Transcribe
Translate
I.C. Notebooks 1
Notes B
More information
digital collection
archival collection guide
transcription tips
and he liked Barbara Streisand. Bobbie said she left Ballet at the Boston Conservatory because she didn't have enough academics. I have her some people to read and book on Isadora Duncan she inside found a clue to knowing development of seeing at A Glance stating once that it was not important for the little girls to do her art but to know their own bodies and what they do with those bodies everyday. She hated the ballet. I learned most about dance from Jerome Robbins whose eyes light. "Where a hundred little girls shall be trained in my art, which they in turn will better. In this school I shall not teach the children to imitate my movements, but shall teach them to make their own.... I shall help them to develop those movements which are natural to them. And so I say it is the duty of the dance of the Future to give first to the young artists who come to its door for instructions freer and [more], beautiful bodies -- and to instruct them in movements that are in full harmony with nature .... The dancer of the Future will be one whose body and soul have grown harmoniously together that the language of the soul will become the movement of the body..." She was inspired no doubt about it. Stein: Seen once, seen once, seen once, SEEN. Her movement is important. It proves there's nothing to teach. Kenneth says Mrs. Langer: "The proof of a pudding is in the eating, and I submit that Cassirer's pudding is good, but the recipe is not on the box..." "That cryptic turn of phrase blew my mind. It is not yet time to talk, but if there's comes to be being such as time the subject of the discourse will be the prophetic message in Cassirer which Mrs. Langer hears: but the telling of how there came to be doing, that to be demonstrated, not told." Kenneth King I think I see a glimpse of a way out of the sociological labor -- with it not with anything I can say about the way Rick drills the kids having an impediment sensing an orgin can [?] continue to block .
Saving...
prev
next
and he liked Barbara Streisand. Bobbie said she left Ballet at the Boston Conservatory because she didn't have enough academics. I have her some people to read and book on Isadora Duncan she inside found a clue to knowing development of seeing at A Glance stating once that it was not important for the little girls to do her art but to know their own bodies and what they do with those bodies everyday. She hated the ballet. I learned most about dance from Jerome Robbins whose eyes light. "Where a hundred little girls shall be trained in my art, which they in turn will better. In this school I shall not teach the children to imitate my movements, but shall teach them to make their own.... I shall help them to develop those movements which are natural to them. And so I say it is the duty of the dance of the Future to give first to the young artists who come to its door for instructions freer and [more], beautiful bodies -- and to instruct them in movements that are in full harmony with nature .... The dancer of the Future will be one whose body and soul have grown harmoniously together that the language of the soul will become the movement of the body..." She was inspired no doubt about it. Stein: Seen once, seen once, seen once, SEEN. Her movement is important. It proves there's nothing to teach. Kenneth says Mrs. Langer: "The proof of a pudding is in the eating, and I submit that Cassirer's pudding is good, but the recipe is not on the box..." "That cryptic turn of phrase blew my mind. It is not yet time to talk, but if there's comes to be being such as time the subject of the discourse will be the prophetic message in Cassirer which Mrs. Langer hears: but the telling of how there came to be doing, that to be demonstrated, not told." Kenneth King I think I see a glimpse of a way out of the sociological labor -- with it not with anything I can say about the way Rick drills the kids having an impediment sensing an orgin can [?] continue to block .
Campus Culture
sidebar