Abraham Walkowitz, Isadora Duncan #29, c. 1915. Water and ink over graphite, Brooklyn Museum 39.174, retrieved from Wikimedia Commons |
A formative period for me while
I was very much in the formative stages of being interested in connecting
autism and classical myth was when I took a week-long dramatherapy course run
by the Arts Therapies team at Roehampton.
It was an experience that went
differently than I had expected. I had imagined us sitting in rows making notes
from sessions led by the tutor. In fact, however, to introduce us to
dramatherapy, we were all immersed in it as though we were clients. It was a
deeply personal, sometimes difficult and transformative time.
Then, about a year later, I signed
up for another course run by the same team on autistic bodies and movement. I
was excited and was feeling some anxiety too about what would happen – but what
happened was that the course was cancelled. So I never got to know.
Since then, however, movement
and autism has been something I have been wanting to find out more about. And already,
I have seen that it is when people copy the gestures of Hercules, Pleasure and
Hard Work - on the panel that is key to the autism activities I have developed
so far - that they move to a deeper
level of engagement.
Carter Workshop, Chimneypiece panel depicting Hercules tasked with choosing between Pleasure and Hard Work, Adam Room, Grove House, Roehampton. Photo by Marina Arcady |
I am soon going to be writing a
paper that might enable me to gain an understanding of some of what might be
involved. I am going to be spending several days in Coimbra in Portugal in July,
participating in the Celtic Classics Conference. The panel I’ll be part of is ‘Religious Movement in Ancient Mediterranean Art’, convened by two inspirational ancient religion
and art scholars Ellie Mackin Roberts and Tyler Jo Smith. What prompted me to
offer a paper was especially one of the features in the Call for Papers which
was that ritualised movement would connect participants and the deities being
worshipped. Reading this, I wondered what could be brought into play – pun not
intended, but I can’t think of a better way to put it… - when it is the god who is dancing.
I proposed a paper that employs Dance Movement Theory to examine the role of dace when on particular ancient deity, Athena, is being depicted or imagined as a dancer.
Here is the paper I proposed: |
What Isadora Duncan knew: Athena as Dance Movement Therapist in ancient Greek art
As noted in the Call for Papers, ritualised movement connects participants and the divinities being worshipped. But what about when it is the divinity that dances? Employing Dance/Movement Theory – where a client and a therapist engage in an empathetic process to facilitate the physical, emotional, social and cognitive integration of the individual – this paper will explore the significance of dance in relation to Athena. This is a deity whose dancing challenges prevailing assumptions about this god as a deity of ‘mind’ whose very theonym is, indeed, derived from ‘mind of god’ in Plato’s Kratylos. But, as this paper explores, there is already the ‘other name’, Pallas, derived in the same dialogue from frenzied, frantic pulsations.
The paper will explore how Athena enacts a divine movement suggesting an instance of what Isadora Duncan knew: that ‘dance is the movement of the universe concentrated in an individual’, above all when Athena is depicted emerging from the head – the mind indeed – of another making furious, violent movements. The paper will start with images of Athena dancing herself into being. It will then turn to depictions of a frantically moving Athena at the Gigantomachy. Finally it will explore images of worshippers dancing like – or, better, as – the deity, suggesting a reconfiguration of space and time where the act of worship is creating the god, and where the god (therapist) and worshipper (client) are joined in an intensely empathetic creative moment.
Writing this posting has helped me to feel ready to get started – as has what I was writing about in the chapter draft of the book I mentioned yesterday. I was looking, among other things, at the play the Lysistrata, where the women of Athens go on sex strike and occupy the Akropolis – the home of Athena’s key sanctuary in the city. The play ends with a dance of joy where the final of a series of deities to be evoked to conclude the performance is… Athena.
More planned tomorrow...
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