Upcoming Events

The Dancing Wilderness Project
Cascade Mountains,Washington
August 9-15, 2010
Wilderness Backpacking and Dance

The 3rd annual
SIERRA CONTACT FESTIVAL
August 20-25, 2010
at Sierra Hot Springs
Sierraville, California

The 8th annual
Thanksgiving weekend
Contact Improvisation workshop

November 26-28, 2010
Berkeley, California

The Davis Contact Jam
3 days of contact exploration
December 10-12, 2010
Davis, California

AXOLOTL
interactive blindfolded performance
and
BODY OF KNOWLEDGE
an interactive performance exploring how
feeling and thought exist through the body
and how environmental and political issues
exist alongside personal and private realities
February/March 2011

 

 


Ashes

a physical theater and movement study directed by Karl Frost

... fascinating; awkward, tender, and violent movement combined with snippets of dialog and swiftly built-up characters and relationships, creating social and sexual conflicts with an almost unnerving intimacy... utterly compelling.

--Brett Fetzer, The Stranger (Seattle April 2004)
click here for full text of review

performance history

the crux of this work is a theoretical somatic-psychology exploration in theater.  In the context of proscenium performance, I have a specific curiosity in physical communication between performer and viewing audience... empathic communication and how it can be used and explored to generate possibilities of positive psychological and social development, whether it be in the simple celebration of body and beauty or in the processing of personal and social wounds or necessities of change.  Ashes hits multiple territories.  The piece is a study in which the performers have a set of very clear structures which they can choose from to generate their action choices.   The scores fall in 3 primary categories

the theory is that the base in the first set of scores would, through sympathetic response, cause an openness in the audience a kind of vulnerability to empathy so that as the very body-based emotional voices arose and interacted, there would be several degrees less emotional armoring to get in the way of empathic response.  As the "themes" would be played out physically, the emotional body would be the primary avenue of communication (as opposed to the intellect).  The piece was thus aimed at making a deeply felt and piercing empathic connection between performer and audience.  We seemed to meet with some success in this investigation.

Looking at this work beyond the idea of "having an impact on the audience" and wanting that impact to be positively transformative, as director I was working in an intuitive manner that was reinforced by the theoretical frames of various somatic psychological practices when combined with theatrical research principles from Growtowskian theater.  Naming two which have been quite influential for me...

Peter Levine's trauma theory and the idea of necessity for completion of suppressed action.  see Peter Levine

Arne Mindel's theories of different voices in the body and the imperative for them to "move". Dreambody work and Process-oriented Psychology.

For me, these investigations point interestingly towards a meaningful technique for a kind of ritual theater.  I hope to continue them in the near future.