ABSTRACT

The Motional Improvisation of Al Wunder takes readers on a journey through the life history, creative genealogies and unique working processes of one of the master teachers of Euro-American postmodern movement-based improvisational performance who has, until now, received scant critical attention.

The book offers a long overdue examination of the significant impact made by an important figure on grassroots movement-based improvisational performance in 1960s/1970s America and in Australia from the 1980s onwards. It revisits the work of groundbreaking New York choreographer Alwin Nikolais, with whom Wunder trained and for whom he later taught in the 1960s; covers collaborations with founders of ‘Action Theater’ Ruth Zaporah and ‘Motivity Aerial Dance’ Terry Sendgraff as part of the explosion of improvisation in San Francisco in the 1970s and tracks the consolidation of a unique pedagogy that would see hundreds of students learn how to map their performative creativity in Melbourne from the 1980s onwards. It conducts a fascinating investigation into the wellsprings of Wunder’s approach to improvised performance as an end in itself, covering teaching innovations such as his use of the Hum Drum, positive feedback, personal power sources and articulators. It includes valuable contributions from a number of ex-students and established Australian artists in dance, music and visual art who share the profound impact Wunder has made on their creative practices.

This book will be a valuable resource to movement/dance improvisation students and teachers at undergraduate and postgraduate level and independent artists drawn to movement improvisation as performance.

chapter |10 pages

Introduction

part I|62 pages

I wonder

chapter 1|18 pages

Creative genealogies

chapter 2|16 pages

Theatre of the Ordinary

chapter 3|7 pages

The dancing drummer

chapter 4|20 pages

Shifting place

part II|23 pages

Pedagogical foundations

chapter 5|16 pages

Positive feedback and power sources

chapter 6|6 pages

Developing a descriptive language

part III|49 pages

Structures

chapter 8|14 pages

The Four Modes

Pedestrian, Character, Caricature and Abstract

chapter 9|13 pages

Four possible ways of entertaining an audience

Expertise, being beautiful or profound, humour and challenge

chapter 10|6 pages

Word/body

part IV|17 pages

Lived experience

chapter 11|13 pages

Beyond Wunder

chapter |3 pages

Concluding note