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Dive into the research topics where Nigel Stewart is active.

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Featured researches published by Nigel Stewart.


Performance Research | 2010

Dancing the Face of Place: Environmental dance and eco-phenomenology

Nigel Stewart

This article explores how environmental dance can generate ecological knowledge and deepen environmental values by developing human kinaesthetic consciousness of non-human nature. Furthermore, the article indicates how eco-phenomenology provides the best means of grasping environmental dance as an axiological praxis.


Archive | 2016

Flickering photology : turning bodies and textures of light

Nigel Stewart

This chapter explores the first part of Russell Maliphant’s Afterlight , a highly acclaimed solo for Daniel Proietto with lighting by Michael Hulls, animation by Jan Urbanowski and costumes by Stevie Stewart, which premiered at the In the Spirit of Diaghilev festival at Sadler’s Wells, London, in 2009. Taking note of the mesmerising effects created on Proietto’s body as he turned in circles and spirals under Urbanowski’s expanding and shrinking nocturnal imagery, the chapter considers the ways in which Afterlight reflects early twentieth-century experiments with light and colour in the paintings of Degas and the movement studies of Muybridge and others. Furthermore, the chapter takes Afterlight as a postmodern looking-glass through which we can glimpse early modern dance works of the same period, particularly those by Nijinsky and Fuller, that transfigure the human form through the play of light on bodies that turn in stage space. The chapter argues that Afterlight creates a flickering ‘photology’ or knowledge of light in which there is not only a relay from Maliphant’s work to optical experiments in early modern dance and visual art, but also a relay from those practices to phenomenological theory, especially as that has been developed by Merleau-Ponty and Levinas. This theory provides an alternative to the hegemonic Western philosophical and scientific tradition in which gross material things are ‘illuminated’ by the ‘light’ of transcendent human reason. Afterlight offers an after light, or erotic light, in which the dancing body at first coils into consciousness of itself, but then unfolds to trace and caress, but never grasp, the textures of light of an elemental other that is non-possessable and indeterminable.


Archive | 2005

Performing Nature: Explorations in Ecology and the Arts.

Nigel Stewart; Gabriella Giannachi


Performance Research | 1998

Re—Languaging the Body: Phenomenological Description and the Dance Image

Nigel Stewart


Archive | 2005

Introduction: spectacle, world, environment, void.

Nigel Stewart


Archive | 2016

The Dusk Wood

Nigel Stewart; Ellen Jeffrey; Lisa Whistlecroft; Louise Ann Wilson; Chris Whitwood; Katie Duxbury


Archive | 2015

Spectacle, world, environment, void:understanding nature through rural site-specific dance

Nigel Stewart


Archive | 2014

The Gathering/Yr Helfa

Nigel Stewart; Louise Ann Wilson; Gillian Clarke; John Hardy


Archive | 2014

Still Life Redux

Nigel Stewart; Louise Ann Wilson


Archive | 2013

Dance and the event:John Jasperse’s Giant empty and The disclosure of being

Nigel Stewart

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