BUTOH DANCING (舞踏): AN ARCHAEOLOGY OF BODY

kazuo-ohno

FULL ARTICLE: BUTOH DANCING (舞踏): DISCOVERING EMPTINESS, EMBODIMENT & ENVIRONMENT IN AN ARCHAEOLOGY OF BODY

The mythological quest to express the sublime through the human body can be the great mystery and significance of dance. The grace and emotive gravity of dance inspire us to explore shared resonance and to comprehend our substance through a most intimate artistry. Yet we are ever limited by our human bodies, those endlessly elusive entities that enrobe our vocabularies and begin and end our extraordinary worlds. Butoh dancing (舞踏) is an expression of body that has found relevance outside of its roots in Japan, across cultures and generations.

Originally known only as the “dance of darkness” or “dance of death”, Butoh has evolved into an encompassing expression of every element to be found through the human body. It does not transcend the human form or express a superhuman consciousness, but challenges us to comprehend ourselves through a different mentality. Despite the fairly recent origination of this dance form, it has quickly appealed and demonstrated that it speaks to something common within us, however we may allow our cultural and geographic borders to define us.