Scores
Scores
Dancers and artists from other disciplines who were associated with the Judson Church in the 1960s are considered to have established the experimental vein of concert dance that's now called "postmodern dance". According to dance scholar Sally Banes (2004, et al), dance postmodernism is defined as the rejection of established modern dance ideas about the importance of emotional or psychological expression, the use of codified movement and rules of composition, and communicating meaning clearly to an audience. Part of the early postmodernists' focus was an interrogation of how dances were made, watched, and understood. In addition to including pedestrian and task-based movement as material, they used chance techniques, choreographic scores, improvisation, and other methods that removed their total control over the creation of dances.
In this spirit, here is my "score" for your last discussion board post. This "score" are deliberately left open for your interpretation.
Create a choreographic score that can be performed by anyone. This can take the shape of a written, verbal instructional list, a drawing or map, or anything else that occurs to you. Record the score and upload as your post. You do not have to perform or record your performance.