Intimate Visualities: Intimacy as Social Critique and Radical Possibility in Kyle Abraham and Carrie Schneider's Dance Response Project's I am Sold and Blood on the Leaves

Authors

  • Stephanie Leigh Batiste University of California, Santa Barbara

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.18061/ijsd.v9i0.6400

Keywords:

Black performance, racial gaze, subjectivity, community, selfhood, race, African American

Abstract

Choreographer and dancer Kyle Abraham and photographer and filmmaker Carrie Schneider position intimacy in screen dance as an affective hailing to viewers. The intimate visualities they achieve serve as an opportunity to critically hypothesize ways of being in community and understanding black visual relationships to subjectivity. In both explorations of meaning a production of close relationships to others, to notions of selfhood, and to blackness animate a radical love of others and of self. Their collaborations, the Dance Response Project, subtly, but powerfully tap persistent modes of black being and of theorizing the social new to creative discourse.

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Published

2018-06-19

How to Cite

Batiste, S. L. (2018). Intimate Visualities: Intimacy as Social Critique and Radical Possibility in Kyle Abraham and Carrie Schneider’s Dance Response Project’s I am Sold and Blood on the Leaves. The International Journal of Screendance, 9. https://doi.org/10.18061/ijsd.v9i0.6400

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Section

Articles