Ass Mask: Noh Faces New Ends

This paper introduces Kyoto-based butoh dancer Yasuo Fukurozaka’s approach to improvised dance. Floating between ritual and raw physicality, Fukurozaka’s dance practice often focuses on committing his body to physical situations that his body – and he – do not plan or expect. Through this approach,...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Gerald Raymond Gordon
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Franklin University Switzerland 2018-12-01
Series:Intervalla : Platform for Intellectual Exchange
Subjects:
noh
Online Access:https://www.fus.edu/intervalla-files/vol5/1_gordon.pdf
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spelling doaj-ea00f42cfaed498bac2ded8fd19143c62020-11-25T02:27:30ZengFranklin University Switzerland Intervalla : Platform for Intellectual Exchange2296-34132296-34132018-12-018921Ass Mask: Noh Faces New EndsGerald Raymond Gordon0Baika Women’s UniversityThis paper introduces Kyoto-based butoh dancer Yasuo Fukurozaka’s approach to improvised dance. Floating between ritual and raw physicality, Fukurozaka’s dance practice often focuses on committing his body to physical situations that his body – and he – do not plan or expect. Through this approach, his body’s physical responses guide the creation process by locating itself within, adapting to and improvising conditional functionalities to stark and unpredictable physical contexts. In this way, Fukurozaka’s dance becomes a real-time physical affective document, his body’s exhibited capacities in relation to changing situations. Through a focused examination of one of Fukurozaka’s performance called “Princess Moonlight,” and by exploring links between his approach and the theoretical aesthetic concerns and applied methods of noh drama as exhibited in its stage craft, performance theory and use of masks, I analyze how Fukurozaka’s unorthodox use of the noh mask both reveals the enduring power of this simple yet powerful ancient technology as well as illustrates the radical respect which this avant-guard improvising dancer shows for and shares with noh’s centering of the audiences’ imaginative autonomy.https://www.fus.edu/intervalla-files/vol5/1_gordon.pdfnohyasuo fukurozakabutohimprovisationdanceavant-guardjapanaudiencemask
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Gerald Raymond Gordon
spellingShingle Gerald Raymond Gordon
Ass Mask: Noh Faces New Ends
Intervalla : Platform for Intellectual Exchange
noh
yasuo fukurozaka
butoh
improvisation
dance
avant-guard
japan
audience
mask
author_facet Gerald Raymond Gordon
author_sort Gerald Raymond Gordon
title Ass Mask: Noh Faces New Ends
title_short Ass Mask: Noh Faces New Ends
title_full Ass Mask: Noh Faces New Ends
title_fullStr Ass Mask: Noh Faces New Ends
title_full_unstemmed Ass Mask: Noh Faces New Ends
title_sort ass mask: noh faces new ends
publisher Franklin University Switzerland
series Intervalla : Platform for Intellectual Exchange
issn 2296-3413
2296-3413
publishDate 2018-12-01
description This paper introduces Kyoto-based butoh dancer Yasuo Fukurozaka’s approach to improvised dance. Floating between ritual and raw physicality, Fukurozaka’s dance practice often focuses on committing his body to physical situations that his body – and he – do not plan or expect. Through this approach, his body’s physical responses guide the creation process by locating itself within, adapting to and improvising conditional functionalities to stark and unpredictable physical contexts. In this way, Fukurozaka’s dance becomes a real-time physical affective document, his body’s exhibited capacities in relation to changing situations. Through a focused examination of one of Fukurozaka’s performance called “Princess Moonlight,” and by exploring links between his approach and the theoretical aesthetic concerns and applied methods of noh drama as exhibited in its stage craft, performance theory and use of masks, I analyze how Fukurozaka’s unorthodox use of the noh mask both reveals the enduring power of this simple yet powerful ancient technology as well as illustrates the radical respect which this avant-guard improvising dancer shows for and shares with noh’s centering of the audiences’ imaginative autonomy.
topic noh
yasuo fukurozaka
butoh
improvisation
dance
avant-guard
japan
audience
mask
url https://www.fus.edu/intervalla-files/vol5/1_gordon.pdf
work_keys_str_mv AT geraldraymondgordon assmasknohfacesnewends
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