Peter Stock on Fri, 20 Jul 2001 11:19:40 +0200 (CEST)
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[Nettime-bold] Stamping Ground Dance Festival: Newsletter Article
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Title: Stamping Ground Dance Festival: Newsletter
Article
To: Stamping Ground supporters &
dance enthusiasts
++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
Let's know if you're receiving double postings
or if you don't want to receive further news.
Here's an article by Clare
Sneddon about the last Stamping Ground
Stay kool
Peter
Stamping Ground
spawns Aussie Billy Elliots
by Clare Sneddon (Sydney lawyer and mother of new dance
enthusiasts, Sophie and David)
A man swims
butterfly down the middle of the Bellinger River cutting a swathe down
its centre his body arcing and bending, rhythmic in the morning sun.
The Lodge Caf� is serving up coffee while customers gaze out the
windows where scenes of cattle grazing are framed.
But the children of Bellingen are experiencing something different.
Those participating in Peter Stock's, Stamping Ground Dance Festival
(January 1-16, 2001) are up at the Showground Hall in the Street Moves
workshop. Bellingen offers a myriad of distractions, but these
children are all focussed on Blacker Conteh, their tutor.
Concentrating intently they make synchronized patterns with their
bodies, like robotic flowers opening and closing while Blacker sets
the rhythm and scene. His godlike body an icon of the
convergence between traditional African and popular western street
culture.
Stamping Ground is an annual dance festival which has the principal
objective of showcasing male dance. It attracts hundreds of
advanced dancers and students from far and wide to the intensive
training workshops and performance making projects. A large part
of the program provides an introduction to the movement arts for men,
boys and local children.
Some of the children have been cajoled, dragged and bribed to get them
to the class. Some come willingly. All of them, once here,
are entranced . Now they are in Blacker's world where their
bodies take over from their conscious minds and they move in his
world.
"Check it out now - the funk soul brothers" entreats Fatboy
Slim from the speakers. They move to the funk beat - some beautifully,
others less so. All are captivated by the aura of Blacker.
The Street Moves class is just one of many. Amongst a broad
tuition program of 25 different action arts workshops the festival
includes a range of introductory courses for children and adults such
as such as bootmen tap, funky jazz, Aboriginal and traditional African
dance. For those not ready to say the "D" word (much
less do it), there is also an acrobatic class for circus enthusiasts,
a music making class, as well as workshops for didgeridoo and other
aboriginal exchange programs (including an introduction to some of the
male rituals of local indigenous culture).
But the classes have a common thread. They are all tutored by
exceptional male teachers who have the ability to communicate their
passion for their art to children. This is a rare gift. There is
no need for imposed discipline. To the weary parent it seems
like magic is wrought here.
Peter Stock is the festival's founder and sole patron (apart from a
$500 gratefully received contribution from the Bellingen Community
Arts). He is proud of the event's impressive track record and
well-founded reputation. It has the distinction of being
Australia's oldest dance festival and is unique in that it offers
programs linking high-level dancemen with advanced & junior
dancers and new enthusiasts. Stock began dancing in his
mid-teens when he took jazz classes at the recommendation of his
singing teacher. Then at 18 he began ballet studies leading to a
diverse dance career based in Australia and 17 overseas
countries.
His love of performance is not limited to dance. For many years
he produced trade shows, cabaret, theatre restaurant and lavish revue
in Melbourne, London, Japan and throughout near Asia and
Europe. This was in addition to directing productions of West
Side Story and Carmen at ages 19 and 22 respectively. As an
aside he also mentions having been in the Victorian State Opera chorus
for several years and understudying John Farnham for 12 months in a
JCW stage musical. Clearly, the man brings a wealth of talent
and experience to this festival not to mention incredible dedication
and passion.
Stock says he works all year to pay the advance costs of the festival
(he runs the Rivers Dance Studio in Bellingen (pop. 2600) and boasts
about the 70+ boys currently enrolled). This year he is only
down a couple of thousand dollars. His willingness to make this
extraordinary financial commitment is less than surprising when you
learn, after probing into his early dance years, that Stock put
himself through every dancing and singing class that he ever took.
He held down a full time job while attending ballet school "full
time". ABC TV choreographer, Jack Manuel (an important
mentor for Stock) had advised he wouldn't be re-engaged if he didn't
improve his dance technique. "Learn ballet" he was
told. Stock does whatever it takes to make his projects
happen.
If you ask him about the purpose of Stamping Ground he will tell you
it is what each participant makes of it. However his main aim in
founding the festival was to create awareness of male dance and
provide positive role models for young boys and men who wanted to give
it a go. He also wanted to erode the cultural censorships that
people in our society impose on boys & men who dance or pursue
other creative interests.
For its founder, another valuable feature of the festival is that
children have the opportunity to be taught by young male teachers -
an increasingly rare thing in our society. Conversely the tutors
also have the opportunity to forge friendships with children.
This phenomenon was evident in the festival's classes and especially
at the final performance.
Stock's analysis is that children respond positively to energetic,
younger teachers because they pose less of an authority figure.
Maybe. Or maybe it's just that the children delight in the
novelty of the situation. Whatever the reason, the chemistry was
obvious.
But despite the fact that Stamping Ground is aimed at showcasing male
dance and ideas about it, it is not exclusive. Girls and women
are welcome to participate. Stock says "better boys =
better men = a better world" and believes more girl dancers and
mums need to encourage boys to participate in the arts experience.
The research evidence is in about the value of arts training and
enrichment. It's high time our education systems seriously embraced
arts practice in daily curricula. He also notes that girls
can also suffer from inhibitions about dancing. He believes that
if girls have not taken dance lessons by the age of 10 they may
already be too self-conscious to participate. Many of their
peers have been taking classes for several years and have reached a
level of proficiency that non-dancers can find intimidating.
Stock is convinced that dancing is innate in us all, as an outlet and
a form of expression. After all, we all make our dance in
private. Stamping Ground is an opportunity for adults and
children to find that expression socially, regardless of their level
(or lack) of skills. The fact that TV producers from the ABC and
SBS who were filming documentaries about the event also participated
in workshops is illustrative of Stock's ability to seduce new
enthusiasts to the excitement and high energy of collaborative dance.
Everyone seemed so absorbed in the business of dancing - the
teachers so involved - that one could hardly help but be drawn into
the experience.
Stock speaks of the emergence from the 5 year old festival of
considerable cultural shift in local attitudes to male dance, and of
an emerging Stamping Ground movement style based on the largely
unexplored possibilities of male energy and dance. Of all the
festival's outcomes, one suspects that this is the one that most
excites him. Certainly, the performance piece created in the
"Action Moves for Boys" workshop was quite unusual.
The workshop catered for boys aged 6-12, its mercurial tutor, Travers
Ross, is 16 and has been training for 13 years. The piece
featured in the concert extravaganza "Burning up the Tallowood"
showcased an item from each of the workshops offered at the
festival.
"Action Moves" comprised a combination of synchronised
stances and acrobatic movements that the workshop's participants
developed together under Travers' guidance. Although the piece
borrowed from stereotypical images seen on film clips and ads, the
result was not hackneyed but rather a vibrant expression of young male
energy. Even the air guitar made an appearance but overall the piece
retained enough original material to be spontaneous. It was a
representation in dance of some of the things that are boys
business.
It was a remarkable piece made more so by the fact that several of the
participants had refused to attend the dance workshops and were not
even aware that they were dancing. Travers and the Action Moves boys
are the main subject of an ABC Australian Story about Stamping Ground
to be screened later in 2001.
Similarly , the piece performed by the festival's skilled dancemen to
Madonna's "Don't Tell Me" hinted at the Stamping Ground
style referred to by Stock. It displayed a range of dance styles
from acrobatic virtuosity to soft fluid movement. The piece
progressed through each man's performance. The audience was
captivated by their individual contributions as well as the way the
dancers meshed in unison sequences. Above all it was a
celebration of male dancers which challenged the audience's
preconceptions about dance - and had them cheering.
In spite of - and perhaps because of the participant's wide range of
ages, skills and ability, the performance was highly entertaining and
especially uplifting for parents.
Stock's strategies aimed at getting people to dance appear to be
effective. The hallmark of this sprawling festival as it
occupies community spaces and outdoor locations for site-works and
ceremonies, is spontaneity, and this is one of the secrets of its
success. Such flexibility would be difficult to achieve in
Sydney where the high costs of rent, and administration make
pre-bookings and deposits necessary. Stock acknowledges that the
positioning of the festival on the outstanding Mid North Holiday
Coast, an area renowned for it's stunning waterways and natural
features, contributes to its success. As well as the festival's
tuition structure in being able to choose from a smorgasbord of
classes without making a commitment to one class for any length of
time.
To keep the event fresh and cutting-edge Stock assembles a tutoring
faculty of about 20 men each year including about 10 specialists
who've not previously attended. Aside from a comprehensive range of
dance-based workshops the tuition program includes a diverse
sprinkling of other action arts such as stuntwork, aerial wire-work,
physical theatre, sword, commedia mask, street-theatre, yoga, and
experiential workshops such as body-mind centering, kinesiology,
feldenkrais and dance therapy. Stock also points out
the tutors understand the festival is a modest budget event and that
this consequently attracts tutors who are genuinely interested in what
he's trying to achieve through Stamping Ground. These men understand
that they are not just aiming to turn out better dancers at the end of
the intensive fortnight. A major victory of the event is that
each year the tutors and performance directors establish new creative
alliances with each other and return to their home base inspired to
advocate male dance by initiating new training ideas, classes and
projects.
In the context of the current high incidence of young male suicide
Stock's work becomes more important. Watching the young and
mature participants flourish in these classes - many of whom had
never danced or performed before, it is obvious that self esteem is
being built here.
It's a great pity the NSW Ministry for the Arts (Regional Arts)
reject modest funding assistance for the event on the basis of
"insufficient professional development". While
professional development appears to be an intrinsic part of the
festival's work ( just ask the visiting danceworkers such as studio
teachers, choreographers, and the many elite dancers who attend) the
building of confidence and genuine relationships between young boys
seems a far more important criteria for funding assistance in a
society seeking new ways to instil a sense of worth in its youth.
The value of passion in one's endeavours is surely integral to this
lesson and something all the participant's take away from Stamping
Ground. The performance recital with concert pianist, David
(Shine) Helfgott and 50+ men & boys had the audience cheering and
weeping, and was another highlight of Stamping Ground 2001,
underlining the power of passionate commitment and the sharing of
it.
Stamping Ground has been growing every year since its inception in
1997 with 383 participants this year. Stock attributes much of
the event's success to its reputation as a place of innovation and
fun, to "word of mouth" - and the more recent
efficiencies of marketing on the WWW. He predicts the net will
bring a steady increase in participants over the next few years.
Certainly, by any standards the festival would be judged a success.
For example, participants came from as far afield as Canada, New
Zealand, Singapore, Cairns, Perth and Arnhem Land. Not only did
the participants learn more about dance, they learnt about themselves
and how they related to their peers and their teachers. These
are lessons that can be applied to many aspects of their lives.
To dance socially is to interact on an intimate and joyful level.
This joy is celebrated each January in Bellingen at the invitation of
Peter Stock and his admirable team of impressive men teachers.
Stamping Ground 2002 runs from 1st-16th January. Info and
program from PO Box 309 Bellingen 2454 - telephone 02 6655 2472 or
email: [email protected]
--
*****************************************
6th. Annual Stamping Ground Dance Festival
Showcasing Male Dance & the Action Arts
1-16 January 2002
*****************************************
Rivers Ballet Studio
PO Box 309 BELLINGEN NSW 2454 AUSTRALIA
Tel: +61 (02) 6655 2472
[email protected]