Formalist then feminine: the New York School
Four American women, Marcia Siegel, Deborah Jowitt,
Arlene Croce and Nancy Goldner, are writers who became dance critics partly by accident
and partly by design and who came of age as dance critics during the ‘heyday of
formalism’ in New York.(1) The ‘heyday’, from 1965 to 1985, gathered momentum
as a ‘golden age’ of choreography (as Croce coined it). In responding to the
age, these critics were
Arlene Croce pointed out in an essay on Edwin Denby
in Sight Lines that ‘nothing is harder to spot than the unconscious
patterns that connect the world of contemporaries’. Perhaps these
individualistic critics of such distinction feel a little uncomfortable with
the idea of being labelled as a school. Martin Esslin gives me a little boost
of courage here, though. When discussing a similar objective in theatre
criticism in his work, Anatomy of Drama, he argues:
a descriptive
term applied post factum may be useful even if the people to whom it is applied
are unaware of its existence and meaning, provided that such a term is not
taken as totally defining the works to which it is applied, but merely as
descriptive of certain features which they have in common and which are basic
to them.
I cannot help but be fascinated with the parallel
that exists between this group of contemporary American women writers who were
the pioneers of a new dance criticism and the women choreographers who
pioneered the American modern dance: Duncan, Humphrey, St Denis, Graham. Both
groups created new languages and approaches for grappling with their
disciplines - pushing the subject of dance into new and enduring dimensions. In
describing these critics as pioneers, I am reminded of Croce’s comments:
We are past
the era - largely male dominated – of happenings and into a phase of planned
activity whose most prominent organisers are women like Rainer, Twyla Tharp,
and Deborah Hay. Rainer’s compulsive logic is a trait common to all three, as
it is a trait of most women artists. (I threw out my copy of The Second Sex
long ago or I’d make you a list, saying how the Brontës, Steins, and Woolfs
outnumber the Austens, Cathers and George Eliots in any competition between
innovative and traditional. And in American dance, the roll call, from Loïe
Fuller to Isadora and onward, is virtually all-women and all-pioneer).(3)
These writers, more than any other contemporary
dance critic published, expanded our notions and vocabulary of dance with such
persistence that they demanded we pay attention to choreographic text with the
same willingness and imagination we might to other forms of literature. There
was among these critics a striking familiarity with the American dance scene -
a kind of in house quality which, rather than being exclusive in tune, infected
the reader with its enthusiasm and intimate knowledge of the ‘family tree’ of
American dance. These critics had an abundancy of dance to view, a willingness
to look for the new, and an alertness in recognising new aspects of a
tradition or heritage. They renewed their response to dance again and again,
infusing their ‘critical repertory’, as Croce coined it, in the same way that a
dancer must find out something for the first time every time s/he performs. In
the spirit of ‘historian’ I am impressed by the shape and texture of an era
brought to life by their writings and by the historical significance of the
writing itself, in introducing and refining a revolution in dance in print.
Siegel states in The Shapes of Change ‘When he (Balanchine) repeats an
arabesque or a battement twelve different ways he’s not exposing his own lack
of ideas but the arabesque’s plenitude of them.’ This comment reflects the
spirit of the
In identifying a school I am responding to the
values and characteristics common to a group of critics who share a particular dance
environment and who influence our perception of dance in a particular way.
‘Walk into a museum gallery for the first time,’ says George Jackson, and
before you can look at any of the art properly, chances are that you’ll become
aware of style. By style I mean the things that advertise authorship as well as
a point of view, a hierarchy of values, the set of assumptions that define the
universe of a work, or a corpus, or an entire school.”(4)
All four women discussed here formed their critical
careers and reputations in New York, largely through their writings in The New
Yorker (Croce), The Nation and The Christian Science Monitor (Goldner), The
Hudson Review and Soho Weekly News (Siegel) and The Village Voice (Jowitt).
Many other publications have and do serve as outlets for their writings and
readers here will be familiar with their published collections or other
critical works.
Croce came to dance criticism via film criticism
and a wide experience of writing for publications of the highest literary
standards; Goldner arrived at the job having initially trained with the School
of American Ballet, and after work as an editor with several publishing houses;
Siegel was first a news reporter and then studied Movement Analysis at the
Laban Institute, and Jowitt had a long standing career as a choreographer and
performer in dance and theatre.
Via all these routes and investigative processes,
this pas de quatre of critics possesses signature characteristics in their
response to dance. To be expediently glib, one could say that Croce responds to
‘the power of the foot’, Siegel to body shape and movement qualities, Jowitt to
the kinaesthetic sense of movement phrases, and Goldner to the mysteries of a
dance’s effects.
Among them the dance work is perceived as being a
whole history of performances and not just the single performance event. In Choreographing
History, Susan Leigh Foster comments that traditional dance studies ‘have
privileged the thrill of the vanished performance over the enduring impact of
the choreographic intent’. While the prime mover status of description in the
writings of the New York School was prompted by vanishing performance, the
collective significance of this material is, when examined, located in
choreography. Goldner goes so far as to say that ‘the choreography of the time
has taught us to see in a particular way’(5). This idea of choreography as art
object is clarified, elucidated and morally protected throughout their
writings. Croce, the former of tastes and opinions and standards often seems to
want to ‘save’ dance from its fans - those who enjoy dance as ‘undifferentiated
sensation’. Siegel pleads with dancers not to ‘muck around with their
posterity’. Jowitt would like audiences to get away from the idea of the immediate
performance as the work, and care more about the dance as an enduring entity.(6)
Goldner investigates the work for its permanent values - beyond cast changes
and the erosions or alterations of time.
In their own ways these critics see their task in
part as an ‘aesthetic conscience’ for the art of dance. As such, they actively
distinguish through active language. To understand the aesthetic assumptions
evident in the writings of these critics it is of course necessary to
understand something about the kind of dance they viewed - what kind of dance
environment they functioned in during those prolific years. For criticism,
however much a creative act in itself, can only exist as part of the complete
cycle of art: creation - viewing - response. That some criticism has the
capacity to secure a work of art in one’s imagination and serve as a source of
renewed intellectual and emotional animation speaks for both the creation and
the creative response. All four critics have had a lot to say about the
critical history of dance in
The legacy of the
When the
figure in white runs in tiny steps from one cluster of women to another, each
group responds to her gesture with one of its own, and these terse gestures
bloom, out of stillness as icons suggesting crowning, praying, rocking a
cradle. spreading a ritual meal... the piano strikes single chords, while the
oboe sustains a high wail. On an abrupt chord, the woman stretches out her
arms, and the others begin to circle her in huge, racking leaps, their bodies
bent forward. Even when the leaps accelerate and scale down into runs the
effect is terrifying.(6)
Such writing met dance on its own terms and found
the motivation for language within the movement. Croce too, whose dance
criticism was more inclined towards complex enchaînements of references and
issues, adopted a ‘story telling’ mode in her descriptive writing. Capturing
the sassy colloquial, irreverent style of Tharp in a 1971 performance of Eight
Jelly Rolls, she observed:
Rudner falls
down dead once, twice... It’s Twyla’s turn and she’s loaded: sick, filthy,
drunk. She’s flat on her nose and can ‘t get up. She’s up and off balance, legs
spiralling, knees sinking, keeling and careening the length of the stage.(7)
These descriptions bring the image into action,
select essential characteristics, and tell us how they perform as the matrix of
the dance. In one of her ‘Cunningham Diaries’ in The Bennington Review, Goldner
described Cunningham’s movement traits with phrases like ‘tendus that don’t
quite hit their destination’, ‘steps that unfold like a quick succession of
flash cards’, and ‘elaborate in content and tonally austere’. Her writing,
gorgeously economical while charged with action, reflected a dialogue with the
dance informed by her fluency in the language of this choreographer. The ‘pen
pushing bodies’ (to use Susan Leigh Foster’s term) of the actively seeing and
writing critics discussed here are described in order to see more clearly;
described as a methodology for clarifying that which endures. The frequent use
of the phrase ‘the curtain rises’ in their reviews framed a picture for the
reader of the movement on the choreographic canvas. In a review of Balanchine’s
Stravinsky Violin Concerto, included in Nancy Reynold’s collection,
Repertory in Review, Nancy Goldner began:
Tin curtain
rises and the music begins. Mazzo and group stand already in stage center, but
do not move a muscle, while Stravinsky is off and running. You sit poised, then
anxious: when will they begin to dance to music that begs for dancing?
What followed immediately was a vivid description
of the movement in chronological order. Likewise, Jowitt’s review of
Balanchine’s Vienna Waltzes, in her collection, The Dance in Mind,
began: ‘The curtain goes up and we see a couple arm in arm, wandering through a
glade’. And in Going To The Dance, Croce launched into a detailed
descriptive account of Paul Taylor’s Runes with the opening, ‘The
curtain rises on a dark stage, its horizon lit by a full moon’. This framing
device assumed a ritualistic quality of preparation for the act of seeing and
of gathering physical evidence for the dance’s expressive effects. The other
most frequently used phrase, ‘the dance is about’ acted as a narrative,
storytelling device. The critics were saying, in essence, ‘this is a story
about a dance and it goes like this’. What we see, they told us, is a dance
about a dance and to get to the expressive core - the heart of the story - you
must believe what you see. ‘The dance is about’ framed the issue of
style-as-meaning. Goldner wrote in The Nation of Tharp’s As Time Goes
By that ‘it is about the elements intrinsic to dance composition’. Jowitt,
writing about the same ballet in The New York Times, said, ‘If the dances look
improvised at times, it’s because the movement - which is what Tharp’s dances
are all about - looks so complex, so spontaneous, that you can hardly believe
that someone taught it to someone else’. In At The Vanishing Point,
Siegel wrote that Tharp’s Deuce Coupe is about ‘the flow and immediacy
of crowds as much as it’s about individuals doing their thing in crowds’. The
unyieldingly formalist nature of these statements brings to mind Cunningham’s
response to the question of what one of his dances was ‘about’ with the quip
‘it’s about forty-five minutes long’.
The preparatory phrase ‘the curtain rises’ and the
formally narrative phrase ‘the dance is about’ were most fruitfully operative
for these critics when writing about the choreographers who most challenged and
inspired them, the choreographers they often referred to as classicists.
Classicists such as Taylor, Tharp, Cunningham, Balanchine and Ashton, reflected
a purity of means in their dance-making that enabled the
In their attentiveness to the impact of innovation
in the choreography of their admired classicists, these critics shared also a
characteristic alertness to the new and set about contextualising its place in
the cultural and historical agendas of current and past dance they viewed.
Croce’s first encounter with the work of Twyla Tharp in 1969 is a near perfect
example of a critic rising to the occasion of the new and finding a language to
articulate the nature of the challenge. It is no surprise that Croce referred
here to Balanchine and Cunningham as a means of historicising Tharp’s impact:
Twyla Tharp is
the first of the new generation of avant-garde choreographers to develop a
choreographic style ordered entirely by considerations of time and space...
Watching a piece like Group Activities, one has the feeling of having
emerged on the other side of some barrier to perception... you grasp
immediately its difficulty and then its beauty of precision. The animation is
so intense, the stop and go action of the piece so unpredictable, that one
hangs on in quasi-dramatic suspense. The unforeseen logic of these calculations
has a peculiar relation to the imagery of abstract ballet, they look
brilliantly irrational to the eye. I know only two other choreographers who
give the same effect, and they’re Mr B and Merce.(8)
The ballets of Twyla Tharp provide excellent
examples of these critics’ alertness to the new because she was one of the
major discoveries in their generation of dance viewing in much the same way as
Balanchine was for Denby. Writing about Tharp’s Deuce Coupe, Siegel
observed that it ‘demands that the audience overhaul its habitual way of
looking at ballet’. And when Croce confronted Tharp’s As Time Goes By in
1973, she appraised the value of the work as ‘moving toward a new quality of
plain speech in classical choreography’ and being ‘on the verge of creating a
new style, a new humanity, for classical ballet dancers’.(9)
The prospect of structural constraint as a
liberating, exhilarating, even romantic product of classicism was very often an
integral part of the experience of the new on the part of these critics. While
they sought a purity of means they were also ‘seduced’ by their responsiveness
to innovation. Their school reflects, like the American culture, the political
tensions bridging the puritanical and the decadent - ‘the American reformative
conscience in action’ as Croce said of Graham’s early work - and the process of
elaboration. One the one hand, the less-is-more aesthetic, instigated by
Balanchine’s richly ‘lean’ choreography constantly led these critics to voice a
reverence for the power and integrity of classicism while on the other hand,
through layer upon layer of descriptive scrutiny, they elaborated on its
innovative significance.
These critics were highly conscious of themselves
as women writers and their critical point of view about dance often revealed a
sympathy with the woman-as-creator, strong feelings about how women are
portrayed in dance and how choreographers express man-woman relationships. In
their view these relationships reveal the humanity of the choreographer and in
addressing this issue there was often a highly-charged moral tone in their
writing, operating as a kind of ‘guardianship of taste’ and establishing a
criteria of morality. Ashton, Balanchine and Feld ballets, for instance, were
often experienced by them as being ‘about’ love, by virtue of a timeless
courtly relationship between choreographic restraint and codes of etiquette in
the handling of men and women. In a critique on Cunningham dancing, by Nancy
Goldner in The Bennington Review, and in a tone strikingly similar to Croce’s
describing Balanchine, she said:
In many
instances the delicate pillars of support he offers are more often than not
decorative; it’s the idea of support, rather than the physical need of it, that
seems paramount. That’s why, I think, Cunningham ‘s duets have such powerful
strains of love in them... When Cunningham partners... he becomes the woman’s
guardian angle, touching her not only to balance her but as though to commend
her to our attention.
This romantic response to the technical and
metaphorical working of the pas de deux is something that all four critics examined
aesthetically, poetically and politically. In discussing the theatre of Martha
Graham, for example, Croce distinguished between the treatment of women in the
hands of a pioneering modern dance choreographer, and the classical ballet
where men dominate as choreographers:
But the tragic
heroine is also a triumphant heroine. Implicit in the rigor of her
self-discipline is the certainty of her reward - self discovery. No Graham
heroine dies unilluminated. The difference between her and the fated heroines
of nineteenth century ballet - a Giselle or an Odette - is that the Graham
heroine possesses, herself, the key to her mystery. She does not entrust it to
the hero; she herself must unlock the inner door.”(10)
Siegel, in a robust piece on gender in dance
approached the issue in this way:
In dance as
well as life [it] hasn’t worked out yet... Today’s leading men seemingly don’t need
any dimension or character nor do the women who oppress them. .. there isn’t
simple warfare between men and women. The message goes beyond sexual
partisanship... Their sex determines their role in society and their role in
the dance. The man is always either a stud or a sensitive ambiguity. The woman
is always a calculating bitch or a clinging vine.’(11)
There was a striking unity of expression regarding
‘anti female’ traits in choreography - that which ‘humiliates’ the dancers or
sexually abuses women. Compare some of their writings on Béjart and MacMillan
in this respect. On MacMillan’s Isadora, Manon, and Gloria, Croce
had this to say:
There are so
many floor-slamming, whizbang adagios, with so many acrobatic crotch held
lifts, that they cancel each other out... The only other key MacMillan composes
in-rapture - is the same as violence, but with heads thrown back is ecstasy... sex
is the ruling metaphor; it’s what lends urgency and fluency to his dance
language... In its continual self investigation, its kneading and twisting and
joining of body shapes and body parts, it reaches a kind of creative delirium -
a mystique of physique.(12)
And in a piece called ‘Knocking About the Jungle’
in The Dance in Mind, Jowitt described exactly what she saw with rather
alarming results:
The Wild Boy
is a joyride for sadists, disguised as a moral tale about corruption and the
loss of innocence. Here’s how it goes: In a vine-draped jungle we see a slinky
woman (Lise Houlton) preening... On come two violent, ragged men (Kevin
McKenzie and Brian Adams). They share her. That is, one holds her foot and the
other her armpits while they twist her around lasciviously... MacMïllan’s sense
of theatre seems to have left him at the scent of this ballet. While he can
express the men’s boisterous camaraderie through adroit close canon, the sex
duet starts at fever pitch and stays there. I think that audiences can and
should be shocked by violence sometimes; but I don’t like being stroked by it.
1f the violent sexual behaviour of men toward women
is what the critics find distasteful in MacMillan, it is the anti-female
attitude described through unisexuality and homosexuality in Béjart’s work that
offends equally. ‘Béjart’s soft, sensuous movement and heavy-handed kitsch may
be the new turn on,’ said Siegel in At The Vanishing Point, ‘but they
mask a virulent anti-feminism and a re-routed sexuality that seem to be his
real message.’(13)
In the moral tone that infiltrated such writing,
‘villains and heroes’ (as George Jackson coined it) were constructed and
choreography itself was scrutinised within the context of this moral order.
Quite apart from their resistance to choreography which literally ‘manhandled’
women in technically unsavoury ways, ‘hybrid’ choreography was also at issue.
The hybrid species of choreography, in its attempt to ‘make more’ was, in the
view of these critics, merely impoverished rather than innovative. Look at the
difference in their tone when describing Tharp as a ground-breaking
choreographer in contrast to their response to European neoexpressionist
choreographers as sensationalist borrowers. The classicisms of Balanchine,
Ashton, Taylor, Cunningham and Tharp were embraced for possessing the greater aesthetic
value than the mannerisms, symbolisms and ritualisms of choreographers like
Béjart, MacMillan, Van Dantzig, Van Manen and others. Their identification of
American dance as distinct from European theatricalities was charged with
nothing less than patriotic territorialism. Siegel, who of all the critics
under discussion has been perhaps the most concerned to define American dance
style and record its heritage, had this to say about the Royal Ballet’s
performance in the Metropolitan Opera House in 1969:
If Ashton’s Jazz
Calendar is jazz, we might as well call Paul Whiteman a soul brother. And
if you are as steeped in the classical tradition as the Royal Ballet, I can see
how you would think that Roland Petit’s titchy, ugly, going-nowhere movement
for Pelleas and Melisande is modern. We in America know belter, to the
everlasting credit of our own choreographers...’(14)
Morality, romance, codes of behaviour, restraint,
purity and innovation were central concepts in the major choreographic
influences they guarded, documented and claimed for an American dance identity.
As early as 1967, Croce was wary of a ‘misguided’
movement in dance which she and the other critics of the New York School saw
largely as a misunderstanding and misapplication of the territory they claimed
as American pure dance or what Croce called ‘dance totalism’:
The ideal is
absolute expression, dancing for its own sake - what might be called dance
totalism; and it has become a major international trend... never was there so
ill-managed a renaissance, means have been imitated, but meaning has been
confounded... In its struggle to avoid literalism, the younger generation of
ballet choreographers has plunged into the opposite kind of doctrinal snare to
totalism. Anything less than total dance metaphor seems proscribed. (5)
Goldner, too, had similar thoughts on the topic she
described as the ‘Americanisation of European choreography’ which, in her
opinion, was inaccurate and inappropriate. Writing in The Nation on May
8, 1972, she said: ‘When Americans decided to purify dance of literal meaning,
they did not mean for it to be meaningless’. And another direct hit by Siegel
the following year when discussing the Royal Ballet’s season at the Met to
honour Ashton’s retirement went:
Van Dantzig is
not a modern-dance choreographer since he only borrows Martha Grahamisms and
glues them to the balletic body. But his attempt to amalgamate the two styles
results in pomposity beyond all tolerating...(16)
The tone of these writings was militant in its ‘security
control’ of what constitutes American-blooded dance innovation and dance purity.
With both critical and political territorialism, pure dance was claimed
as American, misconstrued pure dance alien (foreign) and alienating, resulting
in not just the offensive dance totalism but worse, the cheap, titillating
hybrid that blurred the boundaries between invention and trend, eclecticism and
erosion. Their identification and preservation of American dance values was
shadowed by notions of cultural morality, classicism by behavioural morality,
and choreography by gender morality.
The current dance era is in a state of transition.
Some suggest we are in a post-dance boom and that the values and contributions
of the New York critics cited were particular only to their age - the golden
age now at an end. But the notion of a post-dance boom era helps frame the New
York School within a history that possesses a valuable legacy for the next
generation. Currently, the various media and representations of performance
artists, world dance, and physical theatre may be setting the philosophical and
aesthetic agenda. And these forms invite, too, the challenge of rigorously
imaginative and intellectually passionate discourse.
In an era that produced the choreographic
distinction and genius of Balanchine, Graham, Cunningham, Taylor, Tharp and
others, surely we can ask. ‘was this not enough?’ Perhaps the capacity of these
critics for absorbing the new, for seeking a language with which to take on the
new as history-in-the making, resulted in an appetite for the next generation’s
innovations. The New York School seized upon a large territory of themes,
issues and approaches in dance criticism and was pioneered them rigorously
bringing the discipline to a new level of insight and intellectual and sensual
stimulation. The critics’ subjectivity - passionate, romantic and sometimes
excessive - infused the discipline of dance criticism with a new humanity.
Their collective consciousness of dance history put dance criticism into a much
more political arena. Their approaches to description offered criticism a
technique for rendering the moment and grappling with the new. As women, they
responded to notions of style, etiquette, morality and men-women relationships
in choreography with a sense of romanticism and yet a rigorous pursuit of the
formal. Their analytical insights shifted dance criticism into a more rigorous
contextual arena.
This school of critics defined, and claimed for
their own, the American classicists of choreography who challenged all of the
above senses in them, and who demarcated a dear lineage in the American dance.
Through the pioneering efforts of this school - teachers, critical historians,
chroniclers, essayists, storytellers and prophets, the golden age of dance
cross-fades with a golden age of dance criticism. And the relevance of dance in
our culture becomes clearer as the writing reveals it.
Notes
1. Roger
Copeland, ‘Dance Criticism and the Descriptive Bias’, Dance Theatre Journal,
v. 10, No. 2, 1980, p 27.
2. Deborah
Jowitt and Marcia Siegel share continuous dialogue about their work. Apart from
their communication, all four critics emphasised in numerous discussions with
me that they worked almost entirely in isolation of each other.
3. Arlene
Croce, ‘The Avant-Garde on Broadway’, Afterimages, p340.
4. George
Jackson, ‘Requirements for a Book about Balanchine’, Washington Dance Review,
Winter 1988.
5. Nancy
Goldner, interview, September 1985, New York City.
6. Deborah
Jowitt, The Village Voice, May 30, 1977.
7. Arlene
Croce, ‘Twyla Tharp’s Red Hot Peppers’, Afterimages pp 393-94
8. Arlene
Croce, ‘The Avant-Garde on Broadway’, Afterimages.
9. Arlene
Croce, ‘Look What’s Going On’, Afterimages, pp 132-33.
10. Arlene
Croce, ‘The Blue Glass Goblet and After’, Afterimages, p53.
11. Marcia
Siegel, ‘Siegfried’s Revenge’, Watching the Dance Go By, pp 103-111.
12. Arlene
Croce, ‘Love’s Body’, Going to the Dance, pp 392-96.
13. Marcia
Siegel, ‘I Can’t Hear the Music’, At the Vanishing Point, p 133.
14. Marcia
Siegel, ‘Every Inch A King’, At the Vanishing Point, pp 48-50.
15. Arlene
Croce, ‘Ballets Without Choreography’, Afterimages, p 320.
16. Marcia
Siegel, ‘Ballet: The Uncertain Establishment’, At the Vanishing Point, p
52.