Dr Fusako Innami fusako.innami@durham.ac.uk
Associate Professor
Falling Dance: Hijikata’s Recomposition of the Body via Bacon
Innami, Fusako
Authors
Abstract
The themes of transformation, indefinite form, and disintegration haunt the work of many post-World War II artists, who had witnessed the animality of human beings as well as the depths to which human beings can fall in wartime. This paper looks at falling as an artistic and phenomenological practice of the body in the work of the Japanese butoh dancer Tatsumi Hijikata, whose notations refer in places to the work of the Irish-born British painter Francis Bacon and offer new bodily lexicons with which to graph the movement of falling. Drawing explicitly on Bacon and using cross-media collage to produce movement, a body in Hijikata could be deformed or made formless onto the ground. In falling, inhabiting and simultaneously vacating oneself, the body makes contact with a surface and leaves or exteriorizes a graphic mark, visual, and performative, in its wake. This attention to falling was part of an ongoing process at the rise of phenomenological boom in postwar Japan by which artists attempted to understand and recompose the kind of body that could inhabit the nuclear age.
Citation
Innami, F. (2021). Falling Dance: Hijikata’s Recomposition of the Body via Bacon. The Senses and Society, 16(1), 1-15. https://doi.org/10.1080/17458927.2021.1874142
Journal Article Type | Article |
---|---|
Acceptance Date | Oct 22, 2019 |
Online Publication Date | Mar 12, 2021 |
Publication Date | 2021 |
Deposit Date | Dec 13, 2019 |
Publicly Available Date | Jun 28, 2021 |
Journal | The Senses and Society |
Print ISSN | 1745-8927 |
Electronic ISSN | 1745-8935 |
Publisher | Taylor and Francis Group |
Peer Reviewed | Peer Reviewed |
Volume | 16 |
Issue | 1 |
Pages | 1-15 |
DOI | https://doi.org/10.1080/17458927.2021.1874142 |
Public URL | https://durham-repository.worktribe.com/output/1275284 |
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© 2021 The Author(s). Published by Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group.
This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/), which permits non-commercial re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited, and is not altered, transformed, or built upon in any way.
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