in myself. 7 of 10 25/01/2015 15:38 Avatâra Ayuso - November 2014 — www.senanu.com http://www.senanu.com/avatara-ayuso PHOTO BY MIWAKO MIYAZAKI A r e a l l t h e d a n c e r s i n P r o v i s i o n a l L a n d s c a p e s f e m a l e? Yes, in general dance relies on men to do the lifting and floor work and I wanted to show that the body of the female dancer is not dependent on that of the male dancer; it is quite interesting to see what the female body can do on its own. That being said I also love working with male dancers but at the moment in my company I'm taking female dancers because of the concept of the pieces. W h a t 's t h e w o r k i n g r e l a t i o n s h i p l i k e w i t h y o u a n d t h e 8 of 10 25/01/2015 15:38 Avatâra Ayuso - November 2014 — www.senanu.com http://www.senanu.com/avatara-ayuso d a n c e r s? I learned to be open and ask the dancers for their opinions when working with William Forsythe during the D.A.N.C.E. programme. The problem with that is it encourages conflict and that can be difficult to manage. I always say to the dancers if there is a problem, don't wait weeks to tell me, tell me as soon as possible. With my style of choreography the personality of the dancers can shine through via their own input, however, as the choreographer, the responsibility and final decisions are mine. A lot of the time I will say no to a dancer's suggestion because it doesn't match what I have in mind and some dancers take it personally; I have to reassure them that if I say no they mustn't take it personally. W h a t h a s b e e n y o u r g r e a t e s t s u c c e s s? Doing what I want to do, I am incredibly lucky to be dedicating my life to dance and make a living from it. Every single day I am thankful; I have people that love me, I do what I love, I'm healthy and I get to travel. I love travelling and meeting people, I get to see other cultures, ways of living and understandings of life. I have been all over the world and even if I can't speak the same language as someone else, we always find a way to communicate. In this respect I think of dance as a kind of seventh sense, it helps me read people and their bodies in a different way. 9 of 10 25/01/2015 15:38 Avatâra Ayuso - November 2014 — www.senanu.com http://www.senanu.com/avatara-ayuso PHOTO BY SAMIRA HAMDIEH CO P Y R I G H T © 2 0 1 4 - 2 0 1 5 Y V E T T E D Z A K PA S U 10 of 10 25/01/2015 15:38