人为什么会近视| 地屈孕酮片什么时候吃| gf是什么意思| 傲慢表情是什么意思| 酱油什么时候发明的| 家里为什么突然有床虱| 下肢静脉曲张挂什么科| 相濡以沫什么意思| 什么人不能吃桃子| 草字头见念什么| 颈椎病吃什么药好| 乳头瘙痒是什么原因| 恨天高是什么意思| 今日属相是什么生肖| 左下腹疼挂什么科| 十二星座什么第一名| 生殖科检查什么| 微信什么时候推出的| 安置房和商品房有什么区别| 甲状腺穿刺是什么意思| 陶渊明什么朝代| 洗牙挂什么科| 肋间神经痛什么症状| 鲁肃是一个什么样的人| 里程是什么意思| 怀孕什么时候吃鹅蛋最好| 今天什么节日| 笔试是什么意思| 晨尿泡沫多是什么原因| 什么叫潮吹| 梦见下暴雨是什么意思| 不自觉是什么意思| 红茶什么季节喝最好| 师级干部是什么级别| 金牛女喜欢什么样的男生| 老舍被誉为什么称号| 盐碱地适合种什么农作物| 前列腺炎吃什么药效果好见效快| 补办结婚证需要什么手续| 硌人什么意思| 丙氨酸氨基转移酶高是什么意思| 表白送什么礼物好| 梦到公鸡是什么意思| msm是什么意思| meq是什么单位| 手汗脚汗多是什么原因| ad是什么的缩写| 轻度脂肪肝吃什么药| 身上到处痒是什么原因| 外公是什么关系| 恶作剧是什么意思| 7月1日是什么星座| 阴湿是什么意思| 口干舌燥是什么病的前兆| 血氧是什么意思| 为什么耳朵总是嗡嗡响| 8岁属什么| 寻常疣是什么原因造成的| 什么是地中海饮食| 胃烧心是什么症状| 长红痣是什么原因| 信子是什么意思| 学架子鼓有什么好处| 宣是什么意思| 什么是粉尘螨过敏| 子宫前位和子宫后位有什么区别| 声线是什么意思| 诸葛亮是什么生肖| 水瓶后面是什么星座| 节制是什么意思| 指鹿为马指什么生肖| 一什么无| 雌激素过高是什么原因造成的| 窦骁父母是干什么的| 登高是什么意思| 梦见病人好了什么预兆| 腋下疼痛是什么原因| bp是什么意思| 凝固酶阳性是什么意思| 扬代表什么生肖| lc是什么意思| 单脱是什么意思| 424是什么意思| 90年属什么的生肖| 早起的鸟儿有虫吃是什么意思| 蛇缠身是什么病| 口干舌燥是什么原因| 三伏天喝什么汤最好| 枸杞什么季节成熟| 下面有异味是什么原因| 飞机杯是什么意思| 天哭星是什么意思| 总胆汁酸高说明什么| 做核磁共振挂什么科| 喝啤酒吃什么菜最好| 夏天吃什么好| 王八吃什么食物| 舌头上火是什么原因| 月经推迟是什么原因导致的| 小米什么时候成熟| 什么是超七水晶| 转氨酶高吃什么药| 鼻炎吃什么消炎药效果最好| 木甚念什么| 月经量少是什么原因| 巴旦木和杏仁有什么区别| 尾椎骨疼痛是什么原因| 为什么会流鼻血| 手发抖是什么病的先兆| 吠陀是什么意思| 刚生完孩子的产妇吃什么好| dfi是什么意思| cor是什么意思| 正装是什么意思| 陈皮有什么功效| 高血脂会引起什么疾病| 血糖偏高能吃什么水果和食物最好| 舌苔厚白吃什么药| 完全性右束支阻滞是什么意思| 什么茶下火| 古早是什么意思| 什么是浸润性乳腺癌| 脚踝后面的筋疼因为什么| 什么奶粉对肠胃吸收好| 甍是什么意思| 五月17号是什么星座| 为什么会低血压| 酚氨咖敏片的别名叫什么| 114514是什么梗| 肠胃炎能吃什么水果| 独家记忆是什么意思| 海参不能和什么一起吃| 占有欲是什么意思| 逆袭什么意思| 胎停了有什么症状| 一个口一个者念什么| 吃什么能增强免疫力| 支气管挂什么科| 危险期是什么时候| 乙肝两对半阳性是什么意思| 十二生肖排第一是什么生肖| 记号笔用什么能擦掉| 蛇喜欢吃什么食物| 葫芦什么时候开花| 油压是什么意思| 中国古代四大发明是什么| 10月13是什么星座| 孕妇不吃饭对胎儿有什么影响| 骨骺是什么意思| 西汉后面是什么朝代| 慕名而来是什么意思| 经期延长是什么原因引起的| 六三年属什么生肖| 地贫有什么症状| 岁寒三友是指什么| 春饼卷什么菜好吃| 手足口病喝什么汤| swag什么意思| 为什么会有狐臭| 咳嗽挂什么科| 眼睛干涩用什么药水| 生意盎然什么意思| 男性泌尿道感染吃什么药| 考虑是什么意思| 老火汤是什么意思| 子宫占位是什么意思| 宝宝睡觉头上出汗多是什么原因| 吃叶酸有什么好处| 吃什么补蛋白质| salomon是什么牌子| 精子是什么| 胳膊疼是什么原因| 缺氯有什么症状怎么补| 小螃蟹吃什么| 吃什么水果能壮阳| 打擦边球是什么意思| 中央候补委员什么级别| 白球比偏低是什么意思| 淋球菌培养是检查什么| 朋友是什么| 72岁属什么| 梦见卖衣服是什么意思| 生理性厌恶是什么意思| 为什么怀孕会孕酮低| 遗传是什么意思| 痣的位置代表什么| 铁蛋白高是什么意思| 1978年五行属什么| 护士需要什么学历| 胎儿头偏小是什么原因引起的| 因缘际会是什么意思| 梦见自己输液是什么意思| 承情是什么意思| 为什么不爱我| 原始鳞状上皮成熟是什么意思| 鸽子拉水便是什么原因| 诟病是什么意思| 维生素b6吃多了有什么副作用| 下体瘙痒是什么原因| 仇在姓氏中读什么| 8月份是什么星座| 狮子座女和什么星座最配| 关节镜是什么| 淼是什么意思| 临界点是什么意思| 两个口是什么字| 胃不好吃什么最养胃| 夏天空调开什么模式| 什么东西解辣| 大拇指脱皮是什么原因| 鼻塞喉咙痛吃什么药| 防冻液红色和绿色有什么区别| 天铁是什么| 恐惧症吃什么药最好| 西红柿不能和什么一起吃| 儿童腮腺炎吃什么药| 年薪10万算什么水平| 樱桃有什么功效| 北京大学校长什么级别| 猕猴桃对身体有什么好处| 肩胛骨缝疼吃什么药| 什么是面瘫| 剪头发叫什么手术| 什么流淌| 营卫不和吃什么中成药| 除湿气吃什么好| 美国人的祖先是什么人| 绒穿和羊穿有什么区别| 88年属什么| 高寿是什么意思| 生气胸口疼是什么原因| 努尔哈赤姓什么| 宅是什么意思| 玫瑰花的花语是什么| hpv去医院挂什么科| 南宁晚上有什么好玩的地方| 196是什么意思| 性别是什么意思| 男生爱出汗是什么原因| 痛风忌口不能吃什么东西| 多汗症吃什么药| 一个虫一个合读什么| 深v是什么意思| 幽门杆菌吃什么药最好| 女人排卵是什么时间| 不思量 自难忘什么意思| 经常口腔溃疡吃什么维生素| 切记是什么意思| 结婚35周年是什么婚| 舌头肥大是什么原因| ph值低是什么原因| 鸡蛋过敏什么症状| 腔梗灶是什么意思| 早年晚岁总无长是什么意思| 栉风沐雨是什么意思| 排卵日是什么意思| 犹太人为什么叫犹太人| 蚊子为什么不咬我| 言字五行属什么| 天加一笔变成什么字| 娇嫩的意思是什么| spo2过低是什么意思| 郭敬明为什么叫小四| 孕妇喉咙痛吃什么好得最快| 百度
Home>>

全民阅读调查数据发布 数字阅读率68.2%持续8年上升

By Muyang Shi, Yu Ying (People's Daily Online) 09:29, September 28, 2023
百度 根据该规定,美国贸易代表可以对外国法律、政策或做法进行调查,与有关国家进行磋商,并决定是否采取提高关税、限制进口、停止执行有关协定等报复措施。

London is the home to some of the world’s most renowned performance venues, but none is quite like 14 Duke’s Road.

Late in the 1970s, the redbrick building became home to Britain’s first contemporary dance company, London Contemporary Dance Theatre, and its associated London Contemporary Dance School, coining its name as the Place Theatre. Ever since then, the Place has established itself as a hub for combining dance education, creative choreography and artistic marketing.

In 2013, the Place Theatre welcomed dancers and choreographers from Beijing, Taipei and London for a themed iteration of the intercultural project ArtsCross. Unifying this diverse crowd is a pursuit of both creative process and intellectual discourse, a duality that is best embodied by its Founding Director, Prof. Christopher Bannerman of Middlesex University. As Prof. Bannerman walks us through the corridors and rooms of the building where he once performed, he shares his personal journey from a dancer to a scholar, and how Chinese philosophy has always influenced him since childhood.

A dancer and a scholar

The Place Theatre (Photo/Lewis McCarthy)

People’s Daily Online: At a young age, you trained and performed as a classic ballet dancer with the National Ballet of Canada. What brought you to Asia and Europe in the first place?

Christopher Bannerman: I trained in ballet originally in Canada and eventually made my way to the National Ballet School of Canada and then joined the National Ballet of Canada. I had been focused on dancing, you know, so intensively from the age to about 15 and I was the only person in my school who didn’t go to university. I felt that in Canada was sort of quite an isolated experience and I felt like I wanted to explore the world.

As I reflect on my time living at home as a teenager, many of my father's books were focused on East Asian and South Asian philosophy, and that link to philosophy led me to travel to South Asia. And in fact, I spent almost a year in India and I practiced yoga there and also saw some dance performances. It's just another kind of world of dance. As a part of my journey back to Canada I arrived in the UK and then I discovered a friend was here and he was in a company called the London Contemporary Dance Theatre. And today we're in the building where the London Contemporary Dance Theatre had its home.

People’s Daily Online: Throughout your dancing career you were well versed with both classical ballet and new dance, and eventually began to teach dance at a UK-based university. How did this change in role from professional dancer to professor enable you to connect with China?

Christopher Bannerman: I was lucky enough that, when my dancing career had to end as every dancer does, I was able to move into higher education at Middlesex University. It had quite strong international connections that were just developing. And then I was also active in the dance world in both with the Arts Council England and with an agency called Dance East. They developed a programme for artistic directors called Rural Retreats. In 2007 we held the seminar in Switzerland and included people from the National Ballet of China, including the artistic director and an interpreter.

There was an occasion that I sat down and had a conversation with the interpreter, whose name was Xu Rui. In that conversation we touched on Chinese philosophy which seemed to influence Xu Rui a lot and we started the idea of developing a kind of international exchange in the form of what you might call an intercultural dance project. The fact that I had an interest in Chinese philosophy and knew something about China meant that this conversation was deeper than just the kind of transactional exchange of choreographers to create dances together.

From philosophy to choreography

Christopher Bannerman (Photo/Lewis McCarthy)

People’s Daily Online: Soon after your initial conversation with Xu Rui, you were invited to visit the Beijing Dance Academy (BDA). What was your impression of the institution and how did this trip further your collaborations?

Christopher Bannerman: Some months after my first meeting with Xu Rui in Switzerland I was contacted by him saying, I’ve got some funding, please come to Beijing. So I thought, well, that's extraordinary. And I went to Beijing for the first time in 2008. My feeling was that it was the centre of both government and in a sense a cultural centre. And of course, as far as I'm aware, the Beijing Dance Academy is unlike any other dance institution in the world. It's far bigger in terms of its number of studios and in terms of its range of topics, range of subjects, the old dance subjects, you know, from ballroom dancing to ballet to Chinese classical dance to folk dance. It's all there.

At BDA Xu Rui and I had a chance to have meetings about developing the project and we sort of conceived of a project that would use Chinese dancers, and dancers would be from the resident Beijing Dance Academy Company, but we would bring UK choreographers and organize the project so that two choreographers would work at the same time, one from China and one from the UK. We named the project DansCross and set in place something that we thought was an enabling structure to allow the artists to work and to experiment. And the Chinese dancers responded amazingly well by the end of the project. They were improvising freely and enjoying it and looked amazing on stage. So there were many positive things to come out of it.

People’s Daily Online: After the successful performances at DansCross 2009, Taipei University of Arts joined, and the project gained a new name – ArtsCross. On what occasion was the new partnership formed?

Christopher Bannerman: DansCross 2009 had been an amazing success and it was sort of a very important moment for my life and my dance life. And so Xu Rui and I really thought that we must continue this. So, I came back to London and was discussing it with friends and colleagues. Eventually I came into contact with a woman named Jennifer who was working here and with an organization called Step Out Arts focused on dance and other forms of East Asian heritage.

And she said, oh, by the way, there's some people coming, you know, from Taipei, Taipei University of the Arts and maybe you'd like to meet them. So, of course, I said yes. And we went out for dinner, and I told them about the project. And the next day they called to say, would it be possible for us to join this project?

So, then I emailed Xu Rui: I've got an idea. Xu Rui, being that remarkable person that is amazingly open minded, said, let me discuss this here at the Beijing Dance Academy, but I think that sounds like a good idea.

People’s Daily Online: With a new partner, what new structure was put in place to ensure that the performances reach their full potential?

Christopher Bannerman: For the new ArtsCross project we set out with the idea that we would rotate the project around the world. So we went to Taipei in 2011, we had hoped to come to London in 2012, but we were unable to because the Olympics were in London and everything was crowded. So we went to Beijing in 2012 and then came to London in 2013 and we tried to maintain that rotation throughout the years, although Covid did cause some disruptions.

We see this project as city-based and the cities that we were involved in were all world cities, cities that are dynamic, growing, changing and to some extent multicultural. Each one of them is unique in their own way and therefore we were tailoring the project to that partly through developing a theme for each event and iteration of our ArtsCross project.

Next year in 2024, we are planning an event in Taipei and hopefully starting the rotation again.

A changing world of dance and education

Christopher Bannerman (Photo/Lewis McCarthy)

People’s Daily Online: The ArtsCross project is deeply rooted in Chinese philosophy. How were the performances received in the West?

Christopher Bannerman: We came to London in 2013. We were here at the Place Theatre and the team was quite worried about our performances because they thought, you know, this is a new area of East Asia-UK collaboration. We were not sure we would get enough people in the theatre. What we hadn't really factored in was how many East Asian students there are in London. And how that network would provide an audience. And it did provide an audience – so many that we had to open the dress rehearsal to an audience and make it public.

So this is also of a changing world, changing demographics, changing mobilities, changing interactions. I think we're only sort of providing a vehicle through dance of something that's already happening in the world, but it's just not being captured or recognized.

People’s Daily Online: Now on its 12th year and having endured the difficulties brought by the Covid pandemic, ArtsCross has proven its longevity and popularity. Prof. Xu of BDA, Prof. Wang of TUA and you at Middlesex University have also led the project for more than a decade. What is your vision for the project in the near future?

Christopher Bannerman: I have to say, of course, at some point I'm going to have to be attending ArtsCross events in a different role. Hopefully as a founding director, I will be invited to the performances. But somebody else will be doing the work of developing the projects and working on them. I will be there ready to help, but I probably can't carry this on indefinitely. And so, we have to think about succession as well.

We are thinking about further developments, too. I think we need to form a better and stronger relationship in the UK like other conservatories around the world. Places like the Beijing Dance Academy, Taipei University of the Arts, University of Taipei and Hong Kong Academy for the Performing Arts have a ready-made dancer cohort whereas I've usually brought in dancers from different institutions. But I think now is probably the time to formalize this a little more and to form a relationship with the conservatory here in the UK that can be a partner in that project.

People’s Daily Online: As you gradually start to think about succession in the ArtsCross Project, is there any project that you wish to pursue on a more personal level?

Christopher Bannerman: My situation and my mind – the way I think about my career and the way I think about the world – has changed a lot because of the ArtsCross project. And I suppose that's why I feel strongly about developing UK education in the way that it communicates better internationally, not just projecting itself in and of itself. But to be able to interpret itself better to different context and to understand other contexts better. And of course, the great tradition of education in East Asia and the Confucian tradition is something that is an example that we could look to and see ourselves in relation to because definitely the principles of teaching are not confined to one culture and there are principles that we could definitely learn from.

And again, I'd have to credit my father. Although at the time of my dancing life when I decided to become a dancer, I thought I was rebelling against my father who was this philosopher with all these books. I'm not interested in becoming that university person. I'm going to be a dancer. However, those books were really foundational to my understanding, and therefore, the notion that we were involved in a project that's based on reciprocity is based on a kind of achievement of harmony space and form in which we can improvise and collaborate, work together.

So rather than it being simply, okay, we're bringing our working methods here into this context and showing you how to do it. This is absolutely about exchange between cultures.

(Web editor: Hongyu, Wu Chengliang)

Photos

Related Stories

人尽可夫什么意思 惜字如金什么意思 木石是什么字 肾积水有什么症状 排骨炒什么配菜好吃
脑鸣吃什么药 手足口病是什么原因引起的 梦见仙鹤是什么意思 私处痒是什么原因 疣是什么东西
结甲是什么意思 泪点低什么意思 什么光 重症肌无力是什么病 酚氨咖敏片的别名叫什么
叶酸有什么作用和功效 流年不利什么意思 摇摇欲坠是什么意思 路亚什么意思 板楼是什么意思
胃疼恶心吃什么药效果好hcv9jop3ns0r.cn 尿潴留是什么意思hcv8jop9ns3r.cn 桂圆什么时候上市creativexi.com 甲状腺结节吃什么食物好hcv9jop5ns9r.cn 月光族是什么意思啊cl108k.com
寅木是什么木hcv9jop3ns4r.cn 身份证上x代表什么hcv7jop9ns1r.cn 吟诗作赋是什么意思hcv7jop9ns4r.cn 喝冰美式有什么好处yanzhenzixun.com 吃什么可以提高血小板hcv8jop6ns6r.cn
a1什么意思inbungee.com 三不伤害是指什么hcv8jop3ns0r.cn 青少年手抖是什么原因huizhijixie.com NT是什么钱jasonfriends.com 男大三后面一句是什么gysmod.com
三焦经在什么位置hcv9jop7ns0r.cn 诺如病毒吃什么药好得快一点hcv9jop1ns5r.cn 宫寒吃什么hcv8jop2ns4r.cn 上海是什么中心hcv8jop4ns1r.cn 偏光镜什么意思cl108k.com
百度