Ecology
of Our Community: from tsunamis to juice
By
Evangel King, June 2010
I
often think I am without value as a dance artist, yet I know from the bottom of
my soul, dance is the very center of my life and is my true calling. Living
with both extremes and holding them in an embrace rather than using the word but to cancel one or the
other out is like a splash in the face that invokes openness and depth,
cultivating and watering my creativity. A tenacity wells up from my soul to
make art. It builds like a wave from the unseen depths emerging as a full-blown
tsunami.
I
know these extremes are aspects in the ecology of our community. They go hand-in-hand
with our male ruled capitalistic society, coupled with a lust for success. We
are one of the poorest art forms. We are a female dominated field and so carry
the inheritance of scarcity. The fact that our creative instrument is our body
challenges our culture. And still the creative waters flow deep and wide; there
are constant giant waves, dare I say tsunamis, emanating in all directions.
IÕve
found that there are times when the tsunamis fade away and times when they flow
in full force, like when I arrived at the tail end of the 70Õs. And right now.
ItÕs all a cycle. I feel a diminishment of the constriction and my view is
tsunamis are abundant. So I question: What is present to nourish my sense of
abundance?
Looking
back to arriving in the contemporary dance community at the end of the 1970Õs I
found a thriving ecology (from Greek: "house" or "living relations").
There was abundance. Not of money. Rather an abundance of energy flowing. It
surged and energized the proliferation of activity happening in every way.
The
heart of our art was performances of all shapes and sizes happening indoors and
outdoors. Seasoned pioneers, innovators, dance companies new and established,
independent choreographers, improvisers and collectives all creating. The newly
arrived artists were like the gold rush era miners, seeking fertile grounds,
and I was one of them. The abundance available to us all created a lively
mixing together. Those people already established, for the most part welcomed
the new.
Essential
to a healthy ecology are the dance studios, found everywhere—from the
grand to the diminutive, active day and night, giving classes, workshops,
performances, work-in-progress showings, less formal gatherings, mentoring,
discussion, hanging out, goofing around. Other institutions supported the
community. Churches offered space for dance. A few offered free rehearsal space
for first come first serve. St. JohnÕs on College Avenue in Berkeley was one of
these. Each month I looked forward to the exchange and camaraderie that
happened while waiting to sign up for studio time. Universities and colleges
both presented work of locals and had space within for residencies and
workshops. The Dance Coalition (later known as Dance Bay Area) presented an
annual performance series for locals.
A
basic human need is having information; a
community grows when knowledge is freely shared. In the 70Õs there was a lively
transference by word of mouth plus the Dance Coalition put out a monthly dance
calendar. There were local periodicals, both large and small that printed previews
and reviews. Surprisingly the lack of money spurred greater immersion in
creating and performing, which gave rise in me. Why not do it for the love of
it? Do it; do whatever you imagine and dream. The community is here and we are
all together. Eureka! Unlike the rush of 1849, with a fleeting lure of gold,
here there was an attraction of a thriving ecosystem.
The
details of this ecosystem, like any other system, are points in a cycle. They
have arrived many times before and their counterparts will continue arriving in
the future, shaped by the quality and character of the resources immediately present.
I use the word juice to epitomize what happens when a thriving ecosystem
exists. It gets the juices flowing. It makes things juicy. Whatever the juice
looks like, no matter how small or invisible it may appear, it adds to the
abundance of the ecology of our community.
I
choose three details, experiences of mine, when I was juiced with abundance.
The first juicy experience is when I arrived; the other two are now.
In
1979, just a couple of years since I arrived, feeling the juice of abundance,
three of us (myself, Diane McKallip and Edie White) came together to form
ChoreographersÕ Performance Alliance (CPA). We shared a belief in ourselves,
each other and our community. We want to heighten abundance by presenting more
performance opportunities for our own work and our community. One of the
vehicles we create is now the oldest informal performance series in the Bay
Area, Works in the Works. Most significant to me is the first-come-first-serve aspect
of the festivals procedure. I believe this impartial method of arriving at a
performance line-up is essential for inclusiveness. It breaks down the walls of
separatism and judgment.
Now,
and for the last several years I have been meeting with a like-minded group of 4-6
movement artists to immerse ourselves in movement-based seminars and work with
themes that challenge us. Some themes have been: anger, fear and care. We are
considering the topic of revelation for our next seminar. The group arrived at
these themes together, through a sense of collective readiness. I am in awe of the trust we have willingly given
each other.
Over
a period of four years I met with my friend and colleague Kristine Maltrud, who
lives in Albuquerque New Mexico, once a year and we created our own artist
retreat, inviting other artists to join us at points along the way. We held
each other as valuable artists worthy of nurturance and sustenance, not waiting
for an outsider to recognize us as such. We gave the juice to each other.
It
is in my reflection on these details of my artistic life that I offer: three
truths and three questions to ponder.
Truth:
My experience in feeling this cycle of abundance may not be your experience, and
vise versa.
Truth:
Cultivating our own sense of abundance is truly important. I believe that juice,
created by gratefully receiving connection and support, is what catapults us
into believing in ourselves. Do it; do whatever you imagine and dream.
Truth:
Abundance cannot exist without a thriving ecosystem. Eureka!
Question:
What is the juice that youÕve experienced?
Question:
What are the flavors and the combinations?
Question:
How did they come about?
I
am thankful to Jorge, for the eloquent words and the resulting brain stirring
from the back and forth writing and chatting. And I am thankful to you, dear
readers, for being part of this ecosystem. I would love to know what your
answers are to my three questions. LetÕs continue this conversation on my blog:
http://enigmakikipoo.blog.com/
Bio:
Evangel King
is a choreographer and soloist. The studio is her true home. She loves
collaborating, writing, studying, teaching and being a part of community
gatherings of all sizes. She has participated in the growth and development of
the thriving Bay Area Dance community for 30+ years.