Showing posts with label Paul Michael Henry. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Paul Michael Henry. Show all posts

Sunday, 13 December 2015

First Review: Numina

NUMINA - This is the Way the World Ends *5.30pm*
(Paul Michael Henry, Alessandra Campoli, Alex Mackay, Steven Anderson)

ARE WE EATING EACH OTHER OR OURSELVES?

Moving Pyramids // Strange Fruit // Tantric Dance // Overconsumption // Electronic Noise // Loss And Reversal // Bodies // Spinning Tops //

A Ritual Performance going through Butoh dance and noise hypnosis to see if we can’t feel what we’ve done.

Thursday, 9 July 2015

What is UNFIX?





Pauk Michael 
Henry :
UNFIX is essentially a brand new festival. It has its roots in my work with different Butoh dancers around Europe / internationally, and specifically the 'Moving Bodies' Butoh tour that happened at the CCA last year - this was masterminded by Ambra G. Bergamasco and I only directed the Glasgow leg. Moving Bodies opened doors for me at the CCA and around Glasgow, and has enabled this new thing called UNFIX. 

UNFIX Festival reflects my own journey as someone rooted in a search for a way of being that honours myself but also integrates with the world and the people around me - that world is Glasgow more than any other place. 

Glasgow is a place I've run from in various ways, geographically (making artwork around Europe), philosophically (exploring Buddhism, Sufism, the continental avant-garde and Butoh dance - which for me is kintetic philosophy or spirituality). I found it a hard place to accept growing up as I felt I was being handed a completely broken set of values and ordered to be happy with them; in my case a bowdlerised Catholicism and repressive approach to cosmic / mortal / soul issues, a violent concept of maleness, a very conservative mindset and an obsession with consumerism and material things. 

I still believe these things are true, but over the last years I've come to recognise that there's also an incredible beauty, vibrancy, hope and generosity to life in Scotland; a paradox I've given up trying to resolve. I've also noticed that the cultures and philosophies I ran to - Indian, Japanese etc - are also riddled with paradoxes and nightmares. 

There's nowhere you can go where you don't find this mixture. And over it all sits the spectre of globalisation and corporatism, climate change, the war on 'nature' and so on. We really are all on the same boat - or aboard the same Spaceship Earth as Buckminster Fuller would have it. 

UNFIX festival is my belated recognition of this, and of the fact that if I confess my own darkness and confusion to myself, I see that everyone around me is the same: interdependent, improvising, hoping for better, trying to evolve towards love with varying degrees of success and in a context that is largely not designed for human well-being. So UNFIX is conceived as an act of love, a bear hug to the world, a prayer of sorts. 

I can find all of the above in Butoh dance personally, and Butoh remains a core approach to art and life for me. But it isn't for everyone, and UNFIX is welcoming film, live art, visual / contemporary art, political / climate activists and philosophical & spiritual thinkers to go at this whole issue in a
communal stab at Enlightenment: how can we help each other be better? 

How can we honour this world and our time in it? To lapse into tag-line speak: UNFIX conceives individual human lives as a microcosm of the whole, and puts it to you: climate change and ecological transformation are happening inside your body, RIGHT NOW.

Sunday, 4 January 2015

Blog Rollin' o' Honour

I am going to keep rolling out the names of people whom I believe belong on a list of honour for 2014. I might finish in 2016...


21. The desk staff at the CCA
The CCA has an open-source programming policy. This means that outside companies can book the space (and explains why there is always plenty of events). This causes immense amounts of work for the staff at reception, yet they are unfailingly cheerful, have a good idea about what is happening and put up with me lurking around and pretending I have a social life. 
They are all also knowledgeable about other things, whether it is film, visual art, curation or underground music. Unheralded champions of alternative art and culture, I salute you.

34. Paul Michael Henry
Did I mention PMH before? He is not only a butoh inspired performer and an inspired Butoh performer, he is setting up a festival which happens around the world, but most importantly, in Glasgow. Last year's two nights were full of... inspiring Butoh. His last performance projected words onto his body, and conjured the obscure tensions between language as a trap, defining us and language as liberation, defining us.

55. Ian Spink
Without wanting to relentlessly praise everyone who was involved in Slope, Spink's presence as choreographer just reminded me that we have one of the choreographic greats living in Glasgow (and frankly, not getting enough attention). Spink worked with Caryl Churchill, updated Petrushka  for Scottish Ballet and was recently seen introducing classical trained dancers to more contemporary moves. I bet I have spelled his name wrong, too.

89. Miaoux Miaoux
It might seem Julian Corrie has been quiet this year - he hasn't been on my radio show, which suggests a lull in activity. However, he turned up in a band playing guitar (unexpected), did remixes and installed the sound part of Rachel Maclean's Generations exhibition. 

144. Rachel Maclean
Just so I can print this image, really. Although she had an amazing year. Again.



Sunday, 28 December 2014

It's Awards Time!

Quick! Before it is the New Year! The Vile Arts presents...

the vile arts awards for 2014.

Having got distracted and never completed my Fibonacci sequence listing of theatre events, I thought I would make up some specious categories and pretend that people might be able to use them on their funding applications.

The Ancient and Modern Award
goes to Matthew Whiteside, for his project to bring back the viola d'amore (spelling provided by M. Whiteside) and compose a work for the baroque favourite and electronics. The album will be released in 2015.

The Hot Guys in the Scud Award
And it's Slope that gets this one, specifically for the interlude in London. I still feel deeply insecure about my physicality now.

The Pantomime Award
For consistent breaking of the barrier between stage and audience: Dominic Hill for The Libertine, which had a stage upon the stage and the protagonist was back stage on stage. Beat that, Barrowman!

Butoh Award
Congratulations to Paul Michael Henry, who is on a crusade to bring back butoh to Glasgow. Workshops, solo performances, arranging a festival. He does the lot, and as a fan of the only art-form that cuts to the chase of the human condition, I approve.

The MaƱana Award
Once again, this goes to Gareth K Vile, who may or may not do another list of awards, depending on his ability to get up before midday.


Monday, 1 September 2014

The Glasgow School MCM: the artists reply with Paul Michael Henry

If you had to describe Glaswegian performance in three sentences, or phrases, or even words... what would these be?

"Various. In Glasgow." (I will acknowledge a resistance to that question).

While I am reluctant to suggest that any one artist's answers can represent a large swathe of the artistic community (that is why I am bothering so many people with my survey), I think that Paul Michael Henry is articulating a common response to my questions. When I set out my carefully worded questionnaire, I did expect plenty of replies that called me out on the assumptions I am making. 

Paul Michael Henry is a musician, a thinker, a Butoh practitioner and a festival curator. Most recently, he arranged the Moving Bodies festival in the CCA, a wonderful compilation of Butoh artists from around the world. Apart from being one of the few working artists in Scotland, let alone Glasgow, who are seriously engaging with the Japanese form, Paul Michael Henry is a champion of the art. 

Moving Bodies is a clarion call for Butoh, a showcase of its excellence and a reminder that performance exists in forms beyond most definitions of theatre.

When asked about artists with whom he feels an affinity, his choices are telling. They are not necessarily working in the same area ('My perception of shared characteristics with them includes a sense of art as more than entertainment,' he explains. 'An integrity of excavation into human potentials, rawness and a search for what Hijikata (founder of Butoh dance) called the body that has not been robbed.'). 

Suitably, his list is diverse. 'The late Adrian Howells is my first touchstone here. F.K Alexander, Lea Cummings, Satya Dunning, Jer Reid and Iona Kewney.' Howells was a pioneer of 'intimate theatre,' the one-to-one with a spiritual resonance; Alexander, Cummings and Reid are musicians (and more), Kewney and Dunning are dancers but with very different approaches. 

Throughout his answers, Paul Michael Henry maintains an amiable ambiguity about his influences: willing to recognise himself as a Glasgow-based artist, he sees an international perspective and delights in the complexity of his position.

'I am at heart an internationalist (or more accurately, a universalist). That said, I'm writing this in a moment when my Scottishness is kicking harder than I can remember, triggered by the Referendum debates and also by study of disciplines such as Butoh dance which is Japanese in origin. I haven't felt very Scottish in the past but I'm certainly not Japanese, so where does that leave me?'

This questioning is reflected in his performances: at Moving Bodies, he took time to engage with every single audience member and essayed a piece that emerged from fragments of western dance and Butoh's eastern aesthetic. His belief in the power of art to move - to be political without being explicit or issue based - and his exquisite taste as a curator (Ken Mai blew my mind and confused my understanding of gender identity) might connect with other artists in Glasgow and around the world, but his actual performances make him unique.