Laban, Rudolf

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'''Rudolf (Jean-Baptiste Attila) Laban''', also known as '''Rudolf Von Laban''' (December 15, 1879, – July 1, 1958) was a notable [[central Europe]]an dance artist and theorist, whose work laid the foundations for Laban Movement Analysis, and other developments in the art of dance.  
'''Rudolf (Jean-Baptiste Attila) Laban''', also known as '''Rudolf Von Laban''' (December 15, 1879, [[Pressburg]], [[Austria-Hungary]] (today [[Bratislava]], [[Slovakia]]) - July 1, 1958, [[Weybridge]], [[England]]) was a notable [[central Europe]]an dance artist and theorist, whose work laid the foundations for Laban Movement Analysis, and many more exciting more specific developments.
 
 
 
One of the founders of European Modern Dance, his work was extended through his most celebrated collaborators, Mary Wigman, Kurt Jooss and Sigurd Leeder. Through his work, Laban raised the status of dance as an art form, and his explorations into the theory and practice of dance and movement transformed the nature of dance scholarship.
 
 
 
He established choreology, the discipline of dance analysis, and invented a system of dance notation, now known as Labanotation or Kinetography Laban. Laban was the first person to develop community dance and set out to reform the role of dance education, emphasizing his belief that dance should be made available to everyone.
 
  
 +
One of the founders of European Modern Dance, Laban raised the status of dance as an art form and elevated the reputation of dance scholarship through his inquiry into the theory and practice of dance and movement.
 +
{{toc}}
 +
He established ''choreology'', the research into the art of movement, and invented a system of dance notation, now known as [[Labanotation]] or Kinetography Laban. A credit to the dance world, Laban was the first person to develop community dance and was adamant about dance education reformation. His legacy was rooted in the [[philosophy]] that dance should be made available to everyone.
 +
{{readout||right|250px|Rudolf Laban was a pioneer of [[modern dance]] in Europe}}
 
==Biography==
 
==Biography==
 +
Laban's parents were Austro-[[Hungary|Hungarian]], but his father's family came from France, and his mother's family was from [[England]]. His father was a [[field marshal]] who served as governor of the provinces of [[Bosnia (region)|Bosnia]] and [[Herzegovina]]. Much of his youth was spent time in the towns of [[Sarajevo]] and Mostar, the court circle in [[Vienna]] and the theater life of Bratislava. Taught to be bi-cultural from a tender age, Laban would later apply his [[education]] in both western and eastern [[culture]]s to his movement perspective.
  
Laban's parents were [[Hungary|Hungarian]], but his father's family came from France, and his mother's family was from [[England]]. His father was a [[field marshal]] who served as governor of the provinces of [[Bosnia (region)|Bosnia]] and [[Herzegovina]]. He spent much of his time in the towns of [[Sarajevo]] and Mostar as well as the court circle in [[Vienna]] and the theater life of Bratislava. He was educated in both western and eastern cultures.
+
Laban attended a military school but, after only a short stay, made the difficult decision to reject his father's plan for his life. At 21, he forsook the military and became an artist. He went to study [[architecture]] at the [[Ècoles des Beaux Arts]] in [[Paris]] and began observing the moving form and the space surrounding it. At age 30, he moved to [[Munich]], the art center of [[Germany]]. Spending the summer months at his arts school on Monte Verita, he focused on dramatically impacting ''Bewegungskunst'', the movement arts.
 
 
Rejecting the military career planned for him, he became an artist. Through his studies of architecture at the [[Ècoles des Beaux Arts]] in [[Paris]] he began observing the moving form and the space surrounding it.
 
 
 
At age 30, he moved to [[Munich]], the art center of [[Germany]]. There he focused on revolutionizing Bewegungskunst, the movement arts, spending the summer months at his Arts School on Monte Verita.
 
 
 
Laban established the Choreographic Institute in [[Zürich]] in 1915 and over the next ten years he created 25 Laban schools and choirs for the education of children, amateurs (including men), and professional dancers in [[Latvia]], Zagreb, Paris and Germany, always retaining a 'movement laboratory' for his own research.
 
 
 
One of his greatest contributions to dance was his 1928 publication of ''Kinetographie Laban'', a dance notation system that came to be called [[Labanotation]] and is still used as one of the primary movement notation systems in dance.
 
 
 
By 1929, his 50th birthday celebrations proved that he was at the height of an influential career, not only as a leader of the European modern dance movement, but as a recognized intellectual in the field of dance theater and movement study.
 
 
 
He was appointed director of movement and choreographer to the Prussian State Theatres in Berlin in 1930. In 1934, in a Nazi Germany, he was appointed director of the Deutsche Tanzbühne. Falling foul of Nazism in 1936 while at the height of his career, his name and work was destroyed by the Government Propaganda Ministry.
 
 
 
Some of his disciples believe he took a less active role when the Nazis took power, but in fact he directed major festivals of dance under the funding of Joseph Goebbels' propaganda ministry from 1934-1936. Retrieved December 14, 2007.Laban even published racist viewpoints during this time noting,  "We want to dedicate our means of expression and the articulation of our power to the service of the great tasks of our ''Volk''.  With unswerving clarity our ''Führer'' points the way"<ref>Rudolf Laban, "Meister und Werk in der Tanzkunst," Deutsche Tanzzeitschrift, May 1936, quoted in Horst Koegler, "Vom Ausdruckstanz zum 'Bewegungschor' des deutschen Volkes:
 
Rudolf von Laban," in ''Intellektuellen im Bann des National Sozialismus'', ed. Karl Corino (Hamburg: Hoffmann & Campe, 1980), p. 176.</ref>. Several similar allegations of Laban's attachment to Nazi ideology have been made, for instance that as early as July 1933 he wa removing all non-Aryan pupils from the children's course he was running as a ballet director<ref>Karina, Lilian, and Marion Kant. ''Hitler's dancers: German modern dance and the Third Reich''. New York: Berghahn Books, 2003. ISBN 1571813268</ref>. His falling out with the Nazi regime culminated in 1936 with Goebbel's banning of ''Vom Tauwind und der Neuen Freude'' (Of the Spring Wind and the New Joy) for not furthering the Nazi agenda.<ref>Kew, Carole. "From Weimar Movement Choir to Nazi Community Dance: The Rise and Fall of
 
Rudolf Laban's 'Festkultur'". ''Dance Research: The Journal of the Society for Dance Research'', Vol. 17, No2 (1999): pages 73-96</ref>
 
  
By 1937, he left Germany for England. He joined the [[Kurt Jooss|Jooss]]-[[Sigurd Leeder|Leeder]] Dance School at [[Dartington Hall]] in the county of [[Devon]] where innovative dance was already being taught by other refugees from Germany. During these years, he was assisted in his dance instruction by his close associate [[Lisa Ullmann]]. Their collaboration led to the founding of the Laban Art of Movement Guild (now known as [[The Laban Guild of Movement and Dance]]) in 1945 and the Art of Movement Studio in [[Manchester]] in 1946.  
+
In 1910, he founded what he called a 'dance farm', at which the whole community, after work, produced dances based on their occupational experiences. The 'dance farm' idea sprang from Laban's desire to lead people back to a life in which art grew from their experiences. This would be the springboard for Laban's dance communities where the expression was supremely democratic.
  
At the age of sixty, supported by Ullmann, he started a new phase in his career. He worked in industry, introducing work study methods to increase production through humane means, and greatly influenced the movement education culture in Britain opening. Studying patterns of movement, he observed the time taken to perform tasks in the workplace and the energy used. He tried to provide methods intended to help workers eliminate ''"shadow movements"'' (which he believed wasted energy and time) and to focus instead on constructive movements necessary to the job at hand. After the war, he published a book related to this research entitled ''Effort'' (1947).
+
For the three years before the [[World War I|First World War]], Laban, as well as directing the Lago Maggiore summer festivals at Ascona in [[Switzerland]], directed the movement experience at a self-sustaining art colony there. At these festivals, spectators enjoyed the performance by observing and&mdash;often times&mdash;dancing themselves in the end. These festivals built on Laban's ideology that there was a dance form which was natural for all people; it subsequently led to his movement choir. He was also in search of a dance drama that did not use the formal techniques of mime and classical ballet.  
  
In 1953, the studios moved to a donated country estate in Addlestone. In his last years, he concentrated on movement as behavior, studying the behavioral needs of industrial workers and psychiatric patients. This enabled him to lay the technical basis for what is now the profession of movement and dance therapy, and a basis for the expressive movement training of actors.
+
The outbreak of [[World War I]] halted work on the building of an open-air theater that Laban had begun. He went to live in [[Zürich]] from 1915 to 1918, abandoning the festivals at Ascona and [[Munich]]. During this time, Laban established his own dance school in [[Zurich]] called the Choreographic Institute. And, over the next ten years he created 25 Laban schools and dance choirs for the education of children, novice and professional dancers in [[Latvia]], [[Budapest]], [[Paris]] and [[Hamburg]]. Each Laban school had a 'movement choir' and 'movement laboratory,' integral parts of the school. Each of these schools were named after Laban and was directed by a former Laban master pupil. In his 'choir', the dancers were divided into three main groups in the following way: those having crisp erectness and elevation were called high dancers, those having a swinging heaviness were called middle dancers, those with an impulsive heaviness were called deep dancers. Laban himself was a deep dancer, as were [[Mary Wigman]] and [[Kurt Jooss]], two of his most eminent pupils.
  
Among Laban's pupils were [[Mary Wigman]] and [[Sophie Taeuber-Arp]].
+
His research during these years, more and more stressed the nature and rhythms of space harmonies while he actively worked on a system for dance notation and on 'choreology'. One of his greatest contributions to dance was his 1928 publication of ''Kinetographie Laban'', a dance notation system that became known as [[Labanotation]] and is still used as one of the primary movement notation systems in dance.  
  
==Work and Its Influences==
+
In 1926, Laban's Choreographic Institute was moved to Berlin. He also founded a union for dancers, who at that time had no protection of this sort. A center where standards could be set and where educational and artistic matters could be discussed was a direct outcome of the union. At this time, he also became concerned with questions of copyright for dancers.
  
Laban's ideas were heavily influenced by the social and cultural changes of the time and the contexts that he worked in. The traditional constraints against showing feeling were being questioned, opening the way for a freeing of the feeling body. Laban believed the best way to advocate this freedom was by mirroring it in dance and the movement arts. Freud’s discovery of the psyche, opened a previously closed door and the body’s sexuality need no longer be hidden. The movement arts were thought to be a great medium to express this new freedom, by men and women dancing barefoot and in little clothing.
+
He was appointed director of movement and choreographer to the Prussian State Theatres in Berlin in 1930. In 1934, in [[Nazi Germany]], he was appointed director of the ''Deutsche Tanzbühne''. He directed major festivals of dance under the funding of [[Joseph Goebbels]]' propaganda ministry from 1934-1936. It is alleged that as early as July 1933 Laban began removing all non-Aryan pupils from the children's course he was running as a ballet director.<ref>Lilian Karina and Marion Kant, ''Hitler's Dancers: German Modern Dance and the Third Reich'' (New York: Berghahn Books, 2003, ISBN 1571813268).</ref>
  
In Paris and Munich (1900 - 1914), Rudolf Laban acquired his spiritual attitude and unique value regardless of gender, social status or educational standing. He interpreted this as valuing an individual's own choice of movement and self-initiated vocabularies.
+
However, Laban fell out with the Nazi regime in 1936 with Goebbel's banning of ''Vom Tauwind und der Neuen Freude'' (Of the Spring Wind and the New Joy) for not furthering the Nazi agenda.<ref>Carole Kew, "From Weimar Movement Choir to Nazi Community Dance: The Rise and Fall of Rudolf Laban's 'Festkultur'." Dance Research: The Journal of the Society for Dance Research 17(2) (1999): 73-96.</ref>
  
Rudolf Laban witnessed the response to cultural changes by visual artists such as Klimt, Kockoshka, Shiele, Cezanne, Matisse, Picasso and Kandinsky.
+
In 1937, he left Germany for England. He joined the [[Kurt Jooss|Jooss]]-[[Sigurd Leeder|Leeder]] Dance School at [[Dartington Hall]] in the county of [[Devon]] where innovative dance was already being taught by other refugees from Germany. During these years, he was assisted in his dance instruction by his close associate [[Lisa Ullmann]]. Their collaboration led to the founding of the Laban Art of Movement Guild (now known as [[The Laban Guild of Movement and Dance]]) in 1945 and the Art of Movement Studio in [[Manchester]] in 1946.  
  
He asked himself what was the equivalent of the visual arts revolution for the movement arts? He abandoned the constraints of traditional steps, the reliance on music to inspire and structure dance, the need to mime a story to reveal a body, freed to find its own rhythms, create its own steps and revel in the medium of space. Der Freier Tanz was born.
+
At the age of 60, supported by Ullmann, Laban set out to explore the movement habits of industry workers. He introduced work study methods to increase production through humane means, and greatly influenced the onset of movement education culture in Britain. Studying patterns of movement, he observed the time taken to perform tasks in the workplace and the energy used. He tried to provide methods intended to help workers eliminate superfluous "shadow movements" (which he believed wasted energy and time) and to focus instead on constructive movements necessary to the job at hand. After the war, he published a book related to this research entitled ''Effort'' (1947).  
  
His search for the basic vocabulary of expressive movement identified the basic factors of movement flow, with weight, embodying time and space.
+
In his final years, Laban focused on movement as behavior, studying the behavioral needs of industrial workers and psychiatric patients. This research moved him to lay the technical foundation for what is now the field of movement and dance therapy as well as a basis for the expressive movement training of actors.
  
Rudolf Laban wrote articles and books and formed dance choirs of young male and female performers in his endeavor to introduce a contemporary mass dance culture for urban populations. He created dance works of a celebratory and participatory nature which often dealt in abstract terms with a social and spiritual agenda to educate socially aware dancers.
+
Laban was in poor health most of his life suffering from what would probably be diagnosed today as bi-polar disorder. He was destitute throughout his career, and never owned a home or possessions beyond his working papers. He married twice and fathered nine children, but his family life was virtually non-existent when his career took off in 1919. He developed and relied on a series of apprentices to follow through on his ideas, among them [[Mary Wigman]], [[Sophie Taeuber-Arp]], and [[Marion North]].
  
The First World War put an end to social positioning and this was reflected in theatre art by discarding the traditional positioning of actors. He removed the hierarchical system of ballet companies and replaced it with the democratic ensemble.
+
He continued to teach and do research, exploring the relations between body and spatial tensions until his death in his late 70s in 1958.
  
Rudolf Laban created and toured works for his large and impoverished company. His works explored social themes just as his drama counterparts did (e.g. Brecht), as constructivist visual artists did (e.g. Malevitch) and as caricaturists did (e.g. Grosz).
+
==Work==
 +
Laban's ideas were heavily influenced by the social and cultural changes of the time and the contexts that he worked in. There were certain traditional constraints in the dance world against showing feeling in movement. He challenged this way of thinking and paved the way for a freeing of the "feeling body." Laban believed the best way to advocate this freedom was by applying it to his own artistic movement. [[Freud]]’s theory of the [[psyche]] had also opened a door that had been previously closed because of the controversy associated with it. According to Freud, the body’s natural [[sexuality]] need no longer be hidden. Dance was thought to be an ideal medium to express this new freedom, with men and women dancing barefoot and in little or sheer clothing.
  
Rudolf Laban and his pupil Kurt Jooss made dance into a social force, creating political anti-war ballets and anti-poverty ballets in the 1930's.
+
In Paris and Munich (1900-1914), Laban acquired his spiritual posture&mdash;one that placed value on an individual's own choice of movement. Consequently, he abandoned the limitations of classical movements. The body was thus freed to find its own rhythms, dream up its own steps, and delight in the medium of its own space. Laban searched continually for the basic vocabulary of expressive movement. His intense research in movement analysis yielded four main categories: body, effort, shape and space. In exploring effort or movement dynamics&mdash;the most important category&mdash;the basic factors comprised flow, weight, time and space.
  
 +
Laban created dance works that exhibited celebratory and participatory elements which often displayed abstract concepts and propagated a social and spiritual agenda to educate both the socially aware and unaware.
  
==Death==
+
Committed to his ideology of "dance is universal," he removed the hierarchical system of ballet companies and replaced it with the more democratic ensemble. Together with his pupil Kurt Jooss, he made dance into a social force. His association, under the [[Hitler]] regime notwithstanding, created political anti-war ballets and anti-poverty ballets in the 1930s, ultimately leaving Germany once the tensions between his artistic values and those of the [[Nazism|Nazi regime]] reached the breaking point.
 
 
Rudolf Laban was in poor health most of his life suffering from what we would now call spasmodic manic depression, which appeared during and after excessive creative endeavor and after what he perceived as rejection of his ideas. He was poor throughout his career, and never owned a home or possessions beyond his working papers. He married twice and fathered nine children, although his family life ceased when his career took off in 1919. He developed and relied on a series of apprentices to follow through his ideas, Mary Wigman being the first, Marion North being the last.
 
 
 
He continued to teach and do research, exploring the relations between Body and Spatial tensions until his death in his late seventies in 1958. But his work lives and grows through the work of his followers around the world.
 
  
 
==Legacy==
 
==Legacy==
 +
Laban's theories of choreography and movement served as one of the central foundations of modern European dance. Today, Laban's theories are applied in diverse fields, such as cultural studies, leadership development, non-verbal communication, and others.
 +
In addition to the work on the analysis of movement and his dance experimentations, he was also a proponent of dance for the masses. Toward this end, Laban developed the art of the [[movement choir]], wherein large numbers of people move together in some choreographed manner, which includes personal expression.
  
Laban's theories of choreography and movement served as one of the central foundations of modern European dance. Today, Laban's theories are applied in diverse fields, such as Cultural Studies, Leadership development, Non-Verbal Communication, and others.
+
This aspect of his work was closely related to his personal spiritual beliefs, based on a combination of Victorian [[Theosophy]], [[Sufism]], and popular [[Hermeticism]].
 
+
By 1914, he had joined the [[Ordo Templi Orientis]] and attended their 'non-national' conference in Monte Verita, [[Ascona]] in 1917, where he also set up workshops popularizing his ideas.
In addition to the work on the analysis of movement and his dance experimentations, he was also a proponent of dance for the masses.  Toward this end Laban developed the art of [[movement choir]], wherein large numbers of people move together in some choreographed manner, which include personal expression.
 
 
 
This aspect of his work was closely related to his personal spiritual beliefs, based on a combination of Victorian [[Theosophy]], [[Sufism]] and popular fin de siecle [[Hermeticism]].
 
By 1914, he had joined the [[Ordo Templi Orientis]] and attended their 'non-national' conference
 
in Monte Verita, [[Ascona]] in 1917, where he also set up workshops popularizing his ideas.
 
 
 
Currently, major dance training courses offer Laban work on their curriculum, but he would not deem this his prime legacy. He maintained that he had no method and had no wish to be presented as having one. Rather, he would say, a spirit of inquiry is the main legacy that unites the scattered and diverse body of people who use his work.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
  
 
+
Currently, major dance training courses offer Laban work in their curricula. However, Laban maintained that he had no "method" and had no wish to be presented as having one. His notation system, however, is still the primary movement notation system in dance.
From 1930 to 1934 he was director of the Allied State Theatres in [[Berlin]], Germany. In 1934, he was promoted to director of the Deutsche Tanzbühne, in Nazi Germany<ref>*[http://www.laban.org/php/news.php?id=20 Rudolf Laban] - extensive biography from "official" site. Retrieved December 13, 2007.</ref>.  <ref>Manning, Susan, "Reinterpreting Laban", a review of ''Body-Space-Expression: The Development of Rudolf Laban's Movement and Dance Concepts'' by Vera Maletic. ''Dance Chronicle'', Vol. 11, No. 2 (1988), pp 315-320.</ref>.
 
  
 
==Notes==
 
==Notes==
Line 90: Line 57:
  
 
==References==
 
==References==
 +
* Dörr, Evelyn. ''Rudolf Laban: The Dancer of the Vrystal''. Scarecrow Press, 2008. ISBN 978-0810860070
 +
* Hodgson, John. ''Mastering Movement: The Life and Work of Rudolf Laban''. Routledge, 2001. ISBN 0878300805
 +
* Karina, Lilian, and Marion Kant. ''Hitler's Dancers: German Modern Dance and the Third Reich''. New York: Berghahn Books, 2003. ISBN 1571813268
 +
* Kew, Carole. "From Weimar Movement Choir to Nazi Community Dance: The Rise and Fall of Rudolf Laban's 'Festkultur'." ''Dance Research: The Journal of the Society for Dance Research'' 17(2) (1999).
 +
* Von Laban, Rudolf. ''Laban's Principles of Dance and Movement Notation''. Plays, inc., 1975. ISBN 082380187X
 +
* Von Laban, Rudolf, and Lisa Ullman. ''The Mastery of Movement''. Plays, Inc., 1971. ISBN 0823801233
 +
* Von Laban, Rudolf, and F.C. Lawrence. ''Effort: Economy in Body Movement''. Plays, inc. 1974. ISBN 0823801608
  
 
==External links==
 
==External links==
All links Retrieved December 13, 2007.
+
All links retrieved December 22, 2022.
*[http://www.laban.org/php/news.php?id=20 Rudolf Laban] - Extensive biography from "official" site
+
*[http://www.trinitylaban.ac.uk/about-us/our-history/rudolf-laban Rudolf Laban biography] Trinity Laban Conservatoire of Music and Dance
*[http://www.laban.org/php/news.php?id=11 LABAN] - information about the BA (Hons), MSc, MA and PhD degree programs at the Laban Centre in London
+
*[https://labaninstitute.org/ Laban/Bartenieff Institute of Movement Studies LIMS NYC]  
*[http://www.limsonline.org Laban/Bartenieff Institute of Movement Studies - LIMS NYC]
+
*[https://labaninternational.org/ Laban/Bartenieff and Somatic Studies International]
*[http://laban-courses.org.uk/aboutlaban.html About Laban]website of LInC (Laban International Courses) in UK.
 
*[http://www.labanproject.com/bios.html Short biographies of Laban and some leading Laban practitioners]
 
*[http://www.ickl.org/ring.html Laban Ring]
 
  
 
{{epname|Laban, Rudolf}}
 
{{epname|Laban, Rudolf}}
 
 
[[Category:Biography]]
 
[[Category:Biography]]
 
[[Category:Artists]]
 
[[Category:Artists]]
 
 
 
{{credits|174308576}}
 
{{credits|174308576}}
{{ready}}
 

Latest revision as of 17:40, 22 December 2022

Rudolf (Jean-Baptiste Attila) Laban, also known as Rudolf Von Laban (December 15, 1879, – July 1, 1958) was a notable central European dance artist and theorist, whose work laid the foundations for Laban Movement Analysis, and other developments in the art of dance.

One of the founders of European Modern Dance, Laban raised the status of dance as an art form and elevated the reputation of dance scholarship through his inquiry into the theory and practice of dance and movement.

He established choreology, the research into the art of movement, and invented a system of dance notation, now known as Labanotation or Kinetography Laban. A credit to the dance world, Laban was the first person to develop community dance and was adamant about dance education reformation. His legacy was rooted in the philosophy that dance should be made available to everyone.

Did you know?
Rudolf Laban was a pioneer of modern dance in Europe

Biography

Laban's parents were Austro-Hungarian, but his father's family came from France, and his mother's family was from England. His father was a field marshal who served as governor of the provinces of Bosnia and Herzegovina. Much of his youth was spent time in the towns of Sarajevo and Mostar, the court circle in Vienna and the theater life of Bratislava. Taught to be bi-cultural from a tender age, Laban would later apply his education in both western and eastern cultures to his movement perspective.

Laban attended a military school but, after only a short stay, made the difficult decision to reject his father's plan for his life. At 21, he forsook the military and became an artist. He went to study architecture at the Ècoles des Beaux Arts in Paris and began observing the moving form and the space surrounding it. At age 30, he moved to Munich, the art center of Germany. Spending the summer months at his arts school on Monte Verita, he focused on dramatically impacting Bewegungskunst, the movement arts.

In 1910, he founded what he called a 'dance farm', at which the whole community, after work, produced dances based on their occupational experiences. The 'dance farm' idea sprang from Laban's desire to lead people back to a life in which art grew from their experiences. This would be the springboard for Laban's dance communities where the expression was supremely democratic.

For the three years before the First World War, Laban, as well as directing the Lago Maggiore summer festivals at Ascona in Switzerland, directed the movement experience at a self-sustaining art colony there. At these festivals, spectators enjoyed the performance by observing and—often times—dancing themselves in the end. These festivals built on Laban's ideology that there was a dance form which was natural for all people; it subsequently led to his movement choir. He was also in search of a dance drama that did not use the formal techniques of mime and classical ballet.

The outbreak of World War I halted work on the building of an open-air theater that Laban had begun. He went to live in Zürich from 1915 to 1918, abandoning the festivals at Ascona and Munich. During this time, Laban established his own dance school in Zurich called the Choreographic Institute. And, over the next ten years he created 25 Laban schools and dance choirs for the education of children, novice and professional dancers in Latvia, Budapest, Paris and Hamburg. Each Laban school had a 'movement choir' and 'movement laboratory,' integral parts of the school. Each of these schools were named after Laban and was directed by a former Laban master pupil. In his 'choir', the dancers were divided into three main groups in the following way: those having crisp erectness and elevation were called high dancers, those having a swinging heaviness were called middle dancers, those with an impulsive heaviness were called deep dancers. Laban himself was a deep dancer, as were Mary Wigman and Kurt Jooss, two of his most eminent pupils.

His research during these years, more and more stressed the nature and rhythms of space harmonies while he actively worked on a system for dance notation and on 'choreology'. One of his greatest contributions to dance was his 1928 publication of Kinetographie Laban, a dance notation system that became known as Labanotation and is still used as one of the primary movement notation systems in dance.

In 1926, Laban's Choreographic Institute was moved to Berlin. He also founded a union for dancers, who at that time had no protection of this sort. A center where standards could be set and where educational and artistic matters could be discussed was a direct outcome of the union. At this time, he also became concerned with questions of copyright for dancers.

He was appointed director of movement and choreographer to the Prussian State Theatres in Berlin in 1930. In 1934, in Nazi Germany, he was appointed director of the Deutsche Tanzbühne. He directed major festivals of dance under the funding of Joseph Goebbels' propaganda ministry from 1934-1936. It is alleged that as early as July 1933 Laban began removing all non-Aryan pupils from the children's course he was running as a ballet director.[1]

However, Laban fell out with the Nazi regime in 1936 with Goebbel's banning of Vom Tauwind und der Neuen Freude (Of the Spring Wind and the New Joy) for not furthering the Nazi agenda.[2]

In 1937, he left Germany for England. He joined the Jooss-Leeder Dance School at Dartington Hall in the county of Devon where innovative dance was already being taught by other refugees from Germany. During these years, he was assisted in his dance instruction by his close associate Lisa Ullmann. Their collaboration led to the founding of the Laban Art of Movement Guild (now known as The Laban Guild of Movement and Dance) in 1945 and the Art of Movement Studio in Manchester in 1946.

At the age of 60, supported by Ullmann, Laban set out to explore the movement habits of industry workers. He introduced work study methods to increase production through humane means, and greatly influenced the onset of movement education culture in Britain. Studying patterns of movement, he observed the time taken to perform tasks in the workplace and the energy used. He tried to provide methods intended to help workers eliminate superfluous "shadow movements" (which he believed wasted energy and time) and to focus instead on constructive movements necessary to the job at hand. After the war, he published a book related to this research entitled Effort (1947).

In his final years, Laban focused on movement as behavior, studying the behavioral needs of industrial workers and psychiatric patients. This research moved him to lay the technical foundation for what is now the field of movement and dance therapy as well as a basis for the expressive movement training of actors.

Laban was in poor health most of his life suffering from what would probably be diagnosed today as bi-polar disorder. He was destitute throughout his career, and never owned a home or possessions beyond his working papers. He married twice and fathered nine children, but his family life was virtually non-existent when his career took off in 1919. He developed and relied on a series of apprentices to follow through on his ideas, among them Mary Wigman, Sophie Taeuber-Arp, and Marion North.

He continued to teach and do research, exploring the relations between body and spatial tensions until his death in his late 70s in 1958.

Work

Laban's ideas were heavily influenced by the social and cultural changes of the time and the contexts that he worked in. There were certain traditional constraints in the dance world against showing feeling in movement. He challenged this way of thinking and paved the way for a freeing of the "feeling body." Laban believed the best way to advocate this freedom was by applying it to his own artistic movement. Freud’s theory of the psyche had also opened a door that had been previously closed because of the controversy associated with it. According to Freud, the body’s natural sexuality need no longer be hidden. Dance was thought to be an ideal medium to express this new freedom, with men and women dancing barefoot and in little or sheer clothing.

In Paris and Munich (1900-1914), Laban acquired his spiritual posture—one that placed value on an individual's own choice of movement. Consequently, he abandoned the limitations of classical movements. The body was thus freed to find its own rhythms, dream up its own steps, and delight in the medium of its own space. Laban searched continually for the basic vocabulary of expressive movement. His intense research in movement analysis yielded four main categories: body, effort, shape and space. In exploring effort or movement dynamics—the most important category—the basic factors comprised flow, weight, time and space.

Laban created dance works that exhibited celebratory and participatory elements which often displayed abstract concepts and propagated a social and spiritual agenda to educate both the socially aware and unaware.

Committed to his ideology of "dance is universal," he removed the hierarchical system of ballet companies and replaced it with the more democratic ensemble. Together with his pupil Kurt Jooss, he made dance into a social force. His association, under the Hitler regime notwithstanding, created political anti-war ballets and anti-poverty ballets in the 1930s, ultimately leaving Germany once the tensions between his artistic values and those of the Nazi regime reached the breaking point.

Legacy

Laban's theories of choreography and movement served as one of the central foundations of modern European dance. Today, Laban's theories are applied in diverse fields, such as cultural studies, leadership development, non-verbal communication, and others. In addition to the work on the analysis of movement and his dance experimentations, he was also a proponent of dance for the masses. Toward this end, Laban developed the art of the movement choir, wherein large numbers of people move together in some choreographed manner, which includes personal expression.

This aspect of his work was closely related to his personal spiritual beliefs, based on a combination of Victorian Theosophy, Sufism, and popular Hermeticism. By 1914, he had joined the Ordo Templi Orientis and attended their 'non-national' conference in Monte Verita, Ascona in 1917, where he also set up workshops popularizing his ideas.

Currently, major dance training courses offer Laban work in their curricula. However, Laban maintained that he had no "method" and had no wish to be presented as having one. His notation system, however, is still the primary movement notation system in dance.

Notes

  1. Lilian Karina and Marion Kant, Hitler's Dancers: German Modern Dance and the Third Reich (New York: Berghahn Books, 2003, ISBN 1571813268).
  2. Carole Kew, "From Weimar Movement Choir to Nazi Community Dance: The Rise and Fall of Rudolf Laban's 'Festkultur'." Dance Research: The Journal of the Society for Dance Research 17(2) (1999): 73-96.

References
ISBN links support NWE through referral fees

  • Dörr, Evelyn. Rudolf Laban: The Dancer of the Vrystal. Scarecrow Press, 2008. ISBN 978-0810860070
  • Hodgson, John. Mastering Movement: The Life and Work of Rudolf Laban. Routledge, 2001. ISBN 0878300805
  • Karina, Lilian, and Marion Kant. Hitler's Dancers: German Modern Dance and the Third Reich. New York: Berghahn Books, 2003. ISBN 1571813268
  • Kew, Carole. "From Weimar Movement Choir to Nazi Community Dance: The Rise and Fall of Rudolf Laban's 'Festkultur'." Dance Research: The Journal of the Society for Dance Research 17(2) (1999).
  • Von Laban, Rudolf. Laban's Principles of Dance and Movement Notation. Plays, inc., 1975. ISBN 082380187X
  • Von Laban, Rudolf, and Lisa Ullman. The Mastery of Movement. Plays, Inc., 1971. ISBN 0823801233
  • Von Laban, Rudolf, and F.C. Lawrence. Effort: Economy in Body Movement. Plays, inc. 1974. ISBN 0823801608

External links

All links retrieved December 22, 2022.

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